Ok, so little dude #2 sleeps beautifully if he's on his stomach. So far we've only been allowing this during the day when we're awake and he's right in the room with us. Problem is at night, he refuses to sleep any other way unless it's on us. I'm not getting sleep, he's not sleeping restfully and we kind of have to figure this out because DH goes back to work on Wednesday and I'll be on my own.
Anyone else ever let their LO sleep on their stomach at night? DH is way against it but we don't know what else to try. Ideas?
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All this to say, I would give it a try probably.
With DS he was a belly sleeper since birth. The NICU put him on him belly and he refused to sleep any other way. He slept on his belly since 11 days old when he came home.
It worked for us! My kids both still sleep on their bellies. I say do what works for you. Do you have an angel care monitor? That might put your DH at ease. Good luck and I hope DS2 starts sleeping for you at night!
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When we were in the hospital DD would only sleep fully stretched out, not swaddled on me. I didn't sleep for 3 days. Obviously this wasn't a sustainable thing but she was 23.5 inches long and didn't really fit in the bassinet. SO they gave me a list of things to try when we got home to get her sleeping in a crib and not on me. I can only remember a few.
1. Try elevating the crib/bassinet/whatever. Make sure you elevate the whole unit and not the mattress.
2. Sleep in a bouncy seat in the crib
3. Swaddle and then prop slightly on their side with a rolled recieving blanket and then slowly remove the blanket when the baby is asleep.
With DD we had to do a combination of 1&2 minus the swaddle.
DS has been a tummy sleeper since he first started sleeping in his crib. I was, naturally, very scared of this at first but got over it when I realized there was nothing to be done about it. He'd flip over to his belly first chance he got and if you flipped him to his back - he'd wake up and scream.
I don't think I'm much of a help with my response - just wanted to let you know I've been there and after a few nights, I was much more comfortable. I'm a tummy sleeper and can't imagine sleeping any other way - seems DS is the same as his momma.
GL.
Edited to add: we also have the Angelcare monitor and love it! Rarely have false alarms - just adjust the sensitivity.
C slept like this for the first 4 months of his life. You gotta do what you gotta do. If you are going the tummy route, invest the $ in an angel care monitor. My friends totally recommended it for their peace of mind.
I need to keep trying the swaddle because his little arms flail and he wakes himself up. I have yet to have a baby that is willing to just sleep on their back in their crib/bassinet from the beginning. Rea needed the swaddle and slept in her carseat until 6 months. Linc swaddled until 8 months and slept in the RnP for first 4 months (which we sold!).
I'm all for the tummy sleeping but I cannot for the life of me convince DH. I'll need to check out the Angel Care monitors. Don't they give false alarms all the time?
Sigh.
We had a few false alarms, but that was because we didn't have the selectivity right. We loved our angel care! Used it for both kids until they were both around 1 yr old.
All of this!!
I absolutely love our Angel Care monitor. It was the only way I got any rest. I was terrified of SIDS and LO had reflux and we woke up hearing her making choking noises from her spit up a few times. I was so scared that she was going to choke on her spit up. The alarm gave me much needed peace of mind.
And it was great to have once she started rolling over and sleeping on her tummy.
We used it until LO started moving around too much in her crib and would get off of the sensor mat (7-8 months. Can't remember exactly).
We maybe had one or two false alarm and I think that was just because she rolled off it too much. You can adjust the sensitivity if false alarms are an issue.
We have the one with the video screen. Not the best video screen. If I was to do it over again I would get just the sensor monitor and get a separate video monitor. It's good enough though. We still use the video monitor.
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There is no way I could have survived without the angel care monitor. A girl on Facebook posted about two weeks ago that her 3 month old stopped breathing in the middle of the night and he was unresponsive for several minutes. She said they would have never known if they didn't have a monitor.
Obviously, it's one of my must haves in this house so I love it!
ETA: we rarely had false alarms but there are different senstivity levels you have to play around with.
We loved ours and used it until she was 11mo when she kept going in the far corner of her bed and it couldn't pick up her movement. I have seen many times on the board someone saying "my Ped said the monitor would just stress me out" or "it's not going to prevent SIDS"......one, every one of my family members has used the monitor and was less stressed having it on. And two, ummm....duh it is not going to prevent SIDS but it will give you time to react. You may be able to save the baby, you may not. But in the end, would you rather say "the alarm went off, I ran in there and did CPR and everything I could..." Or would you be saying "I thought he was sleeping in late, then I went and checked on him and he was cold and dead!" As I have mentioned before on this board, one of my nanny kids stopped breathing while I was working, and his monitor went off. Had it been a regular monitor, I wouldn't have known he stopped breathing. But the alarm went off and I ran upstairs and across the house to get him. He started breathing when I picked him up, but who knows what would have happened had I not known and raced up there. Nothing is scarier than seeing a blue lipped five month old.
If you do get one, just make sure the sensitivity settings are correct and you don't have anything that causes movement or vibration on or around the crib or the monitor will think its your baby moving.
There is also a thing called a Snuza you can get that is cheaper and clips on the baby's diaper and will sound an alarm if he stops breathing.
When Abby was in the NICU at 9 days old and the first thing they told us was to lay her on her side or her tummy to sleep to help her breath, that's all we did. We did swaddle her tight, place her on her side, and make little barriers on each side of her with recieving blankets and then a blanket over those (under her) so that they (recieving blankets) wouldn't be able to just roll around. After about 2 months of that, and two more hospital stays where she slept on her tummy and was fine, was just let her sleep on her tummy. To this day, the first thing Abby does when we lay her down is roll to her tummy.
I guess in my mind when the first thing doctors tell me is "oh, just lay her on her tummy to breathe better," I don't question that and I just do it, no big deal. If they don't have any reservations about that, then neither do I, especially if it helps my child breathe.