So DH had a rough time sleeping last night because of DD's baby sleep noises (she's one month old in a cosleeper). At one point he said he was about to go sleep in the guest room because it was annoying to him so much. I pointed out that during the week when he sleeps in the guestroom (a system we worked out because he's up early for work and I'm on out in leave), I don't get the option of sleeping in another room when she's keeping me up and that he knew sleep deprivation comes along with a baby. I wasn't trying to be insensitive and I made sure not gone nasty when I said it, but because I'm BF, I'm getting significantly less sleep than him, so it kind of bugs me when he complains like this.
Overall, he has been fantastic with DD and with helping me out with everything, so I'd hate for anyone to think he's being a slacker or thinks all things baby are my job. Our normal system works great and he splits duties happily. This is the first time he's really had complaints, so I'm looking for a way to maybe make sleep easier on him. I can sleep through her little cries and weird sleep noises pretty well, but he can't. Does anyone have experience with light sleepers having trouble getting used to a baby in the room? I'm thinking a white noise machine might help him sleep better, but I thought I'd check here for suggestions.
Thanks for any ideas :-)
Re: Getting DH used to baby noise / slight vent
Thats a good idea. Our problem is similar, I'm a heavier sleeper, so he always hears her first. I feel bad and want to make this easier on him, but I think even moving her to her room, which I don't want to do yet,wouldn't even help because he'd still hear her on the monitor.
My DH slept in a different building the first 6 weeks of life for both kids. He was the one still getting up, going to work, having to function in the 'normal' environment, etc., I saw no reason for both of us to be dog tired and sleep deprived. I was breastfeeding so it's not like he could help out during the night anyway.
Over time (several weeks, hard to remember now) once babes started sleeping more regularly, he migrated back to our bed. No harm done.
I'm not sure why you want him to suffer simply because you are suffering.
I was thisclose to saying that last night, but I figured I'd ask for ideas here before letting out my normal snark. It may come to that tonight, though :-)
I don't want him to suffer, and during the week when he's working, I don't expect him to get up. But on the weekends I wouldn't mind a bit of a break, however small it might be.
I like this. One of the biggest problems I have is how long it takes her to go back to sleep after eating, so sharing that sounds good. Once she's on a bottle regularly, maybe we'll try splitting this way.
He'll get used to it. Just give it time.
That's all I've got for you. :P
We'll be starting her on a bottle full time within the next week or two, so I guess we can just revisit it then. I guess I'd just like some help with after feedings, when her diaper gets changed and I sit with her for another 20 to 40 mInutes until she falls asleep. I'll easily end up awake for an hour to an hour and a half between the three. Sometimes I can put her down when she's still awake or half asleep, but usually she needs /wants to be rocked back to sleep if she doesn't fully NTS.
I can understand where you're coming from.
I EBF'd both my kids. No bottles. Because my boobs don't respond to the pump. Good times
Anyway, on days when my husband doesn't have to be up early, I'd love for him to be able to soothe my son back to sleep. Unfortunately for me, though, not much will make my son fall asleep quicker than the boob.
It would be nice to get a break.
Just remember that you baby will eventually sleep for longer stretches and everything will be easier.
GL
I just, in the last few nights, started keeping the main light off to do diaper changes, using just a nightlight. It's been working out well, except when she half wakes up and realizes her diaper is wet. Poopy diapers don't bother her, but she'll pee once and start screaming like she's been in a dirty diaper all day. It's really hard to get her back to sleep after that, even if we're completely quiet and in the dark.
I guess part of me is just concerned with how things will go down once I go back to work in March. Part of my reasoning for DH staying in our room on the weekends is so it isn't a complete shock when we're both getting up for work and handling her throughout the night. But, at the same time, I know (hope!) she'll be sleeping longer by then and may not even need much attention throughout the night. I just don't want to get to the point where only one of us is getting a full night's sleep when we're both getting up at 5 am to go to work for 8 hours. But, maybe I'm worrying too much about that when it hasn't even become an issue.
This is a good point. We have a humidifier and for some reason didn't run it last night. DH had trouble sleeping and I woke up with a stuffy nose and sinus headache. Maybe that was part of the problem?
To follow on some of the others - him sleeping in another room so that he can get solid stretches of sleep doesn't preclude him from still getting up and helping you. The two issues are actually unrelated.
If he is a light sleeper and wakes up to all her noises that YOU'RE sleeping through - then he's actually probably even more sleep deprived than you are.
~Benjamin Franklin
DS dx with celiac disease 5/28/10
On weekends I'd get up with DD and nurse her then hand her off to DH and he'd change her and get her back down it allowed me a little extra sleep.
dueing the week I let him sleep unless it was a really bad night.
he's a heavy sleeper so he didn't wake unless I woke him.
No, no apnea. He's just a light sleeper. He says it's from years of being on call as an EMT. Even in his sleep, he'd be keeping an ear out for his pager.
Her weird sleep noises will lessen, but they won't stop for awhile. Probably not by March anyway. I agree with PP about the white noise machine. Buy one and keep it in her room when you transition her. You'll hear it over the monitor and that should partially help cover her noises, as well as help her by covering noises you two will make around the house.
My kids were in our room while DH was on leave, but after that, they went into their rooms and DH and I slept apart for a little bit. He did help out on the weekends. I was sleep deprived and he wasn't, but not being groggy at his job was important for our whole family. And it paid the cleaning ladies;)
You just have to roll with and have him help as much as he can. Babies eventually sleep more and become quieter. This will pass.
My H slept in the guest room for six months. He was complaining about the same thing and I told him to get used to it or sleep elsewhere until Snuggle was sleeping through the night.
Considering DH sleepwalks a lot, I actually slept better with him out of the room, so it didn't bother me.