Husband and I are not planning on cosleeping or having the baby sleep in our room at all. We want the baby to sleep in her room and get used to it from the very beginning. I told some friends this and they seemed horrified. They couldn't believe I didn't even want to put the baby in a smaller sleeping area like a bassinet or pack n' play for the first weeks or months, since, as they tell me, the baby isn't comfortable in such a large area... no idea if that's true.
Did any of you have your baby sleep in her crib from the beginning? It seems like everyone is cosleeping and having the baby sleep in their rooms these days, and I'd love some advice. Of course I want to make the right decision.
Re: Baby sleeping in the nursery right away?
DD slept in our room until she was 7 months and when she was transitioned to her own room, she had no problem whatsoever. If you're breastfeeding I would say that you should at least have the baby in your room for the first month or so while bf is difficult and then move them to their room.
I don't know if you have heard this or not, but having a baby in your room for the first 6 months lowers the risk for SIDS.
It doesn't hurt to try it. (:
I have heard that babies are more comfortable in a smaller space at least at first since they're not used to the big wide world.
Definitely do what works for you, these are just my thoughts.
TFMC 08.02.13 at 19+ weeks. Everyday I grieve for my little Olive.
We planned on having our son sleep in our room for the first few months. When he was 2 weeks old, I was hospitalized for a week. The grandmas came to help DH care for him. It was easier for everyone to have him in his own room with the monitor on. He did great. We just kept that going when I returned home.
One thing I learned from DS is that we can make all the plans we want, but often things change. We just have to be flexible.
This! I plan on having a crib next to the bed. We don't really have the room for it, but some creative rearranging of furniture will help. If that works, awesome. If not, we'll play it by ear and find new solutions.
This is one of the things I worry about. My husband is a commercial real estate developer with some big projects going on and although he's going to slow down a bit, he really can't take time off. His well being is just as important to me!
Never heard of a Moses basket, though I can guess what it is. Definitely adding it to my list, just in case. Glad to hear from a STM who had the baby in her crib from the start successfully!
Once they were a little older, we just moved them into the nursery down the hall. We will most likely do the sane with this one, or just have a bassinet in the room for a bit.
You may find that whatever plans you make, need a bit of tweaking.
We have 3 girls, each very different and though our basic plan was always the same, we had to adjust to suit each of them. No doubt, this baby, whether girl or boy, will fit in and make 'the plan' his of her own.
We never did well with baby in the bed. Nobody except the baby sleeps! Haha. Just not OUR thing. Although, admittedly, I've fallen asleep while nursing a few times!
This. Something about them getting used to your breathing patterns while sleeping and regulating theirs to match. I remember it from my infant care class the first time around.
That said, we only had DD in our room for the first 3 weeks. She was a noisy sleeper and I was anxious and couldn't sleep. Moving her to her room across the hall was the best decision for all of us, and she did fine with it.
We've moved since then, and our bedroom is downstairs while the kids' bedrooms are upstairs. I'm not totally sure what we'll do, but we may just move the crib into our room for the first couple of months, since we have room (we didn't before).
to be honest, i have no idea. i feel like i've thought through/planned so many other details of the birth/first few months, but sleeping arrangements seem so up in the air and dependent on the baby. i'm not anti-cosleeping, so who knows? pack 'n play by my side of the bed? bedshare? stay in their nursery? i really have no idea.
this is probably one of the only areas that i'm pretty breezy about lol.
It's good to be flexible.
Honestly, you really have no idea what's going to work for your family until the baby gets here. (Said as a total planner, too.)
Best laid plans, right?! Hehe.
I think if you're able to comfortably do this, then there is nothing wrong with it at all. I happened to enjoy sleeping with my DD and found some comfort knowing she was right there. I was also a single mommy at the time so it wasn't as big of a deal to co-sleep for the two of us
She preferred it and I got a cute little snuggly bug as a bed partner.
However, since I am married this time around, I haven't really given much thought to sleeping arrangements. I'm looking into a bassinet or co-sleeper, but the baby's crib isn't too far from our room. I've even thought of putting the crib in our room for the first few months. Getting the baby used to being put down in the crib and then transitioning the crib out of our room.
We'll see what actually happens when baby comes, though! haha.
Emma Kate - born 10.16.03 @ 29 weeks, weighed 1lb 13oz and 13.5" long.
TTC #3
The nursery is actually right next to our room, I'd probably hear the baby without a monitor with the doors open, to be honest. All the bedrooms in our house are on the 2nd floor, which will probably make it a bit easier. Thanks for the input! I'm definitely open to whatever works and am planning on changing course if having the babe in her room doesn't work for her or us.
Do you have room for a bed in the nursery? That way if you decide you want to be closer, you can be in there and let DH sleep? I totally get the husband thing, mine needs sleep and even though he was amazing when DD was born, right now they're in the middle of a deal which will sell part of the company he runs, so he'll have new people to deal with and impress...so he'll need sleep to be fresh at work. Also, who ever said something about SIDS? A fan can also prevent SIDS. No need to make her feel guilty. And if you read enough, you can also find things like using a pacifier reduce the risk.
I think we'd all get a miserable night's sleep if we co-slept. Plus the info about it increasing the risk of SIDS is correct. Another study was recently released about this.
Baby goes in a small crib in our room for about 6 months. Then they get their own room. I've got admit reducing SIDS wasn't our biggest motivator. We wanted to help our kids get good sleep on their own as soon as reasonably possible. I've heard co-sleeper parents complain about going through night-time misery with frequent wake ups more often than those who didn't. Our kids are great sleepers. Maybe they'd be that way anyways, but I think there's something to how we put them to bed too.
Our dog has slept in the bed with us since she was 8 weeks old, and I would feel absolutely cruel sending her away now, almost 5 years later. Also DH sleep walks/motions a lot, so I don't think our bed is a safe place for a baby.
Right now the plan is a Pack N Play by my side of the bed, but if having the baby in there keeps DH awake at all (he switches between day and night shift, so sleep is already a tough thing in our household) then the baby will just have to get used to sleeping in his/her own crib. We'll just see how it goes.
Nobody is trying to induce guilt -- it's just a fact. And yeah, it's one among many things you can do to reduce SIDS risk.
Personally, at the end of the day, I think you just have to do whatever gets your family the most sleep. Not sure quite what that will be for us this time around (although extended co-sleeping is a definite no for us).
2010: Infertility
October 2015: missed miscarriage #2 at 11 weeks (trisomy 22)
Ours sleep in the PnP in our room for a little while because they wake so frequently and I'm a c-section mama. It's just easier (and less painful) for me to not have to walk to the other end of the house every 2 hours.
Make whatever decision you feel is best for your family, but be willing to make changes if you find something isn't working well for you.
It's something that they've found MIGHT reduce SIDS. It's one of many, just like a fan or a pacifier or 30 other things on a million lists. I found it odd that OP jumped straight to that as the reason for having the baby in her room.
I decided against the bed in the nursery, but there is room in there for a small bed if the need arises. I started testing out gliders this week and I've tried a few that I can definitely fall asleep in (almost did in the store, ha), if need be. I recognize that I will probably be spending more than a few nights in her room and plan to invest in something very sleep-worthy.
And I appreciate you saying that about SIDS... of COURSE I want to reduce the risk of SIDS. What parent wouldn't? Of course I think about that, and I've been reading lots of research about ways to reduce the risks (like the fan) without having the baby in my bedroom.
Both of my kids went to their nursery basically the 2nd night home. We tried the first night in a bassinet or rock n play but they were noisy sleepers, so I was constantly awake with every little grunt looking at them, and thus getting no sleep. My DH is very against cosleeping, he's afraid he'll roll onto the baby or somehow smother it, so that was out of the question.
Anyway, it all worked out well, maybe a little more work on our (my) part having to get up and go into the nursery and nurse several times a night but that was only for a month or two then they became great sleepers.
Also having a nice video monitor and the angle sounds monitor helped ease my mind a lot having them in another room.
I was the one who brought up SIDS. I was giving her a reason why I chose to have my daughter in our room for the first 6 months. It was one of the many reasons, she asked for opinions and I gave her mine. I didn't say"OH GOD, YOUR BABY COULD DIE!"
Calm down.
It is good that the nursery is close by. I think the thing I loved the most about having my daughter in the room, was hearing her the second she started to move around and I was able to get up and get breast milk thawed and ready before she fully woke up. That was there was very little crying at night. If you have a monitor, even though they're so close to your room, it might help also.
Well, it came across to me that way, so it could have to her.
I think DS would have slept better in his own room. He is a very light sleeper and I think we woke him up a lot. And I jumped anytime he made a sound so I feel like I made his sleeping problems worse.
Jill (36) Wife to Joe (36) Mom to: Alyssa (forever 10) Jacob (10) Baby Due 12/31/13
FTM here and our plan is a pack n play by the bed or the crib. Like a PP said we will see how it goes.
I would never co sleep but it's a very personal choice. Good luck!
With DS, we intended for him to start in the nursery right away. we tried it one night, and it was just so much easier to have him in our room, since we were up 47389739 times a night. Well actually the first 2 weeks he slept on our chest on the couch(whoever's shift it was). Then we moved him to a sleep positioner in between us in bed, then the bassinet in our room, then his crib at 6 weeks. He did fine with each transition.
With DD, we kept her downstairs in the bassinet at first because she had to share a room with DS and we didn't want to wake him. eventually she moved to our room and stayed there for 9 months because she was a horrific sleeper and it was not working for her to share a room with DS til 9 months.
honestly no clue what we'll do with this baby.