Hi... I apologize ahead of time as I know there have been other threads about this subject in the past. I'm just so confused!
There seems to be so much conflicting information out there regarding sleep training a breastfed baby. I read the Weisbluth HSHHC book along with the different threads on TB and other websites on sleep training. I think I may be on information overload and I'm not sure if sleep training is the best way to go.
Are there any of you out there who have already gone through this process?? At what age did you start? When you did start sleep training, was your baby already in their own cribs/rooms? How did you address naps during sleep training? DH and I have a bedtime routine for LO right now and LO does a great job of sleeping anywhere from 2.5-5hrs at night in a travel crib in our room. We continue to struggle with LO napping on his own (he'll only sleep on me) but I feel like that is age appropriate???
Any advice would be so appreciated! Thanks all!
Re: breastfeeding and sleep training
If you 1 month old is giving you 2.5-5hrs at night then celebrate, jump for joy and enjoy it. Let babe nap on you during the day...doing this in the daytime is likely meeting baby's touch quota for the day and allow baby to sleep better at night.
My 13month old slept on/with me for most naps for the first many, many, many months. She now does two 2hr naps a day in her crib and spends the night in her crib (with wake ups to nurse and to check on us).
Letting baby sleep on you this early is NOT going to create a sleeping problem later. Enjoy the snuggles...watch tv, play on your phone or laptop and enjoy having your feet up!
It bothers me that a doctor would say that! Yes, enjoy the snuggles! DS2 slept on me practically day and night for the first 8 weeks and had no problems transitioning to crib. It was nice for me to tote him around in the carrier or be forced to sit down and rest
A friend read that book, and she made it sound like it's more about reading baby's cues, and responding to them appropriately. So feed a hungry baby, get a tired baby to sleep (or just prevent the overtired baby). She said it helped their BF relationship, and she still feeds on demand.