Does anyone have experience with this? Personally or through family or friends?
I'm struggling. My DH has always sleep walked....in the beginning it was funny...I'd wake up to find him putting his pants on over his pj's ...
It's becoming a stress factor though. He used to never leave the room, this last week he's gone downstairs twice. There was one scary incident when we were in the hospital and he moved LO...
I think it gets worse when he's tired...but....new parents/work/life....it's hard to not be tired. He doesn't usually get up to help with LO and night and I try to keep it that way because I don't want him to be more tired and sleep walk more.
I'm full of guilt, but I don't trust him at night...when he gets up to "help" I don't know if he's actually awake. It scares me he's leaving the room now...i don't know if he'll get LO and could fall down the stairs....or even his own safety. What if he makes it to the car, or anything.
I'm trying to convince him to talk to our Dr and see....but does anyone have any experience? Techniques maybe before bed that help? Meditation maybe?
I'm also trying to encourage more of a "routine"...it's hard because he does shift work that varies by days/hours and the last couple weeks he's been doing 10-12 hour days and no 2 consecutive days off. I'm just getting exhausted between waking with LO and waking up when he gets up to roam. ..and every movement he does because I'm worried where he might go...
Any advice is greatly appreciated!
Re: Sleep Walking (adult)
Thank you.
I feel better knowing that you agree he should see a doctor and that I'm not overreacting.
ETA: I also make sure to say, "I am awake" if I get out of bed at night for any reason. This way DH knows he does not have to get me back to bed.
And now he's at work.
We rarely fight. I've been crying ever since.
And yes he's probably embarrassed and/or frustrated. Or he just really thinks I'm over - worrying (he thinks it's my anxiety disorder that's throwing it out of proportion). He's always sleep walked and "nothing bad has happened". He's a very glass - half-full/optimistic, everythingwillalwaysbeokay type of guy. Usually a great balance for me but sometimes so much more aggravating.
I need to keep trying. Or do tlex's trick/plan at the Dr. Wish I thought of that when we were there this morning.