So my husband and I went a little crazy yesterday with our registry at Buy Buy Baby (first child!) and I'm stuck on whether or not to purchase a co-sleeper or bassinet. My SIL has one we can use so it's not really whether to purchase one, but my real question is should we have baby sleep in our room for the first few months? Some of our friends did this and said it made breastfeeding much easier, other friends actually had baby sleep in bed with them, and others used the crib right from day one. What are your experiences/plans with co-sleeping? Thanks!
Re: Co-sleeping
We had a crib, a co sleeper and we researched/prepared for bedsharing. After trying the first two a couple of times it just ended up best for us to bedshare. However I have heard of parents planning to bedshare and then finding out LO sleeps better in a crib. I think one might just keep an open mind then that way if it isn't working you aren't tearing your hair out trying to fit a square peg in a round hole.
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She slept with us until about 6 months (husband was trying to kick her out long before that though). Full transition to the crib included a lot of tears but she's fine now.
Actually the government and many doctors advise against it. While I agree that you do sleep different when you become a parent, you aren't necessarily going to wake up when an infant making no noise is in danger - especially in those first few weeks when you are suffering from severe exhaustion. My U/S tech has gone to NUMEROUS funerals for children who died due to their parents accidentally rolling over on them while they were sleeping - to include one set of parents that the mother was a nurse and the father was an EMT. The sad truth is, it can happen to anyone. It is no different than the bumpers in a crib - there are just too many variables that make it extremely dangerous when an infant is so young and cannot roll over, push things away, or verbalize that they are in trouble. https://www.cpsc.gov/en/Newsroom/News-Releases/1999/CPSC-Warns-Against-Placing-Babies-in-Adult-Beds-Study-finds-64-deaths-each-year-from-suffocation-and-strangulation/
The issue is, unfortunately there is no safe way to do it. How you fall asleep is not how you are necessarily going to stay asleep - most people toss and turn when they sleep. Also, most mothers have a spouse or partner in bed with them and they also can't control how they sleep (plus pillows, blankets, softer mattresses). Trust me, I get that it is NOT easy to stay awake to nurse and change the baby, I remember days when I knew I couldn't even drive if I needed to because I was that tired, but when I would get up to nurse at night I always remembered what my Dr and U/S tech told me and it helped me to stay awake. They also gave me great tips like get up and go to the bathroom before nursing or do something to move around a little to wake up enough. I also found I could keep my Ipad or phone near me and could play mindless games while I was nursing to help keep myself awake. I would rather that other mom's know the facts and statistics so hopefully they can find ways to stay awake too than to lie to them and tell them it is safe and God forbid they become one of the statistics. There are going to be SO many dangers in our children's lives that we cannot control, but I will do absolutely everything in my power to control the ones that I can. I can't even imagine the poor parents that have had this happen to them, I don't know how they go on, but I do understand how it happens.
The issue is, unfortunately there is no safe way to do it. How you fall asleep is not how you are necessarily going to stay asleep - most people toss and turn when they sleep. Also, most mothers have a spouse or partner in bed with them and they also can't control how they sleep (plus pillows, blankets, softer mattresses). Trust me, I get that it is NOT easy to stay awake to nurse and change the baby, I remember days when I knew I couldn't even drive if I needed to because I was that tired, but when I would get up to nurse at night I always remembered what my Dr and U/S tech told me and it helped me to stay awake. They also gave me great tips like get up and go to the bathroom before nursing or do something to move around a little to wake up enough. I also found I could keep my Ipad or phone near me and could play mindless games while I was nursing to help keep myself awake. I would rather that other mom's know the facts and statistics so hopefully they can find ways to stay awake too than to lie to them and tell them it is safe and God forbid they become one of the statistics. There are going to be SO many dangers in our children's lives that we cannot control, but I will do absolutely everything in my power to control the ones that I can. I can't even imagine the poor parents that have had this happen to them, I don't know how they go on, but I do understand how it happens.
Well said!
https://commonhealth.wbur.org/2013/11/is-it-time-to-rethink-co-sleeping
The debates aside on this thread: not everyone should or will bed-share but it can be done safely for those who do choose to do it. If you're not comfortable with that then a bassinet (or similar) is a great to have.
I'm personally fine with whatever my baby is comfortable with whether it is with me, in a bassinet or their crib. Co-sleeping does make BFing much easier and you do get better rest so you're really not as exhausted. That's been my experience anyway.
So my 2 cents: have the bassinet and co-sleeper on hand and see how it goes.
Con: mommy wakes up every time baby makes a noise
I suggest getting a pack n play with a bassinet so baby can sleep in your room for the first two months if needed. Move baby to the crib asap.
Get an AngelCare monitor for the crib, for peace of mind so you know if baby cries or stops breathing.