FTM here. I know I may be overthinking this, and I welcome that possibility. That being said, I can't stop thinking about how to make sure that my baby is a good sleeper. I've been on these boards long enough to know that some people will say that there's nothing you can do, you either have a good sleeper or you don't. My mom says we were both great sleepers, and if you expect that your baby will sleep then they will sleep. So a part of me just wants to follow my baby's lead, feed on demand, etc., and hope for the best. But I don't want to do things that may be creating bad habits from the beginning if I can avoid it. For example, a friend of mine would always go into her baby's room whenever he fussed to put his pacifier back in his mouth, fix his swaddle, or bring him into her bed if he wouldn't stop fussing. He's 13 months and she is STILL up in the middle of the night with him and he ends up in her bed often. I have to believe there's something she could have done/be doing differently to avoid this.
I guess I'm wondering if there's anyone who swears by a particular method or trick they used, or has advice beyond "you have no control"! Thanks in advance:)
Re: Newborn Sleep Question for Seasoned Mamas
Edit: I put both kids down awake as much as possible. I actually didn't start this rocking DS nonsense until we moved him to a bed.
TTC#1 for 19 months with PCOS and MFI IUI#3 + injectables = BFP!!!! Beta#1-134(13dpiui) Beta #2-392(15dpiui)
#1 born December 2011
TTC#2 - Beta #1 -51@10dpo Beta#2 -1353 @16dpo
#2 born May 2013
TTC # 3 June 2014 BFP 12-1-14
#3 born August 2015
#4!!!!!!! due June 2017
ETA: Not that you're judging, just don't feel bad if you end up doing some of the things your friend does. You never know what will work for you, just do your best!
In regards to sleep I got blessed with a "sparkler" (difficult baby). We did everything we could except "cry it out" as I don't support that method at all and we prefer a more gentler approach. I will say where we went wrong was with what @Miz_Liz pointed out. We didn't put him to be "sleepy while awake". We plan to do that this time around. I think for us it was a first time experience and we really had no idea how to handle such a difficult little dude. Every baby really is different. Some babies sleep. Some don't. Can you work on it? Absolutely. You just have to do what works for you and baby.
For newborns I really think eat, play, sleep is magical. Even if they're only awake for 5 minutes. It's hard to keep them awake sometimes!
This is a schedule someone shared on the bump back in 2010 when I had DD. I have it saved still bc it's an excellent guide!!
Awake Times
Guideline for Awake time for babies
0-4 weeks: 30-45 minutes
4-6 weeks: 40-60 minutes
6-8 weeks: 40-70 minutes
8-12 weeks: 50-80 minutes
3-4 months: 60-90 minutes
4-5 months: 1 hr to 1.5 hrs
5-6 months: 1.5 hours
6-9 months: 2 hours, give or take 15 minutes
I do agree that you should try and avoid putting baby down asleep (at a reasonable age, like not a newborn baby), but we couldn't do that for some time because our baby screamed for hours every night from the day she arrived and I felt she was too little to leave. We tried Tizzie Hall's method at age 6 months. It sort of worked (she slept longer) but she still screamed for hours before falling asleep. Truly awful. Every time teething or illness comes along we have sleep regressions. Others will tell you 'I think sleep disturbance due to teething is a myth.' GGRRRR. Maybe for your kid!!
We have tried the soft approach, the controlled crying approach, every goddamn approach and nothing has stuck - it is definitely not for lack of consistency or routine, whatever anyone says, because every method we have tried, we have stuck at for months on end. I have pretty much always made sure she was home in her bed for naps too. It really took two years for her to start sleeping better and even now we still struggle with sleep stuff - and now, she does fall asleep by herself a lot of the time so it's not that we are always in there soothing her to sleep.
It really annoys me when people say you should just do 'X' and you won't have a problem - I'm referring here to ppl I know in person and not PPs BTW - because all babies are just so different. Mothers of 'sparklers' will agree with me I'm sure!
My daughter was a pretty good sleeper and started sleeping through the night early. She was a happy, easy baby. We did not put her down awake though, we rocked or walked her to sleep, then carefully transferred her to the crib. Usually she had a bottle or nursed first, sometimes falling asleep while nursing. We did not use a pacifier. We used Aden & Anais swaddling blankets and wrapped her up tight!
She did rely on having milk before bed... Now I just make sure she has milk before brushing her teeth. We still hold her in the chair until she falls asleep, then put her down. This is a hassle, but it works and sometimes it doesn't take very long. The main problem we have now is that she is not good at putting herself to sleep so I'm having trouble transitioning her to a twin bed. I'm considering trying soft music.
She sleeps very well, maybe wakes in the middle of the night once every two weeks, seems like a bad dream though.
One thing that is important to remember is around 4-5 months they will start to wake in the night and can fuss a little bit. This is normal. We took the approach of letting her fuss for about five minutes before going in to settle her, and usually she would soothe herself back to sleep. As she got a little older the limit would be ten minutes unless she was full on screaming bloody murder. I guess this would fall under CIO, but I would never let her cry if it sounded serious or as though she needed comfort. I also weaned from the pacifier at 5 months so she would not become dependent on that for falling back asleep in the middle of the night since she either couldn't put it back in her own mouth or wouldn't be able to find it. This helped her to find other ways to soothe.
These days she is 15 months and STTN almost always unless she is teething or sick. I'm hoping that DD2 will also be a naturally good sleeper and these techniques will work with her, but every baby is different and I certainly expect a challenge this go around
Good luck to all of us!
I don't really think you can mess up the sleeping habits with a newborn. When they're first born, in my opinion you have to meet their every demand, feed on demand, rock them to sleep, etc. I think it is a matter of phasing those types of responses out as they get older and better at self-soothing and understanding that just because you're not coming doesn't mean they won't ever get fed or held again.
My three year old has always gone through sleep phases. With each bad phase we would enable it for a while out of desperation and then eventual tackle it when we got desperate. I think with sleep (as with anything baby/kid related) it is a matter of solving issues as they come up...because there will always be issues
things I never do: let her fall asleep in my bed
Cuddle or rock her to sleep, I will cuddle or Rock her for 10 minutes to relax her or calm her, but I refuse to do it til she falls asleep (then I place her in her bed, tell her goodnight, I love her, and close her door almost all the way).
My husband and I felt they are better off in their own space (we have a queen size and both of us sprawl out to where we bump each other lol no room for kiddos!!) and that they need to learn to figure out how to soothe themselves to sleep. If she cried I would go see what was wrong. If nothing was, I repeated the steps above and went back to bed.
I feel very strongly about routines for kids. And in our case, it seems to work
Now, she does struggle with falling asleep for naps and at night sometimes but she's 2.5 and she has autism and so I'm thankful that she even sleeps through the night at that rate because I've heard stories of autistic kids who can't and don't sleep well.. I'd rather struggle with her taking awhile to fall asleep than her not to sleep!! I need to get some chamomile and diffuse in her room..
However, babies are going to sleep or not sleep no matter what you do. My advice regardless is always stick to routine and be consistent.
But I would say until 3 months, enjoy the newborn stage, it goes so quick!!
I am NOT a fan of CIO or any form of "sleep training". Especially before age 1. Babies do not know object permanence yet and do not understand the concept... IMO.
I started a bedtime routine for DS at 4 weeks old. At that time I was nursing him to sleep. Because I felt like that's what he needed. Around 5mo I started laying him down awake, in Marlins Magic Sleep Suit with white noise on my phone. We had been using white noise to help sooth him for a while, so I knew it helped. He would just lay there and fall asleep. It was heaven. He still woke up often in the night... But at least it was easy to put him back down!
Around a year I weaned him from all of that and would just rub his back while he fell asleep. Then it got to where I could just sit in his room... Last week (22mo old) I started laying him down (awake of course) and leaving. He doesn't cry and never has to fall asleep.
He didn't start to STTN till I stopped breastfeeding around 15mo. But I didn't mind getting up with him. It was only 1x or 2x unless he was sick.
That's what worked for me. With one child.
Colten James - 9/9/2005
Isabella Ann - 7/20/2012
SURPRISE!!! Emma Leigh - due 8/27/2015 (c-section date 8/7/2015)
I'm hoping this baby is a good sleeper because DD wasn't, but I'm also trying to mentally prepare myself for another kid that hates sleeping.
Eat
Activity
Sleep
You (time for yourself!)
With #1 (DS) I did what everyone said b/c I didn't know any better. With DD2 I used my intuition.
DD1 born 8/3/10
bassinet from day 1 and put down sleepy but awake. This was horrible for me. Tried Easy method but didn't have much luck with the sleeping tips. We eventually moved on to using a swing to calm baby or by physically rocking him and the transfer to their crib.
I attempted to BF with DS but he wouldn't latch so I pumped (we made it 6 months)
but supplemented with cereal at 4 months (with pedi approval). He was a bad sleeper and still is in terms of going to sleep on his own. Also, he ate A LOT. His food diaries shoes him at 40-50 Oz of BF/FF plus starting at 6 months he was also eating 15-20 Oz of pureed char food
DD1 born 8/17/13
She slept next to the bed in a rock'n'play for the first few months, nursed or rocked to sleep for all naps, and EBF. She was sleeping 6 to 6 every night with 2-3 naps every day. She's had brief periods of poor sleep but even those nights were great compared to DS's sleep. At this time, 22 months, she stays in her crib from 8 pm to 7 am every night. She gets put down wide awake after her evening routine and generally lays down quietly then falls asleep within 15-30 minutes. She also takes 1-2 naps daily, nap times vary depending on # of naps, activity level, etc. In general she probably naps for 2-3.5 hours per day but sometimes longer.
ETA: grammatical errors/punctuation might not be great. Very tired and keypad is kinda starting to swim...
Some good advice coming from the mums of two or more children who have had very different experiences to date... It just goes to show how different they can all be even with the same carers using the same methods.
Ditto both of these. I read these books and did a combo of both of them. My boys were always good sleepers once they hit 6 weeks adjusted age.
As for newborns, I would put them to sleep barely awake... they always woke and I would feed them straightaway bc they never pooped until they were being fed. So the routine every three hours was basically wake, eat, poop, change, bed. They would always fall asleep during or towards the end of the feed, but the diaper change was enough to rouse them a little so they went back to their bed (or bouncer for refluxy DS2) sleepy but awake.