My DD is almost 2 weeks and we've generally been doing well. The days and early evenings are great, but nights are another story. I know some babies sleep 3-4 hr stretches at night and go back to sleep easily. My DD is not one of those. She has been going down ok at night and will sleep anywhere from 1-3 hrs at a time. The last few days she has been hard to get back to sleep in the early morning (4am-ish). It will take about an hr to get her back to sleep. She's not a super fussy baby outside of this hour. My DD generally only feeds for 5-10 min at a time, and I can't get her to eat longer. However, I also know she's a super efficient eater based on her postpartum visit, so I'm not sure if her short feedings are contributing to her frequent wake-ups or not. I'm just curious what other people's feeding/sleeping looks like so far, mostly so I can get a little validation that I don't have the only baby that wants to eat ever hour at night. What are you guys doing to cope when your babes are fussy and you're exhausted? Any advice is welcome!
Re: What do your nights look like?
But you know what worked for us? A heartbeat sound simulator. You can get them at any store that sells baby stuff. She gets one whiff of that and she's out.
I'm enjoying it while I can. DH goes back to work Monday, so I'll be taking over first watch.
Edited because I apparently can't tell time.
ETA after I posted this, my daughter was up every hour for the remainder of the night. Baby's gonna baby.
They say the first one is usually an angel to trick you into having another one that will be the devil, and we hope to add #2 as soon as is healthy, so we shall see.
Anyway, I went to a lactation clinic today because my let down is so heavy my poor LO is overwhelmed and sputters and gasps and frequently only feeds 5-10 minutes and only feeds on one side per feeding which is every 2-4 hours. Anyway, the lactation consultant said based on babies weight gain, diapers and my let down my baby is getting a ton of food despite the short feeds and to watch diapers not the length of feeding for adequacy. I asked about hindmilk and she said baby is even more efficient than the pump so as long as his diapers are normal not to worry about foremilk vs hindmilk.
This was happening at just about every night feed until I read a suggestion to not change his diaper during night feeds unless it's really wet or he poops while eating, since the change and the light would wake him too much. It feels weird to wait for another feeding before changing him, but it doesn't seem to bother him.
We're also trying to be more conscious of having as much light in the house as possible during the day and as little as possible in the evening to help him start to get his days and nights straight.