I can't figure out what the best scenario is for the first few months, when LO will be in our room.
He wakes up needing to be fed or changed: Do I or my DH do this in the bedroom? If so, do we put a changing table in our room and nursing chair? (This will all fit, btw.) Or when LO wakes up, is it best to do the feeding/changing in another room? The wrinkle here is the master in our house is on the ground floor; all the other rooms are upstairs. So my options as I see them are:
1) put crib, nursing chair and changing table in master bedroom, do changes and feedings right there with some sort of dim light
2) Walk upstairs to nursery, do changes/feelings up there, walk back downstairs to put him back in his crib (which will temporarily start out in our master)
3) put nursing chair in living room, put changing table in hallway, and when he wakes up, leave bedroom, but have everything downstairs so we are not walking up and down the stairs all the time.
What system do you all anticipate having? STMs: What worked for you?
Me: 38; DH: 41
DS: Born 5-17-16
Re: Logistics when LO is sleeping in your room
i kept my babies next to my bed in the Rock and play to sleep.
DS: Born 5-17-16
When DS was in our room, I still used the chair/changing table in the nursery often-- but they were only 6 steps away. If I felt alert enough to not accidentally fall asleep bf (it's a thing...bf will make you tired in addition to the night wakings) then I'd just sit in bed to nurse and change there if it was just a pee diaper. If I knew I was extra tired, I'd get moving to the other room because the walking would wake me up more. DH slept through everything whether I was in the room or out of the bedroom.
We changed his diaper on the PNP mattress (it was the elevated insert, not the bottom you're used to seeing or a bassinet addition as I had read frightening reviews on those). This way if he had a diaper disaster we could just whip off the PNP sheet and put on a new one. All the supplies were in the side storage pocket, including spare onsies.
I fed and burped him in our bed before putting him back in the PNP. We were a bottle fed family so during the time DH was off work (2 weeks) we took turns every other feeding so that each of us were able to sleep a few hours at a time. Initially we both woke up every time DS did (which was fine because I was in a lot of pain and moving very slowly, so DH would change him while I got ready to feed etc) but after a while exhaustion kicks in and a rustling diaper was not enough to keep either of us up!
My advice to you is to do whatever necessary to keep from leaving the room. Not only will it stimulate baby, but it will be painful and sometimes physically too much on such sleep deprivation. Change baby's diaper in the crib, nurse in bed, keep diapers on a nearby dresser or shelf, the closer the better!
speaking of nursery, something tells me we will hardly use it at first. Makes me wonder why I prioritized it so much in my planning!
DS: Born 5-17-16
@araecasey is right...men and their ability to sleep. they suck! haha
Our house has 4 levels because we live on a hill. Top floor is bedrooms, third is kitchen/dining, second is den and laundry, bottom is a walk out finished basement. I've been thinking about buying just a basic changing table to keep in the den, but there's not a lot of space outside of our other furniture. I had a friend suggest one for downstairs so you don't have to run upstairs all the time (in our case two floors from the den). I'm curious what others do? Downstairs changing table? Throw a blanket on the floor?
I have a spin off question: DH has to have the tv on before bed while he falls asleep. If the LO is in our room for the first month or so, do you think it's fine that the tv is on? During the first few weeks they sleep all hours and fall asleep with different sounds but I don't want to create a habit of having to fall asleep with something on.
I think I'll do the same. No set spot to change. They just have their stash of diapers in one spot downstairs and don't seem to have any issues. I personally wouldn't invest in another change table. Find a place that will work and either use a mat or nursery style change pad and leave it there. That makes the most sense to me anyway
oh oh I should also add, lots of people change on the couch or floor too that I've seen. I hate getting up and down off the floor as I'm really tall but it's certainly still an option!
I'd just plan on doing it all in your room, you'll figure it out as you go!
I use the pack n play w/ bassinet in the living room (1st floor) for a changing or nap area.
But for those with multiple stories, I'd have a changing set up on the floors you frequent the most! Even if it's a mat and a basket of supplies!