DH and I have found that our ideal parenting styles are vastly different. DS is 6.5 weeks and I feel he still needs comfort and to know that when he cries, someone will be there to offer support, cuddles, and love to help him feel better. DH says that he needs to learn to self soothe and that by immediately coming to him, we are teaching him to rely too much on the touch of others. I would love to bedshare so DS can dream feed, allowing all of us to get more sleep. I tried it one night and DH almost had a fit. He thinks that DS will become spoiled by sleeping in our bed and doesn't want to even entertain the idea of dream feeding. To make matters worse, DH is so hard headed. Arguing with him is pointless as he always has a comeback and I feel like it's a waste of my time. Help!
Married DH 11/15/08
Formerly MissMheMhe
Do you and your SO have similar parenting styles? 72 votes
SO and I agree completely
SO and I agree some of the time
SO and I do not agree at all
Re: Do you and your SO have similar parenting styles?
It is not likely at this age to spoil a baby. Even at 3-4 months when a baby cries, we should be responding. I do not let LO go more than 1 minute, 2, if I am literally in the middle of doing something that I have to finish doing before I can go get him, (ex. using the bathroom). I framed it like this to his Pedi. "As long as I know DS is clean, has been fed/not expecting to eat soon/hurt in any way, should I let him cry for a few minutes?" She pretty much blatantly told me "no", to go pick him up and that at this age, you can not spoil a baby. It is not teaching him anything in regards to; "Ooo, I will get my way from mom and dad if I cry." They are not there developmentally yet.
I asked about sleeping in our room and her only response to it was; "Is he sleeping in your bed?" I said "no", and that was what she would have been concerned with. I wanted to know if he was at the age (2 months) where we should start transitioning him out of room, because I thought similarly like your husband, that he would get to used to us always being there. Our Pediatricians concern about whether or not he was in our bed was because many babies do have a really hard time transitioning from bed sharing/co-sleeping when they get older. I would think that debate would be totally up to you two still, but even though it sounds like a dream for you and you think you may be getting more sleep now, it might end up causing more work to get LO to sleep in their own space/own room, down the road. Again, I do not know your situation, so I am not trying to judge what works best for your family.
As far as what DH and I are like as parents I'm much different than I expected. I have always been a firm, strict caregiver with set in stone rules and a more detached style. When we adopted a puppy I insisted she sleep downstairs and DH was the one that went and slept on the floor with her because he couldn't stand for her to cry. But ever since DS was born I'm the softy. I want him to be held and snuggled constantly and would gladly sacrifice whatever necessary to bring him comfort and happiness. Fortunately DH is a nurturing person and go with the flow, so he's mostly supportive of my style even if it's not exactly like his.
Have your DH read the most recent research on self-soothing and baby spoiling. He doesn't have to change his parenting style, but I hope he sees merit in your style and supports it
https://kfor.com/2016/02/01/new-research-ends-an-age-old-debate-will-you-spoil-your-baby-if-you-pick-it-up-each-time-it-cries/
Discipline is much different though. The Littles (or the toddler for now) gets spankings or his hand slapped and he gets things taken away if he misbehaves. His daughter has never been spanked and has been a very spoiled only child for 8 years in both households. It's been a big transition, but from the very beginning of our relationship, I told him I'd never treat her differently than I would treat my own, tough love or not.
Communication is key! Talk over these things now because as they get older, the kids will pick up on the differences between you and your partner. And they WILL play those differences against you
we agree with trying to get her quiet as well. There have been nights where she cuddles with me sitting in bed or mornings where she sleeps with me cause I side nurse but I'm not too worried about it being a habit yet. My husband doesn't mind either. The only thing is he wants me to start getting her to sleep in her crib. And some nights I will try but sleep is more valuable to me so she often still ends up in the rnp or swing. I told him he's not the one getting up and fighting with her at night loosing sleep. ( I let him sleep since he has to leave for work at 5) during the day I try her crib more until I get fed up
Another example was helping our 3.5 yo adjust to the new baby. I read a ton of research and articles about how to best help the transition and what's normal expected behavior at this time. It's not I'm right and you're wrong. I say, "this is what I've read, what do you think?"
SO has a daughter from a previous marriage who is 10 and she was born SUPER early (25 weeks) so she spent time in NICU. So SO 1. Doesn't remember what it's like with a new baby and 2. Didn't have the "newborn" experience so everything is basically new for both of us.
At first I was 100% against co-sleeping I feared I would roll over and squish my son in my sleep. So we set up the pnp in our room and used that....until one night SO put the baby in the bed and now he hates sleeping in the pnp ( seriously LO can be knocked out we put him in the pnp and a few mins later he wakes up) we have him propped up on a pillow so I can feel when I'm close to the pillow and honestly when I sleep I don't move an inch I wake up in the same position I fall asleep in.
And right now LO's bedroom is across the house and it's too far away from our room for us to be comfortable with letting him sleep alone. We plan on moving soon and hopefully we will find somewhere that has the bedrooms close together so we can get LO in his own room *fingers crossed*
Our pedi has told us at this point CIO is pointless. They aren't crying just because, they are crying for a reason and CIO doesn't solve anything at this point.
But, I do let him cry. I don't pick him up at the exact moment he starts crying. And sometimes I'll hold him while he's crying ( he does this cute pout thing and I just love watching his face lol) just so he CAN cry. But never for more than a minute, when that time is up I feed him and he's happy and we go about his day.
SO doesn't like for him to cry at all- if he cries at all SO will immediately pick him up and will coddle him until he stops crying.
So far though, SO and I agree on most things- but I'm 98% certain when LO gets older we will start to disagree ALOT more ( SO and I have opposite personalites so we already clash )
At this age DH defers to me on most things since I'm the one home with the baby and the one breastfeeding around the clock. If I wanted to bed share and he said no I'd pretty much tell him to eff off.