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sweet dreams

June 20th, 2007 by Melanie

I’ve done it! I have mastered the art of getting babies to fall asleep on their own.

Our youngest, now 4 1/2 months, can fall asleep without assistance, consistently. I’m pretty proud of that, because it makes my life MUCH easier. She no longer has to fall asleep nursing but can be laid down awake and put herself to sleep without a peep.

It took some work, but it always does. Not all babies are the same either. I’ve found that out in the few years I’ve done daycare, which is how I’ve now mastered it by the time I got to my own second child ;)

Don’t be disheartened if you’re trying and can’t get your child to fall asleep. Every child has their own personality and ours is easier than most, although I will admit it wasn’t perfect. I’ve had practice and heard enough babies crying while trying to fix meals for preschoolers or feed a second baby that I can tolerate a little more crying than most mothers. It’s always hardest when it’s your own, however. See my other post in Kids and family to know how I did it.

With enough sleep (and loving care), every baby can be a happy baby!

If I had known then…

April 11th, 2007 by Melanie

…what I know now, I would have had an easier time with our first child. After 2 1/2 years of daycare and four infants after our own, I can tell you a lot about getting a good night’s rest.

After the third week postpartum, I was ready for more sleep. However, that comes with the infant developing neurologically enough to sleep for long periods. Well, we got lucky to start, and my experience has helped take it further. Part of the reason new parents don’t get enough sleep is the process of putting the child to sleep or back to sleep in the middle of the night.

I now know how to make that happen so parents can maximize their sleep time.

With our first, we rocked her to sleep ALL the time. We didn’t understand how to train her to sleep on her own and I wasn’t going to let her cry herself to sleep. That only hurts a child emotionally. However, with both, we started out with the girls in our bed. With the first, it was the first two months. With our newest, I moved her to her “bed” around the 2-3 week mark. I also breastfed the first and am doing the same with the second. It provides something that bottle-feeding never will–a stronger sense of security and bonding between mother and child.
What I did different with our newest is simple. Besides moving her into her own “bed” in our room (for easy and quick access), we figured out what she wants.

The big question is “What makes my child feel secure?” When they are secure in their environment, your child will sleep better. Our number two MUST be swaddled tight. That’s her rule when she’s tired. She’ll wiggle and squirm a few times while falling asleep, but those little hands must not come free at that stage or she wakes up. After she’s been asleep awhile, it’s not as big of a deal if she gets one or both hands free. She also gets plenty of cuddling time during the day from mom and dad, and the breastfeeding gives her time to be close to me also. She relaxes then and, even when she’s overtired and fussy, will doze off when nothing else soothes her.

The second part of getting a child to sleep is to make sure they 1) have a clean diaper and 2) have a full tummy. Some babies cannot stand a soiled diaper. Our first didn’t care, but number two does. As for the second part, could you sleep very well with an empty tummy?

The next part is more complex. Training an infant to put themselves to sleep takes time, but the earlier in their life that you start, the happier everyone will be and the easier it will be.  Develop good habits early rather than trying to break bad ones later.  Please be aware that every infant is different, but figuring out your baby is up to you.  Not every technique will work for every infant, and they do take time.

The first part is to figure out what your baby needs, as I’ve already mentioned.  The next is to use that wisely.  If your infant will take a pacifier, great.  It’s a wonderful self-soother for them.  Our number two takes it only if she’s a little hungry or is overly tired, but she spits it out when she’s ready to fall into a deep sleep.  Some babies wake up when they lose their pacifier.  That’s okay.  Now, here’s the real trick–when to answer a waking infant’s cries.  When they wake in the middle of the night, let them get into a serious cry, because they may just put themselves back to sleep without any intervention, especially after the first four to six weeks.  It’s part of the sleep-training process.  You’re there, but they don’t always need you to soothe them.  Give them a chance to soothe themselves.  Only tend to them when it’s obvious they aren’t going back to sleep on their own.  This applies to naps also.

Putting an infant to sleep is a process also.  You don’t have to let them cry themselves to sleep.  In fact, give them some security and it’ll go a long ways towards giving you a good night’s rest.  A little rocking is okay, and early on you may be rocking them to sleep.  In the arms of someone who loves them, they have all the confidence in the world that every need will be met.  That’s why so many infants have a hard time sleeping alone.  Lay them down in their crib–always on their back–and step away but STAY IN THE ROOM.  This is the important part.  If they wake up don’t pick them up right away but try to soothe them by offering the pacifier, using a quiet voice, stroking their head (with that soft baby hair :) , or whatever you know works for your infant.  If they won’t settle, pick them up and start over.  Eventually they’ll tire enough to just fall asleep, but that’s to your advantage.  If they aren’t tired enough to go to sleep, then maybe they shouldn’t be going down yet.  Eventually you’ll get them on a routine, but don’t count on it until they’re at least four months old, and then if you’re lucky.
Practice this every time, not just every night.  (Being able to lay an infant down without any special attention makes it easy on your daycare provider also, especially when they have other children demanding their attention, particularly other infants.)  Gradually, you’ll be putting your infant down to sleep more alert.  My suggestion here is to make sure they are tired.  You can’t force a young infant to sleep.  Besides, they need the alert times too, just not in the middle of the night.  Nighttime is for sleeping.  As they start sleeping for longer periods, they may want to stay awake in the early AM waking.  In those instances, don’t let them.  Also, if that’s the case, you need to keep them awake for longer periods during the day.  Let them lay on the floor under a gym toy, talk to them, and simply engage them in activity.

With all I’ve learned and what it has allowed me to do with our second girl, I wanted to pass this knowledge on.  More and more often–our baby being just over nine weeks and sleeping at least eight hours through the night–we have only to recognize the signs of her tiredness, make sure she’s clean and fed, swaddle her, and lay her down in her baby bed.  She puts herself to sleep and we get ours also.

baby bragging

April 3rd, 2007 by Melanie

I must have one of the best babies of anyone I know.  How many people can only blame themselves for not getting enough sleep when they have such a good sleeper?  At five weeks, our newborn was sleeping 5 1/2 hours a night.  Since turning seven weeks old, she’s starting to put in 7-8 hours a night regularly.  The first couple of times, I worried if she was still alive.  (SIDS is something no mother wants to hear in reference to her own child.)  By the third time, I’ve gotten used to it.

She’s a great baby, like her older sister was, and I know I got lucky.  Her personality is different, but how much of that can we credit to genetics and how much to parenting?  In either case, I suppose her mom and dad can brag a bit :)

incredible shrinking woman

March 29th, 2007 by Melanie

Well, not incredible, but the weight is going in the right direction–down!  Another 1 1/2 pounds gone!  Woohoo!  I’ll be in my old clothes by the time the reason I gained the weight is baptized.

Postpartum weight loss

March 22nd, 2007 by Melanie

I have to say this here, as a way to track my progress. I recently had a baby, but put on 45 pounds. With my first, I gained 40 and lost it all within four months. My goal this time is to lose it within the same amount of time, but it’s proving harder.

At present, I have about 18 pounds left with a goal to lose another 3-5 pounds by Easter. By the end of May, I hope to have it all off and be back to an ideal weight of 110 pounds or less. Can I do it?

Although I ate right during the pregnancy, I still gained a lot of weight. I’d have had to starve myself not to. I’m now having to cut back, but I still eat. I am trying for a bowl of oatmeal every day along with fresh fruits and green veggies more than any other carbs. I cut back on refined sugars, but I found that chocolate-covered raisins have helped a lot and don’t contribute to any weight gain. In fact, for me they are helping the weight loss. A few here and there throughout the day has helped to curb the sugar cravings, and I get healthy raisins along with a little satisfying chocolate. Not a bad combination. Nursing plays its part in the weight loss, along with the regular workouts 3-4 times a week (30 minutes on the treadmill and at least another 20 minutes on the weight machines and free weights).

So, here I am marking my place towards reaching my weight loss goals. Labor was easy compared to this.