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Cas, how about reclaiming your bed and helping him
to sleep near you as a copromise?
You have already said that he is more contented
when he sleeps beside you. If the objective is to get as much sleep as possible,
perhaps a sidecar arrangement would work best?
Place his cost or a single bed, beside your bed, up
against the wall. Then push your bed up against that. Remove the bars off one
side of the cot so you can reach him easily. This gives you and your husband
enough space, while also giving him the closeness that he is
craving.
I think within our society we are so completely
focused on having the baby in another room, we lose sight of the fact that what
is most important is what works, rather than what our friends are all doing or
what a book tells us is right.
Many times I will hear mothers identify what works
best, i.e. having the baby in bed, but they will then say in the next breath
"but I don't want to get into that habit" or "I don't want to go down that
path". What do you think would happen if you did make that choice? Unlikely the
baby would still be there when he was 5 years old although if he was and you
were all still sleeping, would that bother you? And if so, why? What would be
your concerns?
Before you can find a solution, you first need to
identify your priorities and your concerns/fears. If having the baby in your bed
works but it would cause you excessive distress then this may not be the option.
As a mum of 4 who chose co sleeping with babies 2,3 and 4, a childbirth educator
and a doula, I have to say that any fears about the baby being spoilt or never
moving into their own room are unwarranted. My kids have all moved quite
comfortably to their own beds at around 3-4 years of age. Exactly the same time
that otehr friends who insisted on cots in seprate rooms had children who
started to settle better at night.
It doesn't really appear to makea lot of difference which method you try in terms of getting them to sleep through the night. Several points to remember: 1. Some babies just do sleep through night
regardless of what their parents do or don't do - it is just luck of the
draw
2. Some babies need more close connection with
their parents for the first 3 years
3. It is more important to get sleep than to have
good intentions - without sleep you have no ability to carry through the
good intentions anyway!
4. Most babies tend to settle a lot more once they
get beyond 3 years - regardless of what you did in the first 3
years
Think about why him being in his own bed is so
important to you. Is it because of preconcdeived ideas about what constitutes a
good mother? Or what other's expectations of you are? Or having to explain to
other people (perhaps not tewlling anyone else is a viable alternative
here!)
Good luck. Having had my first child who did not
sleep through the night until he was four years old and after sharing countless
sleepless nights with him, I can completely empathise.
Nikki Macfarlane
Director, Childbrith International
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Title: Message
- [ozmidwifery] Rural Victoria Issues Mary Doyle
- [ozmidwifery] sleep issues Wayne and Cas
- RE: [ozmidwifery] sleep issues Nikki Macfarlane
- RE: [ozmidwifery] sleep issues Wayne and Cas
- RE: [ozmidwifery] sleep issues Jo Bourne
- Re: [ozmidwifery] sleep issues Pinky McKay
- Re: [ozmidwifery] sleep issues Pinky McKay
- Re: [ozmidwifery] sleep issues Nicole Christensen
- RE: [ozmidwifery] sleep issues Wendy Taberer
- Re: [ozmidwifery] sleep issues Tania Smallwood
- RE: [ozmidwifery] sleep issues Juliana Brennan
