Fulltime Mama
My name is Elizabeth, and I am the happy wife of ten years to Fabio and fulltime mama to four beautiful children: Joshua-9, Dominique 7, Israel- almost 5, Johann-3 and expecting a new baby in April 2012! We are currently living in Brazil as missionaries and life never ceases to be an adventure!!!
I love motherhood with a passion and am passionate about providing a place here at MamaKnowsBest where mothers can learn, grow, and share ... pooling the wisdom of many into one big jackpot for mothers.
"I'm sure you have
always had people ask you if you get enough sleep? I get this question all of
the time and when I tell people I actually do, I think they are more than
shocked. I mean, my baby (at 3 months old) sleeps with me for right now and her feeding is really
automatic, so I never have to fully awake to feed her. But I guess what I am
trying to get at is the fact that she does sleep well through the night, and I
don't know if this is just because we sleep together and she is breastfed, so
we don't need to wake up, or if other babies that are breastfed as well are
just "up" during those nighttime hours. Am I blessed with a good
sleeper, or do all co-sleeping, breastfed babies just naturally stay asleep
most/ all of the night?"
My Two Cents on
Co-Sleeping
Before I had my first child, I was SOLD on co-sleeping, and
I do mean with a capital “S”!And it
went great for the first while.By a
couple months old, Joshua was only waking up once or twice to nurse and
immediately go back to sleep, and this didn’t require me to get out of bed, so
it was fine with me.I never was one of
those ladies who could sleep through the nursing session, however, as my mother
had been and apparently a lot of women are, but it didn’t bother me too much
because at least I didn’t have to fully awake to nurse, and I didn’t have any
trouble getting back to sleep immediately afterward.
I was happy with his sleeping habits so far, and I reckoned
that he would naturally just sleep better and better, waking less and less,
until he was finally sleeping through the night entirely, with no effort from
me.
It didn’t work out that way. Actually, at around 6 months
old, he began waking up MORE rather than less.Then I went through the whole, “It’s probably teething” thought process
and just put up with it. He was also getting more active by this time,
including during his nighttime nursing sessions, which made it more difficult
to stay at least half-asleep through them.
Another problem we began running into was that he was so
used to ME being right next to him to sleep, that he would hardly stay asleep
unless I was right there. This meant that he barely took naps for over half an
hour or so, and at nighttime I had to basically go to bed at the same time he
did, or he would wake up as soon as he realized I wasn’t there, and we would
have to go through the whole “lay in bed with him to nurse him to sleep for
half an hour” to get him back to sleep, and again, if I tried to get up, he
would usually wake up within twenty minutes or so. It was a trying time!
So, by the time he was about 10 months old, I was very
disillusioned with co-sleeping. Joshua was waking up 7-8+ times a night to
nurse, during which he would flop back and forth from one side of me to the
other, making it impossible for me to sleep at all. He barely napped during the
day, and at night I had to go to bed at 8:00pm – or go through the LONG ritual
of getting him to sleep 2-3 times if I didn’t….
However, I had very little other option at the time because
we had moved to a TINY apartment at the time with some friends (in Japan) who were
just one paper door away from us. I had no other place to put Joshua but right
next to me, and I couldn’t let him cry or he would wake the whole house. So for
the time being, I had to grin and bear it.Until he was 15 months old and we had our own place again. That is when
he first started sleeping through the night, and I did too! It was not without
a HUGE struggle, however, to break the habits I had trained him in all that
time.
So, the next time we had a baby, I determined to not go
through that again. I still brought our baby in bed with us for the first month
or so, but I didn’t always let her sleep ON me or touching me, so that she
wouldn’t get so dependent on my presence to be able to sleep. Then, when she was
about a month old, we got a pack n play to put next to our bed and she began
sleeping there. She was still close, and I still pulled her in bed to nurse
when she would wake up at night, and sometimes fall asleep with her in our bed.
This was okay. I just didn’t make it a rule to have her there.
Sometimes I would put her in her pack n play when she was
still awake, but sleepy and recently-nursed. She thus learned to fall asleep
without having the breast in her mouth. I was not strict about this either. She
often did fall asleep while nursing, which was fine with me. I just wanted her
to be able to do both.
This arrangement worked out well, and she even took great
naps during the day, all on her own! She followed the same basic sleeping
pattern as Joshua had while he was little during the night – waking up 2-3
times to nurse and immediately go back to sleep.
Then, around six months or so, she started waking up quite a
lot more frequently, just as Joshua had.After a couple of weeks I realized that it was just because her
awareness had increased: she knew Mommy was right next to her and that made her
think she needed to be nursing all night long!So, it was at this point that we moved her pack n play into the room
next door. Worked like a charm – she immediately went to sleeping through the
night with the exception of one 5am nursing, after which she would go back to
sleep for about 2 more hours.
Since then, I have had two more babies and have done the
same thing with them. They have all followed exactly the same pattern. To a “T”.
I have talked to many, many mothers who co-sleep and have
drawn a few conclusions. Babies who co-sleep when they are older, tend to wake
up more than their non-cosleeping counterparts. Im sure there are exceptions to
this, but these are merely the conclusions I have drawn from my very informal
research.However, some mothers don’t
mind this at all and claim that they don’t even notice when the baby nurses! My
own mother was like this.
So, I am not against co-sleeping. I think that each family should
simply do what gets them the most sleep!If co-sleeping is working out well for you, super! If it ceases to work
out well, then move on to the next stage. :)
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