Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After 6 weeks, your baby should start to sleep through the night. The only thing sleeping in the baby's room is going to do is wake the baby up. Get a sleep monitor and sleep peacefully in your room. It is common for the baby to wake up a bit at night and chat to his or herself - only rush in if the baby does not seem to be able to self soothe after 5 or 10 minutes.
***Time to you will seem to go very slowly. The baby will not feel abandoned if you let him or her try to self soothe for 10 minutes.
Make sure it is seriously dark in the baby's room - black out curtains are a must because babies are very tuned in to small changes in light and you don't want to be waking up at 5am every day this summer.
This advice will save you years of sleep problems. (Mom of 5 here - ask me how I know!)
OP here - FTM but everything I have ever read about safe sleep practices indicates that room sharing is important for the first 6 months...
You do not need to room share for 6 months. My son was in our room for 6 weeks and then we transitioned him to his own nursery (right next to our room) and he immediately started sleeping 8-9 hours straight.
Anonymous wrote:After 6 weeks, your baby should start to sleep through the night. The only thing sleeping in the baby's room is going to do is wake the baby up. Get a sleep monitor and sleep peacefully in your room. It is common for the baby to wake up a bit at night and chat to his or herself - only rush in if the baby does not seem to be able to self soothe after 5 or 10 minutes.
***Time to you will seem to go very slowly. The baby will not feel abandoned if you let him or her try to self soothe for 10 minutes.
Make sure it is seriously dark in the baby's room - black out curtains are a must because babies are very tuned in to small changes in light and you don't want to be waking up at 5am every day this summer.
This advice will save you years of sleep problems. (Mom of 5 here - ask me how I know!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:After 6 weeks, your baby should start to sleep through the night. The only thing sleeping in the baby's room is going to do is wake the baby up. Get a sleep monitor and sleep peacefully in your room. It is common for the baby to wake up a bit at night and chat to his or herself - only rush in if the baby does not seem to be able to self soothe after 5 or 10 minutes.
***Time to you will seem to go very slowly. The baby will not feel abandoned if you let him or her try to self soothe for 10 minutes.
Make sure it is seriously dark in the baby's room - black out curtains are a must because babies are very tuned in to small changes in light and you don't want to be waking up at 5am every day this summer.
This advice will save you years of sleep problems. (Mom of 5 here - ask me how I know!)
OP here - FTM but everything I have ever read about safe sleep practices indicates that room sharing is important for the first 6 months...
Anonymous wrote:After 6 weeks, your baby should start to sleep through the night. The only thing sleeping in the baby's room is going to do is wake the baby up. Get a sleep monitor and sleep peacefully in your room. It is common for the baby to wake up a bit at night and chat to his or herself - only rush in if the baby does not seem to be able to self soothe after 5 or 10 minutes.
***Time to you will seem to go very slowly. The baby will not feel abandoned if you let him or her try to self soothe for 10 minutes.
Make sure it is seriously dark in the baby's room - black out curtains are a must because babies are very tuned in to small changes in light and you don't want to be waking up at 5am every day this summer.
This advice will save you years of sleep problems. (Mom of 5 here - ask me how I know!)
Anonymous wrote:Hi everyone, we are due in a few months and after the first few weeks all together (bassinet in master bedroom) are considering doing a shift sleeping schedule where each parent sleeps half the night in a twin bed in the baby's room, switching in the middle of the night. Our master bedroom is very small and we are both light sleepers, so we figure this is the best way to ensure we are both able to get a decent chunk of hours in a row each night while still practicing room sharing for baby's safety. I do not plan on EBF, so that is not a concern.
Did anyone else either do or try this? Are there any drawbacks we're not thinking of or any tips to make this work well?
Anonymous wrote:We did shift sleeping like this for about the first 6-8 weeks. It was important to us that both of us got adequate sleep. It worked quite well. I wouldn’t say we were full of energy and super well rested but neither of us was delirious with sleep deprivation. Around 6-8 weeks, we dropped it as the baby started sleeping longer stretches.
We actually did not ever room share, in the formal sense— our baby was always in her own room/crib, with black out shades and low white noise going. We stopped sleeping in her room when we stopped sleeping in shifts and just used a baby monitor instead. I agree that the “room until 6 months” advice is just a rough guideline and doesn’t need to be followed to the point that you or your parent needs to literally sleep in the baby’s room until they are 6 months.
Btw, you’ll see a lot of advice and guidelines when you become a parent. Sometimes the advice makes sense for your family, sometimes it doesn’t, sometimes it’s well-supported by evidence, sometimes it’s not. And sometimes what is advised in the US is actually counter to other countries, etc. This is one of those guidelines that I think does not need to be followed to the letter as long as you practice other safe sleep things— nothing in the crib until a certain age, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never understood how sleeping in the same room helps to prevent SIDS. If you are asleep, how would you know if your baby stops breathing?
My understanding is that hearing the rhythm of your breathing helps the baby maintain their rhythm. But I think it's also one of those mysteries.
Same room is easier, I think. I don't know for sure, because we didn't try having them in their own room, but it just makes sense that if you're getting up a lot, not having to go far works.
I think your idea of a twin bed in the other room is a good one.
Anonymous wrote:I've never understood how sleeping in the same room helps to prevent SIDS. If you are asleep, how would you know if your baby stops breathing?