Anonymous wrote:I have a baby boy born in September. He’s a very easy baby and is generally a good sleeper. We use the Snoo for bedtime and most naps. I started getting him on a schedule around 8 weeks. We did sleep train and put him on a schedule. He’s on a schedule with a 15 minute flexibility window. My husband has the week off and has been enjoying spending time with him. He’s has made comments about how I’m too strict with a schedule. He has wanted to play with him or FaceTime when it’s nap time and I’ve had to tell him wait until the next wake cycle. He has said I’m too strict and he should be able to spend as much time with his baby whenever he wants. I told then he can deal with him when he has a crying bout because he’s overtired and won’t go to sleep. He called me mean. Who is right?
Anonymous wrote:He doesn’t eat throughout the night at his age ??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A one hour wake window is very reasonable for a baby that age! I don’t know what these people are talking about. Does your husband not get that keeping the baby up will make the baby cranky?
OP here. He’s awake for longer than that now. He usually is up for 75-90 minutes and then about two hours before bedtime.
He thinks he sleeps too much and that he would sleeps 12 hours at night like our friends baby if we kept him up for longer. Her baby requires less sleep. I told him all babies are different, and 8 hours at night ( 11 hours with dream feed) is good for a baby his age.
Holy crap, your husband doesn’t know how good he has it. My ten month old does nine hours until his first wakeup if I’m lucky. Six if I’m unlucky. And that’s with serious efforts at sleep training.
Anonymous wrote:He doesn’t eat throughout the night at his age ??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A one hour wake window is very reasonable for a baby that age! I don’t know what these people are talking about. Does your husband not get that keeping the baby up will make the baby cranky?
OP here. He’s awake for longer than that now. He usually is up for 75-90 minutes and then about two hours before bedtime.
He thinks he sleeps too much and that he would sleeps 12 hours at night like our friends baby if we kept him up for longer. Her baby requires less sleep. I told him all babies are different, and 8 hours at night ( 11 hours with dream feed) is good for a baby his age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What type of schedule is your baby on? Does he not get to spend time with your baby at all?
OP here. His schedule is
Feedings - 7am, 10am, 1pm, 4pm, and 6pm, 7:30pm, and 10pm.
Naps: 8:15-10am, 11:30-1pm, 2:30-4pm, 5:30-6pm. Bedtime at 8. Wakes up at 7am.
He was a mess for the first 8 weeks because he rarely showed signs of being tired until it was too late and then would cry for 30 minutes while I tried to get him down. He was always fussy. I read a book and realized I was keeping him awake too long. I started following wake windows and everything fell into place. He is a much happier baby now. He is 9.5 weeks old and has been following this routine for about two weeks. It may change but at least I know what to do now.
That is way too much sleep for a baby. My kids never slept more that much. Keep him awake and play with him. Stop forcing him to go to sleep.
New Poster here. He's not even 10 weeks old. This isn't a lot of sleep for a kid this age.
Anonymous wrote:A one hour wake window is very reasonable for a baby that age! I don’t know what these people are talking about. Does your husband not get that keeping the baby up will make the baby cranky?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What type of schedule is your baby on? Does he not get to spend time with your baby at all?
OP here. His schedule is
Feedings - 7am, 10am, 1pm, 4pm, and 6pm, 7:30pm, and 10pm.
Naps: 8:15-10am, 11:30-1pm, 2:30-4pm, 5:30-6pm. Bedtime at 8. Wakes up at 7am.
He was a mess for the first 8 weeks because he rarely showed signs of being tired until it was too late and then would cry for 30 minutes while I tried to get him down. He was always fussy. I read a book and realized I was keeping him awake too long. I started following wake windows and everything fell into place. He is a much happier baby now. He is 9.5 weeks old and has been following this routine for about two weeks. It may change but at least I know what to do now.
That is way too much sleep for a baby. My kids never slept more that much. Keep him awake and play with him. Stop forcing him to go to sleep.
Anonymous wrote:He doesn’t eat throughout the night at his age ??
Anonymous wrote:He doesn’t eat throughout the night at his age ??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What type of schedule is your baby on? Does he not get to spend time with your baby at all?
OP here. His schedule is
Feedings - 7am, 10am, 1pm, 4pm, and 6pm, 7:30pm, and 10pm.
Naps: 8:15-10am, 11:30-1pm, 2:30-4pm, 5:30-6pm. Bedtime at 8. Wakes up at 7am.
He was a mess for the first 8 weeks because he rarely showed signs of being tired until it was too late and then would cry for 30 minutes while I tried to get him down. He was always fussy. I read a book and realized I was keeping him awake too long. I started following wake windows and everything fell into place. He is a much happier baby now. He is 9.5 weeks old and has been following this routine for about two weeks. It may change but at least I know what to do now.
That is way too much sleep for a baby. My kids never slept more that much. Keep him awake and play with him. Stop forcing him to go to sleep.
Anonymous wrote:OP, that baby is going to change his own schedule soon enough. You will learn that just as you think you find what you baby likes, they become a whole new baby. A lot of it has to do with your baby’s natural disposition and not as much of your choices as you think. That’s why you will see a lot of response on this forum calling people out as first time parents when they talk about how they did this magic thing that made their baby a good sleeper/eater/whatever. Then we learn that when we do the exact same thing with another kid, it has no effect at all.
Let dad play with his baby.