Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at all the PPs thinking they know better than OP what her baby needs. Are you all like this IRL?
The baby will outgrow this sleep cycle quite soon. But the damage to the relationship and OP ensuring that she will be the default parent will last a really long time. Sometimes you have to look at the long game.
OP here. I am the main person with him all day. I know what he needs and I have made a routine that works for him. He’s not the one that has to care for him while he cries for 30 minutes because he’s overtired. He’s not the one that had to deal with a fussy baby all day. I was and I did something about it.
My husband works 7/8am - 5/6pm during the week. He takes a break around lunch to play with him and during the 6-7pm time. He spends a lot of time with him on the weekends.
But your initial post said it was his week off. For his week off would allow more flexibility as long as he (dad) is willing accept/deal with consequences. Dad bonding/learning time with baby is more important. When he is back at work - go back to your rules. It’s just one precious week. Let dad take charge and take some “you” time.
OP here. That would throw everything off. He doesn’t do well with crying and immediately passes the baby off to me when he cries for more than a couple of minutes. He won’t be the one to calm him and get him to sleep. I will and that’s why I feel like i should do the things my way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're right. But you should let him try to skip nap once and then see how cranky and un-fun the baby is.
There should be plenty of time for play during your baby's awake times, anyway. And in a few weeks your baby is going to have even longer awake times so it won't be as much of an issue.
Great time to leave the house for a 2-3 hour errand!
Anonymous wrote:You're right. But you should let him try to skip nap once and then see how cranky and un-fun the baby is.
There should be plenty of time for play during your baby's awake times, anyway. And in a few weeks your baby is going to have even longer awake times so it won't be as much of an issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at all the PPs thinking they know better than OP what her baby needs. Are you all like this IRL?
The baby will outgrow this sleep cycle quite soon. But the damage to the relationship and OP ensuring that she will be the default parent will last a really long time. Sometimes you have to look at the long game.
OP here. I am the main person with him all day. I know what he needs and I have made a routine that works for him. He’s not the one that has to care for him while he cries for 30 minutes because he’s overtired. He’s not the one that had to deal with a fussy baby all day. I was and I did something about it.
My husband works 7/8am - 5/6pm during the week. He takes a break around lunch to play with him and during the 6-7pm time. He spends a lot of time with him on the weekends.
But your initial post said it was his week off. For his week off would allow more flexibility as long as he (dad) is willing accept/deal with consequences. Dad bonding/learning time with baby is more important. When he is back at work - go back to your rules. It’s just one precious week. Let dad take charge and take some “you” time.
OP here. That would throw everything off. He doesn’t do well with crying and immediately passes the baby off to me when he cries for more than a couple of minutes. He won’t be the one to calm him and get him to sleep. I will and that’s why I feel like i should do the things my way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at all the PPs thinking they know better than OP what her baby needs. Are you all like this IRL?
The baby will outgrow this sleep cycle quite soon. But the damage to the relationship and OP ensuring that she will be the default parent will last a really long time. Sometimes you have to look at the long game.
OP here. I am the main person with him all day. I know what he needs and I have made a routine that works for him. He’s not the one that has to care for him while he cries for 30 minutes because he’s overtired. He’s not the one that had to deal with a fussy baby all day. I was and I did something about it.
My husband works 7/8am - 5/6pm during the week. He takes a break around lunch to play with him and during the 6-7pm time. He spends a lot of time with him on the weekends.
But your initial post said it was his week off. For his week off would allow more flexibility as long as he (dad) is willing accept/deal with consequences. Dad bonding/learning time with baby is more important. When he is back at work - go back to your rules. It’s just one precious week. Let dad take charge and take some “you” time.
OP here. That would throw everything off. He doesn’t do well with crying and immediately passes the baby off to me when he cries for more than a couple of minutes. He won’t be the one to calm him and get him to sleep. I will and that’s why I feel like i should do the things my way.
“Frank, if you and the baby FaceTime your cousin Jim right now, the baby will be overtired and screaming, and you’re not going to be the one dealing with it. Please call Jim later.” What would he say?
OP here. He gets annoyed and will say that it’s his baby too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He doesn’t eat throughout the night at his age ??
It sounds like he eats too much. Both of my babies ate 24-28oz, and didn’t start eating more than 24oz until 3-4 months old. Her baby eats 28-32oz which is a lot for a 9 week old baby.
OP here. The pediatrician said 24-32oz/day is normal. He eats a lot but he is not a big baby. We feed him what he wants. We don’t make him eat if he’s not hungry.
At least you feed him on demand. Why can't he sleep on demand?
Babies that age don't get overtired. They sleep when they sleep. They wake up when they wake up.
It's only when they are older that they can be stimulated and kept up. I think... I mean unless your husband is just turning on loud music and doing active playing with a newborn which would be pretty weird.
What? Of course a newborn can get overtired. That's baby 101. When a baby gets overtired That's when they need extra help (like walking or bouncing or a ride in the stroller) to get to sleep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at all the PPs thinking they know better than OP what her baby needs. Are you all like this IRL?
The baby will outgrow this sleep cycle quite soon. But the damage to the relationship and OP ensuring that she will be the default parent will last a really long time. Sometimes you have to look at the long game.
OP here. I am the main person with him all day. I know what he needs and I have made a routine that works for him. He’s not the one that has to care for him while he cries for 30 minutes because he’s overtired. He’s not the one that had to deal with a fussy baby all day. I was and I did something about it.
My husband works 7/8am - 5/6pm during the week. He takes a break around lunch to play with him and during the 6-7pm time. He spends a lot of time with him on the weekends.
But your initial post said it was his week off. For his week off would allow more flexibility as long as he (dad) is willing accept/deal with consequences. Dad bonding/learning time with baby is more important. When he is back at work - go back to your rules. It’s just one precious week. Let dad take charge and take some “you” time.
OP here. That would throw everything off. He doesn’t do well with crying and immediately passes the baby off to me when he cries for more than a couple of minutes. He won’t be the one to calm him and get him to sleep. I will and that’s why I feel like i should do the things my way.
“Frank, if you and the baby FaceTime your cousin Jim right now, the baby will be overtired and screaming, and you’re not going to be the one dealing with it. Please call Jim later.” What would he say?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at all the PPs thinking they know better than OP what her baby needs. Are you all like this IRL?
op thinks she knows better than her husband what his baby needs, so 50/50 she's wrong.
Anonymous wrote:OP, can your DH be the one to put him to nap? So he's spending time with baby, but still respecting the schedule?
I agree that your baby is a week or two away from being a lot more awake on a regular basis, so some of this is somewhat moot. But at this age it's not about play/not play. It's just about actively caring for the baby.
Also, please do bear in mind that soon your baby will want to be more awake...and you need to let him. My SIL (baby born in June) really struggled with that transition to needing to let the baby just experience the world, because she had invested so much energy in monitoring the routine. As I'm sure you know, it's critical for development that around 12weeks babies really start to see and interact with the world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at all the PPs thinking they know better than OP what her baby needs. Are you all like this IRL?
The baby will outgrow this sleep cycle quite soon. But the damage to the relationship and OP ensuring that she will be the default parent will last a really long time. Sometimes you have to look at the long game.
OP here. I am the main person with him all day. I know what he needs and I have made a routine that works for him. He’s not the one that has to care for him while he cries for 30 minutes because he’s overtired. He’s not the one that had to deal with a fussy baby all day. I was and I did something about it.
My husband works 7/8am - 5/6pm during the week. He takes a break around lunch to play with him and during the 6-7pm time. He spends a lot of time with him on the weekends.
But your initial post said it was his week off. For his week off would allow more flexibility as long as he (dad) is willing accept/deal with consequences. Dad bonding/learning time with baby is more important. When he is back at work - go back to your rules. It’s just one precious week. Let dad take charge and take some “you” time.
OP here. That would throw everything off. He doesn’t do well with crying and immediately passes the baby off to me when he cries for more than a couple of minutes. He won’t be the one to calm him and get him to sleep. I will and that’s why I feel like i should do the things my way.
Anonymous wrote:at all the PPs thinking they know better than OP what her baby needs. Are you all like this IRL?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:at all the PPs thinking they know better than OP what her baby needs. Are you all like this IRL?
The baby will outgrow this sleep cycle quite soon. But the damage to the relationship and OP ensuring that she will be the default parent will last a really long time. Sometimes you have to look at the long game.
OP here. I am the main person with him all day. I know what he needs and I have made a routine that works for him. He’s not the one that has to care for him while he cries for 30 minutes because he’s overtired. He’s not the one that had to deal with a fussy baby all day. I was and I did something about it.
My husband works 7/8am - 5/6pm during the week. He takes a break around lunch to play with him and during the 6-7pm time. He spends a lot of time with him on the weekends.
But your initial post said it was his week off. For his week off would allow more flexibility as long as he (dad) is willing accept/deal with consequences. Dad bonding/learning time with baby is more important. When he is back at work - go back to your rules. It’s just one precious week. Let dad take charge and take some “you” time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He doesn’t eat throughout the night at his age ??
It sounds like he eats too much. Both of my babies ate 24-28oz, and didn’t start eating more than 24oz until 3-4 months old. Her baby eats 28-32oz which is a lot for a 9 week old baby.
OP here. The pediatrician said 24-32oz/day is normal. He eats a lot but he is not a big baby. We feed him what he wants. We don’t make him eat if he’s not hungry.
At least you feed him on demand. Why can't he sleep on demand?
Babies that age don't get overtired. They sleep when they sleep. They wake up when they wake up.
It's only when they are older that they can be stimulated and kept up. I think... I mean unless your husband is just turning on loud music and doing active playing with a newborn which would be pretty weird.