Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let the baby sleep in bed with you. It will solve all your problems.
OP here. Neither of us sleep while in bed with him. Even then he wakes up multiple times. It has not solved any problems. Co-sleeping isn’t some magical cure.
Please look into reflux. Babies with reflux do not sleep. Or when they drift off it is while being held upright. Your wife surely put the baby down when newborn? Did you baby not sleep as a newborn? If the only way your baby slept as a newborn was on you, something is wrong with your boy. Something hurts.
OP here. Our baby doesn’t have reflux.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let the baby sleep in bed with you. It will solve all your problems.
OP here. Neither of us sleep while in bed with him. Even then he wakes up multiple times. It has not solved any problems. Co-sleeping isn’t some magical cure.
Please look into reflux. Babies with reflux do not sleep. Or when they drift off it is while being held upright. Your wife surely put the baby down when newborn? Did you baby not sleep as a newborn? If the only way your baby slept as a newborn was on you, something is wrong with your boy. Something hurts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let the baby sleep in bed with you. It will solve all your problems.
OP here. Neither of us sleep while in bed with him. Even then he wakes up multiple times. It has not solved any problems. Co-sleeping isn’t some magical cure.
Please look into reflux. Babies with reflux do not sleep. Or when they drift off it is while being held upright. Your wife surely put the baby down when newborn? Did you baby not sleep as a newborn? If the only way your baby slept as a newborn was on you, something is wrong with your boy. Something hurts.
Not all babies who don’t sleep have reflux. A large majority needs to taught how to sleep and they don’t have reflux. It sounds like the baby is used to being held and rocked to sleep that he can’t self-soothe. I doubt it has anything to do with reflux.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let the baby sleep in bed with you. It will solve all your problems.
OP here. Neither of us sleep while in bed with him. Even then he wakes up multiple times. It has not solved any problems. Co-sleeping isn’t some magical cure.
Please look into reflux. Babies with reflux do not sleep. Or when they drift off it is while being held upright. Your wife surely put the baby down when newborn? Did you baby not sleep as a newborn? If the only way your baby slept as a newborn was on you, something is wrong with your boy. Something hurts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let the baby sleep in bed with you. It will solve all your problems.
OP here. Neither of us sleep while in bed with him. Even then he wakes up multiple times. It has not solved any problems. Co-sleeping isn’t some magical cure.
Please look into reflux. Babies with reflux do not sleep. Or when they drift off it is while being held upright. Your wife surely put the baby down when newborn? Did you baby not sleep as a newborn? If the only way your baby slept as a newborn was on you, something is wrong with your boy. Something hurts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let the baby sleep in bed with you. It will solve all your problems.
OP here. Neither of us sleep while in bed with him. Even then he wakes up multiple times. It has not solved any problems. Co-sleeping isn’t some magical cure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course it’s possible that OP just has a very difficult baby, but they’ve never practiced or tried to get to independent sleep, so they don’t really know.
+1. OP, you’re the one doing nights by yourself, so you get to parent how you want. Read all the sleep stuff, make sure you’re keeping lights off, no play time at night, no rocking, give the baby exactly what they need (food/diaper/pat on the back), then back to bed. They need to learn that nights are for sleeping.
To all these posters, if this were the wife saying she was doing everything at night, husband wasn’t helping at all, but was dictating how she does it, you’d all call him a controlling ass and tell her to “leave him now, before it’s too late”.
I thought they are both doing nights? Either way, if she doesn't want to try to independent sleep, then she can do 100% of nights. She sounds bananas. Please tell me you are vaccinating your kid at least.
OP here. I do the evening routine, night wake ups, and morning with him. We are very pro vaccine.
Anonymous wrote:Are you planning to have you child attend daycare in the future? It is very difficult for the younger ones to go from attachment parenting to a group care setting.
Practise the self soothing when the little one is fully awake and fed. If fussing, start stretching out how long before you scoop up. Sing and talk in calming voices saying you will be there soon and all is okay. This way the little one can start getting used to not being held all the time, and practise self soothing for short stretches to start.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course it’s possible that OP just has a very difficult baby, but they’ve never practiced or tried to get to independent sleep, so they don’t really know.
+1. OP, you’re the one doing nights by yourself, so you get to parent how you want. Read all the sleep stuff, make sure you’re keeping lights off, no play time at night, no rocking, give the baby exactly what they need (food/diaper/pat on the back), then back to bed. They need to learn that nights are for sleeping.
To all these posters, if this were the wife saying she was doing everything at night, husband wasn’t helping at all, but was dictating how she does it, you’d all call him a controlling ass and tell her to “leave him now, before it’s too late”.
I thought they are both doing nights? Either way, if she doesn't want to try to independent sleep, then she can do 100% of nights. She sounds bananas. Please tell me you are vaccinating your kid at least.