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Recommendations for gentle sleep training resources

4 replies

Paris2019 · 11/08/2021 10:27

My 8 mo DS has always been a bad sleeper. We've been co-sleeping but it's getting harder now he's more mobile and I'm just getting so tired of the 2-hourly wake-ups. I'm on the fence about sleep training but feel like something needs to change, especially as my return to work is looming. What books / resources can people recommend for gentle sleep training?

OP posts:
Thinkingthinking · 11/08/2021 10:30

Following as I'm in the same boat (although my DC is nearly 2 Confused)

gemwhitt · 11/08/2021 18:56

This was me with my baby when he was 7 months. I bought the Lucy Wolfe Sleep Solution Book. Read it. Followed all the advice. And it took my 7 month old from co-sleeping and waking hourly to sleeping 7-7. It's excellent. She really knows her stuff and also posts a lot of content on Instagram. Lots there about feeding and wake windows, night weaning, and lots of trouble shooting.
Her biggest piece of advice is to not let them get over tired.
I have to say though. The book did take us most of the way there but after a few weeks of following the advice in the book I did one night of controlled crying and that was the icing on the cake. Just helped him seal the deal on learning to fall asleep in his own. Honestly couldn't have done it without that book and I keep coming back to it for advice on travel, etc.

tryingmommy · 11/08/2021 21:01

First, it’s important to understand that co-sleeping is not magic. Although some proponents of the family bed would disagree, numerous couples have reported that their babies did not necessarily sleep deeper or longer because their parents were close by. In fact, some parents found that their child slept longer and woke less frequently when they stopped co-sleeping and moved him into his own crib.
However, whether families choose to co-sleep or have their children sleep independently is a personal decision, and if both parents and child are safe, rested, and fulfilled, then co-sleeping is nothing to worry about.
If you decide do co-sleep, this commitment requires some very careful thinking about what you and your spouse feel is right for you as individuals, as a couple, and as a family.
Ask yourselves the following questions:
• Is it nice to think about enjoying the coziness of sleeping in close proximity, or does one or more of us tend to stay active during sleeping – potentially disrupting the others?
• Does everyone in our family want to co-sleep, or are we leaning toward it because one of us feels strongly?
• Are we willing to commit to being quiet after our child falls asleep, or do we like to watch TV or talk in bed?
• Will we enjoy being able to feed our baby more often throughout the night, or will having him next to us make it tougher to wean nighttime feeds?
• Are we agreeable to getting into bed when our child does, to ensure his safety?
• For working parents, does sleeping next to our child allow us to feel more connected to him?
As expected, co-sleeping has both advantages and disadvantages.
Let’s take a closer look at them.

Advantages:
• Constant closeness whenever the child is awake. Many children and parents enjoy this feeling.
• Immediate action and support for any sleep-related problem
• The ability to nurse and respond to other nighttime wakings without getting up
• More time to spend with the child
• Possibly better sleep for both the child and the parents, if the child was sleeping poorly to begin with
Disadvantages:
• Parents may sleep poorly if their children are restless sleepers
• Parents may end up sleeping in separate rooms, and they may become angry at their child or with each other
• Children’s and adults’ sleep cycles do not coincide
• Parents may have to go to bed at a very early hour with their children and be left with little time for their own evening activities
• Parents have little privacy
• There may be a slight increase in the risk to the infant from SIDS and related causes.

The decision to co-sleep should be yours, made by the parent – or parents – and based on your own personal philosophies, not on pressure from your child or anyone else. Another family’s good or bad experience with co-sleeping should not influence your decision: your child is unique and your family is not the same.

Recommendations for gentle sleep training resources
OaxacaChihuahua · 12/08/2021 05:52

I second Lucy Wolfe. Took my baby from waking every hour while co-sleeping to sleeping 9 hours unbroken in his cot. He still wakes at 4am but we are a million times better off than we were.

I loved that it didn’t ever involve leaving him to cry. It took us a bit longer than the book suggested, but by 4-5 weeks after we started we were reliably getting it so he slept through most nights. It was an absolute game changer for us.

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