Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Sleep

Join our Sleep forum for tips on creating a sleep routine for your baby or toddler. Need more advice on your childs development? Sign up to our Ages and Stages newsletter here.

The Physics behind Your Baby's Waking Pattern !

6 replies

milkmonsters · 27/03/2010 01:13

Both of my children have always woken at exactly 1.06am (give or take a few minutes either side depending on my clock calibrations), regardless of their regular sleeping patterns, or what time they went to sleep, etc.etc.

It's not as if I go to bed at 1am either and disturb them.

Theoretically, in the same way the National Grid powers up for an energy surge in usage around 6pm every day, so too could there be some surge in microwaves at this time every night (not the cooking sort, microwaves/radiowaves/any sort of frequency) . I've also noticed around 11pm at night the lights dim or flicker for a second before restoring.

So, does anyone else have experience of this phenomena around 1am each night?

It's a Phenomena simply because it's so consistent! There's has to be a scientific reason for it.

Alternative, it'#s self-fulfilling, in that around this time each night I start thinking, "any minute now, baby's going to wake up" and that thought's transmitted to him. Sounds daft, but I bet you have also experienced moments where your baby's in a deep sleep and the hoover doesn't wake hi, but you tiptoe into the room he's asleep in completely silent and he wakes, as if he's psychically tuned in to your presence!

I don't know enough about physics to expand, but perhaps someone on mumsnet does, but it could be likely couldn't it that as baby's skulls are still so undeveloped, they could be more susceptible to absorbing (how do you spell that!?) radiowaves . As you know, human skulls block out white noise constantly, otherwise we'd all be hearing 24-hour broadcasts, we are transceivers after all, we've got an electrical spark at the literal heart of our physical make-up!

OP posts:
RubyBuckleberry · 27/03/2010 07:30

i don't know abou all the physics but my ds slept throught not one, but two blaring fire engines about ten feet away from his pram the other day.

something to do with sleep cycles?

AngelDog · 27/03/2010 11:41

Don't know about sleep cycles or the physics, but from an early age, DS decided that 8pm is when he wakes for his bedtime feed. It started off as 'somewhere between 8 and 9', and gradually settled at 8pm (at about 5 weeks - he's now 12 weeks). Attempts to persuade him any earlier that it's bedtime tend to fail if before 7.30, but are usually successful after that. Again, it appears to bear little relation to how long / when he slept before that, although if he is overtired, he'll refuse point blank to do bedtime.

LifeOfKate · 29/03/2010 14:15

Not sure about the 1.06 time, my DS isn't that predictable, but the thing about sleeping through loud stuff and then waking up with the tiniest of noises is so true!
On the same day a couple of weeks ago, DS slept through some hoovering, but woke up when DH whispered up the stairs that my dinner was on the table

AngelDog · 29/03/2010 19:51

Ah, that'd be the Hot Food Reflex, LifeOfKate - works every time. It's similar to the Just Made A Cuppa Reflex.

Lizum · 29/03/2010 22:38

OP - Might be worth reading this month's book club book.

LifeOfKate · 30/03/2010 10:26

AngelDog - yes, definitely, DS has a remarkable gift for waking up/crying/generally causing a fuss virtually every time I sit down to a meal

I don't drink hot drinks, so am thankfully exempt from the other reflex I have been known to have to put my bowl of ice cream in the freezer when he has woken up in the evening so it doesn't melt though

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread