Why Won’t My Toddler Stay Asleep

November 21, 2011 at 10:40 pm | Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments

Jen Simon hasn’t gotten a full night’s sleep in two years. Her son, Noah, was born three weeks premature, weighing just four pounds, and almost from the time he came home from the NICU he has woken up before dawn every morning — as early as four and rarely later than 5:30 AM. And while his mother describes him as beautiful, smart, and funny, she has also nicknamed him “The Sleep Monster”.

She has tried everything. Sleep training helped a bit, and at least whittled the number of awakenings from half a dozen, to just one. A sleep consultant was a disaster. She decided that by the time Noah showed signs of being tired, he was actually over tired, and instructed Jen to never be more than a few blocks from the apartment so that she could whisk Noah into his crib at the first yawn. She also suggested putting the boy to bed at 5, which only resulted in his waking up at 3 — and also led Jen to start taking two separate antidepressants.

Jen and her husband switch off the days that they get up with Noah, but even on their off duty mornings they wake up at the sound of their partner getting out of bed. They have tried letting Noah sleep with them. That didn’t work. They tried rocking him, and playing him special sleep CDs, and reading him sleep themed books. They have just found a clock that changes colors, hoping to teach him that he must play quietly in his crib until the numbers shift from yellow to blue. They still have hope that this will work, but it hasn’t, yet. About once a month Jen has started leaving her New York apartment and moving into her childhood bedroom in Kansas City, where her mother and father wake with the baby so she can sleep. It isn’t quite as restful as she’d hoped, she says, because she hears her parents get Noah, but at least she can stay in bed.

She would like to go back to work in public relations, but she can’t imagine being this tired — she calls it Zombie Tired — and having to get herself dressed and to an office. She had always thought she would have two children, but for the moment, and possibly for the future, she says, “we have no plans.”

“I never knew that being a parent was striving for normal”, she wrote on her Facebook page. She is desperate for some advice. “People keep saying to me it gets better,” she says. “And it has gotten better. But when does it get good?”

Talk to any parent and you will find something they are “going through”, something with which they need help. If nothing else, they need an ear, and some reassurance that others have been in the same boat, that nearly everything will pass eventually, and that yes, it will get good.

Today we are launching Parentasking (what you’d get if you cross Parents Asking, and Multi-tasking, ‘natch…) a video series that takes readers’ parenting struggles and opens the floor to other readers who have been there and bring some advice. We will also touch base with experts (though the bottom line is that there really are no parenting experts, just people who have been through this before) and ask them for practical suggestions. To help Jen, we contacted Deborah Pedrick, of familysleep.com, who has been helping parents get their kids to sleep for 14 years and who is the co-founder of the International Association of Child Sleep Consultants. You can hear all she had to say in the video, but her bottom line was that by responding to Noah before dawn, his parents have taught him that it’s just dandy to wake up that early, and she had a few suggestions on how to teach him that it really truly would be better to sleep.

How about you? Have experienced you nights with the “Sleep Monster”? What worked? What didn’t? How long did the torture last?

Should Jen think about having another child? Or going back to work? Is it impossible for her to fit either of those things into her sleep deprived life at the moment? Or perhaps part of the problem is that Noah is quite clear that HE is the center of his mommy’s life. Huffington Post, Writer Lisa Belkin 11/21/11,

SIDS and other Sleep-Related Infant Deaths

November 15, 2011 at 1:04 pm | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

SIDS and other Sleep-Related Infant Deaths
Summary of Recommendations
AAP 11/1/11
(Emphasis added)

1. Back to sleep for every sleep until 1 year of life. Side sleep is not safe. Once an infant can roll from supine (back) to prone (stomach) and prone to supine, the infant can be allowed to remain in the sleep position that he or she assumes.

2. Use a firm sleep surface. Infants should not be placed for sleep on beds because of the risk of entrapment and suffocation. Sitting devices, such as car safety seats, strollers, swings, infant carriers, and infant slings, are not recommended for routine sleep. if an infant falls asleep in a sitting device, he or she should be removed from the product and moved to a crib or other appropriate flat surface as soon as is practical.

3. Room-sharing without bed-sharing is recommended. Devices promoted to make bed-sharing “safe” (eg, in-bed co-sleepers) are not recommended. Infants may be brought into the bed for feeding or comforting but should be returned to their own crib or bassinet when the parent is ready to return to sleep.

4. Keep soft objects and loose bedding out of the crib. [Bumper pads] are not recommended.

5. Pregnant women should receive regular prenatal care.

6. Avoid smoke exposure during pregnancy and after birth.

7. Avoid alcohol and illicit drug use during pregnancy and after birth.

8. Breastfeeding is recommended. The protective effect of breastfeeding increases with exclusivity.

9. Consider offering a pacifier at nap times and bedtimes. It does not need to be reinserted once the infant falls asleep…he or she should not be forced to take it.

10. Avoid overheating.

11. Infants should be immunized (because) immunizations might have a protective effect against SIDS.

12. Avoid commercial devices marketed to reduce the risk of SIDS (such as) wedges, positioners, special mattresses, and special sleep surfaces.

13. Do not use home cardiorespiratory monitors.

14. Supervised, awake tummy time is recommended. Shared from the By weissbluthmethod blog at http://weissbluthmethod.wordpress.com/

How to Handle Day Light Saving this Sunday Night

November 4, 2011 at 12:15 pm | Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment
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“OMG! The time change is coming! What do I need to do?” This is the message that Iʼm getting on my voice mail and in emails as well as from moms and dads all across the country. Okay letʼs take a deep breath…… and remember that we go through this every year. It comes and goes and we get through it just fine. You really donʼt need to worry about it. Daylight saving officially ends the first Sunday in November which this year falls on the 6th. The good news is, we gain an hour. So at 2:00 am November 6th, you will set your clock back one hour.

Who doesnʼt love getting an extra hour of sleep? Unfortunately if you are a parent, you will not share the same benefits as your childless peers because your children will be waking one hour earlier.

Well donʼt fret, remember we all get through it and forget about it until the next time
change and itʼs usually not too painful. So, with that said, what adjustments can we make to get through this as quickly and painlessly as possible?

Napping Children:

Naps:
Start the naps 1/2 hour earlier than the normal nap time. For example, if
your childʼs original nap time was 8:30 am, then make it 8:00 am instead.

Bedtime:
Since the naps are starting earlier and probably ending earlier, then
you will also need to make the bedtime earlier. A 5:00 pm bedtime might be
necessary especially for the younger babies taking two naps a day.

Transition Complete:
As the wake time inches closer to the original, the nap times will also start occurring at the normal times once again.

Children who are not napping:

Bedtime:

make it a little bit earlier, maybe a 1/2 hour if they too are getting up earlier. Once the wake time gets back to normal, so can the bedtime.

Big Kids and/or Pre-teens:

Our older children and young adults will benefit from this time change. As
it is these kids are at such a deficit of sleep due to early school times and late
nights doing homework, any amount of extra sleep will make a difference.
Overall it takes about a week for the older kids and a little more for the younger ones to come together. The only advice for the moms and dads; get yourselves earlier to bed as well. Until next time………….

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