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Newborn Babies and Sleep
By
Elizabeth Pantley, Author of
the No-Cry Sleep Solution
Congratulations on the birth of your new
baby. This is a glorious time in your life. Whether this is your first
baby or your fifth, you will find this a time of recovery, adjustment,
sometimes confusion and frustration, but — most wonderfully — of falling
in love.
Babies younger than four months old have very
different sleep needs than older babies. This article will help you
understand your newborn baby’s developing sleep patterns, and will help
you develop reasonable expectations when it comes to your baby and sleep.
Read, Learn, and
Beware of Bad Advice
Absolutely everyone has an opinion about how
you should handle sleep issues with your new baby. The danger to a new
parent is that these tidbits of misguided advice (no matter how
well-intentioned) can truly have a negative effect on our parenting skills
and, by extension, our babies’ development…if we are not aware of the
facts. The more knowledge you have the less likely that other people
will make you doubt your parenting decisions.
When you have your facts straight, and when you have
a parenting plan, you will be able to respond with confidence to those who
are well-meaning but offering contrary or incorrect advice. So, your first
step is to get smart! Know what you are doing, and know why
you are doing it. Read books and magazines, attend classes or support
groups – it all helps.
The Biology of Newborn
Sleep
During the early months of your baby's life, he
sleeps when he is tired, it’s really that simple. You can do very little
to force a new baby to sleep when he doesn’t want to sleep, and
conversely, you can do little to wake him up when he is sleeping soundly.
A very important point to understand about newborn babies is that they
have very, very tiny tummies. New babies grow rapidly, their diet is
liquid, and it digests quickly. Formula digests quickly and breast milk
digests even more rapidly. Although it would be nice to lay your little
bundle down at a predetermined bedtime and not hear a peep from him until
morning, even the most naïve among us know that this is not a realistic
goal for a tiny baby. Newborns need to be fed every two to four hours —
and sometimes more.
During those early months, your baby will have
tremendous growth spurts that affect not only daytime, but also nighttime
feeding as well, sometimes pushing that two- to four-hour schedule to a
one- to two-hour schedule around the clock.
Sleeping “through the night”
You have probably heard that babies should start
"sleeping through the night" at about two to four months of age. What you
must understand is that, for a new baby, a five-hour stretch is a
full night. Many (but nowhere near all) babies at this age can
sleep uninterrupted from midnight to 5 a.m. (Not that they always do.) A
far cry from what you may have thought "sleeping through the night"
meant!
What's more, while the scientific definition of
“sleeping through the night” is five hours, most of us wouldn’t consider
that anywhere near a full night’s sleep for ourselves. Also, some of these
sleep-through-the-nighters will suddenly begin waking more frequently, and
it’s often a full year or even two until your little one will settle into
a mature, all-night, every night sleep pattern.
Falling Asleep at the
Breast or Bottle
It is very natural for a newborn to fall asleep while
sucking at the breast, a bottle, or a pacifier. When a baby always
falls asleep this way, he learns to associate sucking with falling asleep;
over time, he cannot fall asleep any other way. I have heard a number of
sleep experts refer to this as a “negative sleep association.” I certainly
disagree, and so would my baby. It is probably the most positive, natural,
pleasant sleep association a baby can have. However, a large percentage of
parents who are struggling with older babies who cannot fall asleep or
stay asleep are fighting this natural and powerful sucking-to-sleep
association.
Therefore, if you want your baby to be able to fall
asleep without your help, it is essential that you sometimes let
your newborn baby suck until he is sleepy, but not totally asleep. When
you can, remove the breast, bottle, or pacifier from his mouth and let him
finish falling asleep without something in his mouth. When you do this,
your baby may resist, root, and fuss to regain the nipple. It’s perfectly
okay to give him back the breast, bottle, or pacifier and start over a few
minutes later. If you do this often enough, he will eventually learn how
to fall asleep without sucking.
Waking for Night
Feedings
Many pediatricians recommend that parents shouldn't
let a newborn sleep longer than three or four hours
without
feeding, and
the vast majority of babies wake far more frequently than that.
(There are a few exceptional babies who can go longer.) No matter what,
your baby will wake up during the night. The key is to learn when
you should pick her up for a night feeding and when you can let her go
back to sleep on her own.
This is a time when you need to focus your instincts
and intuition. This is when you should try very hard to learn how to read
your baby’s signals. Here’s a tip that is critically important for you to
know. Babies make many sleeping sounds, from grunts to whimpers to
outright cries, and these noises don’t always signal awakening. These are
what I call sleeping noises, and your baby is nearly or even totally
asleep during these episodes. I remember when my first baby, Angela, was a
newborn. Her cry awakened me many times, yet she was asleep in my arms
before I even made it from cradle to rocking chair. She was making
sleeping noises. In my desire to respond to my baby’s every cry, I
actually taught her to wake up more often!
You need to listen and watch your baby carefully.
Learn to differentiate between these sleeping sounds and awake and hungry
sounds. If she is awake and hungry, you’ll want to feed her as quickly as
possible. If you respond immediately when she is hungry, she will most
likely go back to sleep quickly. But, if you let her cry escalate, she
will wake herself up totally, and it will be harder and take longer for
her to go back to sleep. Not to mention that you will then be wide
awake, too!
Help Your Baby
Distinguish Day from Night
A newborn baby sleeps about sixteen to eighteen hours
per day, and this sleep is distributed evenly over six to seven brief
sleep periods. You can help your baby distinguish between nighttime sleep
and daytime sleep, and thus help him sleep longer periods at night.
Begin by having your baby take his daytime naps in a
lit room where he can hear the noises of the day, perhaps a bassinet or
cradle located in the main area of your home. Make nighttime sleep dark
and quiet. You can also help your baby differentiate day naps from night
sleep by using a nightly bath and a change into sleeping pajamas to signal
the difference between the two.
Watch for Signs of
Tiredness
One way to encourage good sleep is to get familiar
with your baby's sleepy signals and put her down to sleep as soon as she
seems tired. A baby cannot put herself to sleep, nor can she understand
her own sleepy signs. Yet a baby who is encouraged to stay awake when her
body is craving sleep is typically an unhappy baby. Over time, this
pattern develops into sleep deprivation, which further complicates your
baby’s developing sleep maturity. Learn to read your baby’s sleepy signs
-- such as quieting down, losing interest in people and toys, and fussing
-- and put her to bed when that window of opportunity presents itself.
Make Yourself
Comfortable
I’ve yet to hear a parent tell me that she or he
loves getting up throughout the night to tend to a baby’s needs. As much
as we adore our little bundles, it’s tough when you’re woken up over and
over again, night after night. Since it’s a fact that your baby will
be waking you up, you may as well make yourself as comfortable as
possible. The first step is to learn to relax about night wakings right
now. Being stressed or frustrated about having to get up won’t change a
thing. The situation will improve day by day; and before you know it, your
little newborn won’t be so little anymore — she’ll be walking and talking
and getting into everything in sight…during the day, and sleeping
peacefully all night long.
Excerpted with permission by McGraw-Hill/Contemporary Publishing from
The
No-Cry Sleep Solution: Gentle Ways to Help Your Baby Sleep Through the
Night
by Elizabeth Pantley, copyright 2002 Website:
http://www.pantley.com/elizabeth
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