Babies sleeping through the night
Z is 8 weeks, 2 days old. Yeah, yeah, I know, we still count days. We've, of course, been trying to get him to sleep "through the night." Many folks, myself included, think that "through the night" is kind of a mythical goal and I've said it when asked. A few days back he slept from 9pm to 3am and that was "through the night" as far as I was concerned. We have continued our quest for a few more hours sleep, though.
Now, I know all babies are different and this all may be a fluke and there will be times when he's 8 years old and won't sleep through the night, but for the most part, I think our general technique is working. I'm sure you've got similar tips.
Z slept from 11pm until past 8am last night freeing us (and particularly my wife) up to sleep 9 hours. Here's what my extensive (
- Routine - Babies love routine. We put him down, plus or minus an hour, at around 9pm ever night. This will likely head more towards 8pm.
- Food - We are breast feeding exclusively (no formula) and pumping with a breast pump. We give him one bottle of pumped milk a day, so he's used to it in case of emergency.
- We give him a bottle just before bed to really fill him up. Babies seem to get comforted by the boob more than the bottle, so he'll drink as much as 4oz with the bottle, eyes open while he'll go into "buffet mode" on the boob and pass out. When he's that full, and keeps it down, he'll sleep for hours, not being awoke by hunger.
- We'll also sometimes "top him off" just before he's put into the crib (which is next to our bed)
- Another technique that is well thought of that we haven't tried is to give a breast-fed baby one formula bottle a night. Formula is harder to digest and says in the tummy longer, letting babies sleep longer as a result.
- Warm Bath - After he eats and gives us the obligatory and nearly immediate gift of poo, he takes a bath(picture above) in water that's warm (100 degrees F). We'd been using lukewarm water and he used to freak out. When we switched to using rubber-ducky thermometer that checks for temperature safety we make it hotter. He loves the tub at only eight weeks. Totally relaxes him.
- Set the Stage - We've also started lowering the lights and turning on the radio around this time. Too much light seems to freak babies (at least this one) out. We slow down, talk quiet and generally prep him for a quiet time.
- Swaddling - Don't use a receiving blanket to swaddle, it'll never work, too small. We use this blanket because it's huge - 42"x42". When he's on lockdown he can't wake himself up with spastic arms.
- Down is down - Now that he's put down he'll cry here and there, but we believe he's to young for us to Ferber him (in the hardcore way). However, we do avoid picking him up when he's down as it just starts the whole process over. We stoke his face and comb his hair and generally watch for the difference between "sobbing" and "crying." He sobs when he's tired, he cries when something's wrong.
None of this is rocket science and I assume it's all up for debate and variability. However, it's working better each night and knock wood, it'll continue to work for the most part.
All of this means a happier baby when he's awake and gives the wife and I time together before we collapse from exhaustion, wake up, rinse and repeat the process for the next eighteen years.
It's also easier to write posts like this when he's happily asleep :)
About Scott
Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.
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Three months ago, my eyes would have rolled when I saw this kind of baby stuff but now we are expecting our first (July / August). I enjoy this stuff every bit as much as your traditional postings. Also enjoying Hanselminutes.
-Andrew
I think the ferber technique is crap, babies are meant to be held. =)
The more children sleep, the more they sleep. It's counter-intuitive, but the earlier you put a child down, the longer he or she will sleep. It has something to do with hormones waking them up overnight b/c they got overtired by going down too late. We put our daughter down at 7, and pretty quickly she would sleep until 6:30 or 7am. That started happening at around 4 months.
Of course, YMMV.
Our book of choice: "Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child"
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0449004023/002-0049725-6847262?v=glance&n=283155
Check out this book. My wife and I use this book to schedule our baby. She slept thru the night (9 pm to 7 am) at 7 weeks...
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0971453209/002-2302398-2228843?v=glance&n=283155
Maybe some kids (and adults) don't react well to imposed schedules, but in general I think parents are better equipped to determine the sleep needs of the child than the child is. The approach looks similar to the Ferber info you linked to in principle - tired babies often cry for a few minutes when they're first put down, and if you pick them up and feed or rock them to sleep, they learn that pattern. If you let them cry themselves to sleep a (suprisingly) few times, they learn to go right to sleep when you put them down. Well rested babies are happier, as are well rested parents.
We've got mixed results on dealing with 2 year olds waking up in the middle of the night, though. Where's the book on that? ;-)
Sounds like you've got a good thing going though - congrats.
Steven Levitt does some interesting analysis of the non-efficacy of parenting methods in Freakanomics. His conclusion is that most of the policies we take with regard to our children don't really matter, but the character and intention behind the policies does have an impact. For instance, children who apply to charter schools perform better in school, regardless of whether they are actually accepted in the charter schools. The point is that the type of parents and kids who care enough to try to get in a charter school will perform better in school because they actually care about it. He concludes that a lot of the things parents do don't actually matter.
What does this have to do with the topic of kids sleeping through the night? If mine weren't asleep right now, I wouldn't be writing this.
I'm telling ya, more ritual and superstition is applied towards child rearing than any other activity. Except maybe for sporting events.
On a side note and to be careful, don't forget those side pillows (I don't know what they call them) to protect the baby against SIDS.
See http://www.sidscenter.org/Downloads/S07.htm for example.
As for Ferber... or as we refer to it -- the Nelson treatment (named after a friend's baby who had serious trouble going to sleep). We found during the first year or two, we had to allow our son to cry it out a bit going to bed. But it got shorter each night... usually fixing things after just a couple of nights. Like you mentioned about age, we didn't use that technique though until he was a little older (9 months - 1 year).
Just keep up those routines... you are definitely on the right track. Carry on...
-ScW
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Non-parents are horrified by my "duct-taping" the baby technique, but it means more sleep for everyone!