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Get Your Baby to Sleep

Get Your Baby to Sleep the Night

By: Deborah Nelson

baby sleepingGetting sleep becomes all the more precious when you have a newborn who wakes roughly every two to three hours to eat. Some newborns sleep longer stretches; parents of those babies are fortunate.

If you have a baby who doesn’t sleep a long time and you’d like to improve how much sleep you and your baby get, try these ideas:

Establish a Routine

Create a routine (for example, nursing, three books, warm bath, brush teeth, into dark room to get new diper and pjs and off to bed). You can change and modify this routine as you learn what works and what doesn’t.

Establish a Set Bedtime

Babies sleep better when they go to sleep earlier. Often, people have the misconception that a baby will be more tired if you keep them up later. It works in reverse.

When a baby is extremely tired, she sleeps worse. Babies are designed to want to go to bed anywhere from about 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Experiment to see which time works best for your baby.

Keep a Chart of Your Success

When extremely tired, it’s easy to think you’re getting nowhere with sleep and the night routine. Keep plugging away, and you’ll get there. Create a chart on your computer or by hand that shows you the time the baby went to sleep, HOW baby went to sleep (in your arms, at the breast, alone in crib, etc), the time of the next waking, and how long it took to put him back down and HOW you put him back down (rocking, walking, in the crib alone, etc).

When you chart this way, you’ll learn how many times your baby wakes in the night, how long she sleeps in total, and how you are progressing. Keep a chart for 1-2 nights and then STOP. Wait 7-10 days before you chart again so you can see progress.

The success you’ll enjoy includes:

1. Reduced time to get baby to sleep.

2. Reduced length of nightwakings for an increase in total time slept.

3. Increased actual hours slept by 1 hour.

4. Increased length of longest stretch of sleep by 1-1.5 hours. At the end, the increase was 9 or so hours until baby slept routinely 12 hours in a row.

5. Having a lot of fun in the routine with your baby.

You’ll want to wait until your baby is at least four months old before you employ these techniques. While some newborns will sleep a long time right away, the majority need to eat at night since they are growing so much. It’s always a good idea to ask your pediatrician for advice on what age is best for encouraging longer stretches of sleep.

NOTE: It’s important to make sure you are ready for a new nighttime routine. Some parents desperately want sleep and then still find it hard when their baby no longer needs them at night. Change is usually challenging. With change comes a little sadness at leaving how things were (no sleep but lots of midnight snuggles) and also happiness (more sleep!).

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About the Author of “Get Your Baby to Sleep the Night”

Deborah Nelson manages http://www.totville.com/babyblog

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4 Responses to “Get Your Baby to Sleep”


HI, MY BABY IS 17 MONTHS OLD AND JUST WONT SLEEP I HAVE TRIED EVERYTHING BUT STILL HAVENT BEEN ABLE TO SUUCEED PLEASE CAN YOU HELP ME ANY INFORMATION OR TIPS AT THIS STAGE IS EXTREMLY APPRECIATED

PLEASE HELP. DESPERATE MOM

If you have the money, you can hire a “night nanny” who can sleep over at your house and get up with your toddler.
Keep in mind that at 17 months he is capable of sleeping through the night, and there is no risk of sids either, it may be time to turn down your baby monitor, and just let him cry. He will probibly try to fight it and get really angry the first few nights, but if you can stick it out, that might be a good idea.

As a mother and grandmother, I know how difficult it is to sit back and allow your baby to cry. At this stage it will be difficult breaking your child from the bad habit he/she has formed. I don’t believe you need to invest in a nanny as of yet. Try the following first:
1. Darken the room
2. Keep the home quiet
3. Lay the child down with their favorite blanket or toy
4. Close the door
Your child will cry really hard for the first 10 minutes; however, if you can make it past that you have made it over the hump. After 15 minutes, go in the room and check on your child. Be prepared…it may get worse before it gets better. Stay strong and comfort the child with soft words, but don’t pick them up. Walk back out of the room for another 15 minutes, if they don’t stop crying hard give in and hold them until they fall asleep.

‘Desperate Mom’ Helps is here. The right bedroom environment is important. Children respond to color, light, sounds and movement differently. First, take a good look at where your child is sleeping. Are the blinds pulled close? Do other family members interfere when you are putting the child to bed?

At 17 months, your child is old enough to leave crying in the crib. It will be difficult at first, but you need to be strong. If your child still takes a bottle, try rocking the child to sleep. Wait 10 minutes after he/she has stopped sucking on the bottle to place the child in bed. If that doesn’t work, walk away and allow your child to cry themselves to sleep.

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