So a blog was well overdue! So here it is poor sleep deprived parents. I'd like to know what you find helpful so when you fix it leave me a comment and we can help each other!
Now babies, I'm going to name and shame you …Bailey, Alice, Luca, Abigail and I'm adding some toddlers to the piece …Ari, Ben and even Miss Freya who has been known to do a 5:30am wake up. I'm sending my sister a Groclock to do some teaching in the hope of a quick turn around!
Early morning waking occurs for many reasons
The danger with starting your day at 4 or 5am is that it can become the new normal and a fixed event and even get earlier… eeek!
I can totally understand the temptation to just give in however over the long term it won't help you. It's actually more important to address the early morning waking compared to any other regular night time waking.
How Much Sleep Is Enough?
Most babies need a lot of sleep (11-12 hours at night and an extra 2-3 hours in the day. 14-15 hours in total). Go by their mood and if they're cranky on getting up and cranky in the day they're not having enough sleep. Sleep is important for so many reasons and I'm sure I don't need to remind you. So here are a few ideas to think about and maybe give a try ...Later vs Earlier Bedtimes
Some parents put their babies to bed later than usual hoping that a finite amount of sleep is needed. However this only makes things worse. Often the reverse is needed, an earlier bedtime of 6:30pm may be the solution. Deep restorative sleep is from 7pm to 1am so if your baby is going down at 8pm they are actually missing out on an hour of the deep sleep. Deep sleep reduces cortisol and helps prevent stressed babies and night waking.I was helping a sleep deprived toddler who was whingy all day and going to bed at 7:30pm or 8pm and once I met him I realised he needed an earlier bed time and guess what? He now sleeps till 7:30am and his parents have to wake him! 13 hours of blissful sleep. I went round for the night time settle and he was refusing his dinner, didn't want a bath. He was basically overtired. So it was as simple as an earlier bedtime.
Going down too early for a daytime nap
Babies over six months old who are having a morning and afternoon sleep may need a later morning sleep rather than 9am. If the gap between waking and going down is increased a bit it may help you get them down earlier at night. So try and do a 9:15am or 9.30am put down and see if this helps.Try for day sleeps in the cot at home
Sleeps in the car or out and about are often the stealers of good night time sleep and then you get a little cat napper. Good long restful sleep in the day will promote the same at night. Never forget that sleep promotes sleep. The more you get, the more you need and want. So think about those day sleeps and where they are occurring. As long as more sleep is in the cot than the car or stroller it's unlikely to regress. And particularly the long sleep in the cot during the day.Winter temperatures and what temperature babies need for sleep
It's important the room temperature is cooler for inducing sleep and keeping baby asleep. Try for 16-18°C (60.8-64.4°F) at night. Use merino layers on the baby with a sleeping bag type of garment. If they are nice and toasty they may sleep so much better. I have just had a report from Miss Abigail's mum that an extra skivvy under the Grobag did just the trick, she resettled so much easier and slept longer.Babies waking at 3 or 4am may be waking because they're cold. Night temperatures drop at 3am as does the internal body temp. Babies lose body heat 4 x as fast as an adult. Socks on baby may help, especially when it hits 3 and 4am. At night the temperature drops and if baby's feet get cold it's really hard for baby to go back to sleep. You may need an extra blanket or merino wool jumper or body warming vest on baby at 3am.
Your sleeping bag needs to be merino wool or 2.5-3 tog for a room temp of 16-20°C (60.8-68°F) in winter. If your child's bedroom is very cold, below 12-16°C (53.6-60.8°F) then definately merino wool or a 3.5 tog.
Merino wool sleep suits retain heat much better than cotton so are a better option for Winter.
https://nurtureparenting.com.au/keeping-toddler-warm-night-cooler-months/
Summer temperatures
Australia gets incredibly hot in summer so be careful not to overdress babies. Any temperature over 26°C (78.8°F) dress baby in a nappy with or without a short sleeved singlet.Using a fan in extreme heat can be helpful. Babies need to adapt to Australia and using air conditioning too often affects this. Obviously, it depends on the age of the baby and how hot it is. If you have a newborn and it's a 40°C (104°F) day use either air conditioning or an electric fan to cool them. Older babies have a more adaptable thermostat.
How much clothing should my baby wear?
You will need to judge this based on many factors - room temperature, how warm or cool your baby feels, what sort of clothing you use.Use only natural fibre clothing - cotton, bamboo or merino wool are best and layers.
Use merino wool against the skin as it helps regulate temperature. Some of my favourite options are Hello Night kids sleepwear
Is the room dark enough and conducive for sleep?
You may need darker curtains or a block out blind. Remove all mobiles and think about night lights and music i.e. not using them at all. Sleep associations are powerful things and bedrooms should be calming and restful places. Watch this video starting at the 50 second mark to see me demonstrate the application of tin foil https://youtu.be/mBNyUpJrePUOr Bedroom Blackout Blinds and use the code Nurture10 to get 10% off your purchase.
Are they teething or in pain?
Teething pain can cause night time waking. Do they need Panadol (paracetamol), Tylenol (acetaminophen) or Nurofen (ibuprofen) ? If you're in pain you can't go back to sleep easily, it's the same for a baby. They have an acupressure point on the fleshy part of the palm between the thumb and forefinger. Try pressing several times a day to provide pain relief. Check their temperature to make sure you're not missing anything. You can use a standard thermometer and a normal temp is 36.5-37.5°C (97.7-99.5°F). Or feel the back of their neck or the optimum place is touching their tummy with your hand.
Are they having enough solids in the day?
After six months old they should be fed to appetite and offered food first, milk second. They need a lot of good nutritional quality food and may need two to three Weetbix for breakfast and up to one to one and a half cups of food at each meal. Offer main and dessert at lunch and evening meal. Food has more calories than milk so beware of giving more than three breastfeeds or 750mls (25 fl oz) of milk if six to 12 months old.
Over one year old (and if giving yoghurt and cheese you can cut the milk down to one to two cups a day). Think about what they're eating and low glycaemic foods fill up for longer giving a slow release of energy (basmati rice, pumpkin, sweet potato, weetbix, porridge oats, quinoa, bananas). Calorie dense foods are important, adding dairy to each meal e.g. butter, cheese, cream. If dairy intolerant/allergic add avocado, coconut cream, peanut butter, oily fish and cook food in coconut oil. Fat has more than double the calories of carbohydrates. Read more on fixing your baby's sleep with diet on my other blog here: https://nurtureparenting.com.au/diet-and-baby-sleep/
So what do you do when they wake at 4am or 5am?
You should resettle. If they are six to 12 months old use Magic Presence or Mantra Magic. We are teaching them that whilst we are there for them they are not getting up and getting fed till a more reasonable hour.
It may take up to three weeks before the new wake up becomes 6 or 7 am but it will pay off. So don't give in, persistence is the key. Babies are going to protest, it's what they know and they know by crying they will get responded to.
Whatever you do try not to feed or put into your bed before 6am as this rewards the behaviour (the crying).
Try not to pat or take out of the cot for a cuddle too often. The least you do, the least you have to do. We are reminding them it is night time.
And if they're over 16 months and all else has failed to help try a Gro-clock. it may save your sanity!
https://nurtureparenting.com.au/diet-and-baby-sleep
Baby still not sleeping?
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6 comments
There were a few things that worked for us at different ages. At 14-15 months, my son used to wake at 5am and I assumed he was waking because he was hungry and used to always give a bottle of milk. Once someone gave some sound advice to drop that 5am bottle and not to go in at the slightest stir, we pushed his wake up time to 6.30-7am. Later on, when he regressed back to 5am wake ups, we used the groclock and still use it to re-set his pattern after coming back from holidays with different time zones.
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