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Knocked Up

The Great Sleep Saga, Chapter 10

Yup, it's more on sleep again.  Babies are supposed to be sleeping 14 - 15 hours at seven months between naps and nightime - or at least that's what I remember reading somewhere, but I can't seem to find the source.  I know for sure it's a lot and, since it takes up more than half of Axel's day and not nearly enough of mine, it's frequent blog fodder.   I'm no sleep expert, just another momma trying to make her fumbly, bumbly way through the bleary-eyed wee hours of the morning. 

 

We've had some sleep successes.  Axel can now fall asleep on his own most nights.  I wouldn't have believed it was possible three months ago.  I thought I'd be rocking the child and singing My Favorite Things until he grew armpit hair and I had the unsquelchable urge to rip the whiskers off of every kitten I saw and gorge on schnitzel with noodles.  Gradually, the sleep situation has gotten better, and you needn't worry about any poor kitten's whiskers or my pork consumption. 

 

Here's a list of  things that have contributed to our bedtime success:

 

1.  We stick to the bedtime routine like a lemon cupcake to vanilla buttercream frosting.  Nothing will interfere with the bedtime routine - unless it is baby-initiated or a natural disaster. 

 

2.  Our nightly routine: some mushy solids at about 6, playtime, bathtime at 6:45, baby massage/baby wrestling and yelling about the ignominy of diapers at 7:00, board book reading and page nibbling at 7:10, nursing at 7:25, and put the boy in his crib (with the humidifier on for white noise and moisture in the high alpine desert of Denver) at 7:45.  This schedule shifts forward or backward a bit depending on when Axel woke up from his last nap, if my husband is on shift and I'm alone and exhausted, or if Axel seems ready for bedtime earlier.  By the time we get to the books, Axel knows what's coming (sleep) and he's ready for it.  I used to rock him and tunelessly sing from my vast repertoire of Beach Boys and Buddy Holly songs after 7:45 because he needed it, but I gradually cut back on the rocking and eventually got to a place where I could just put him down.

 

3.  I put the boy down on his side and he promptly rolls to his belly.  A few months ago he started choosing to sleep on his stomach, and now we've found that putting him down on his back, he gets all riled up and ready to rumble - and that requires more intervention, and no one wants that.  When he's put down on his side, he looks around, rolls on to his stomach, wiggles a little, and then passes out.

 

4.  We do not immediately intervene with all fussing.  If it's been extended and is passionate (for us, that means 2 - 10 minutes and stronger than a few half-hearted whimpers), we'll go in and provide some love.  At about five and a half months or six months, I discovered (in a moment of frustration and exhaustion, after putting him down after the bedtime routine and a little rocking because he wasn't asleep yet, I was seasick with all the damn rocking, and I really wanted to sit down and eat already) that he would briefly squawk and then babble to himself a bit before suddenly - almost too quickly, so abruptly that I thought maybe he'd choked on his own thumb and had to go check on him - going silent and falling asleep.  He's figured out how to trigger his own awake time on/off switch - it's not a gradual dimmer, it's a switch with just two settings.   Also, after six months, we decided that, if he did wake up before midnight, he would first be given a chance to sooth himself back to sleep; if that didn't work after after a little bit, my husband would go in - but there would be no nursing before 12:01 am.  He's still nursing once per night, but no longer does he nurse each time he wakes up.  I wanted to reinforce the links between other ways of going to sleep.

 

5.  Axel is now in his own room.  He has been for about two months now, and it was time for both of us to have a little more space.  That means I don't jump immediately at his every whimper, and I have at least a few minutes of semi-coherent mushy night thinking on the walk from my room to his room to remind myself to wait at his door and see if he really needs me or if he's just fussing about and setling himself back down to sleep.  He also doesn't hear us move, and he doesn't smell me right next to him and think, "Mmmmm, mmmmmilk." 

 

So, our combination for moderate sleep success: own room, bedtime routine, white noise, a little bit of fussing, clinging to every small success, and a whole lot of luck and fairy dust.  Maybe the solid foods started in the last month have helped fill up his belly, maybe he thinks all those bears and hippos in the Boyton books have the right idea about bedtime, maybe he's just tiring himself out more with all his activity.  I've also got a suspicion that the introduction to sometimes falling asleep on his own that occured during his three days a week at daycare helped with sleeping at home.     

 

All that said, he still gets up once a night between one and three to eat, and every so often more than that.  Once per night seems very reasonable to me, and I'm thankful it's just once, given that he used to wake up so often I stopped counting.  He also does this evil 5 am waking for the day thing from time to time.  I have no idea what to do about this except stare up at my ceiling, listen to him talking to himself, and wish that he would sleep longer. 

 

Naptime is a whole different story.  Axel's got a morning nap (starting at 8 - 9, depending on when he wakes up in the morning), and an afternoon nap (starting at 12:30 - 1:30, depending on when the last nap ended).  Once in awhile he throws in a third late afternoon nap.  When it's naptime and he's getting tired, I scoop him up and get him ready for bed, and then try to get him to sleep by a variety of strategies.  It often becomes a back and forth battle with Axel almost falling asleep then waking himself up to yell and remind me that he's tired and he wants to sleep.  His morning nap is pretty short - rarely over thirty minutes - and it's often harder to get him to go down for the morning nap than the afternoon nap.  My theory is that he will be better off when he's down to just the afternoon nap, since that one always lasts longer, sometimes as much as two hours, and is a smoother transition for Axel.  My second theory is that I'll keep on wishing as hard as I can that it will get better, and maybe the nightime sleep fairy that's helped us out with rain down her blessings on naptime.  My third theory is that the gradual trial and error that seems to have helped with the bedtime routine will eventually help us more with naptime.  Some things haven't changed: I've still got enough rotating sleep theories for a dozen dissertations. 

 

We're making progress, one night at a time.   

 

 

 

 

 


Comments

 

liz said:

Ahh, I remember those days. I found that every three months we went through a major milestone phase and all the bed-training went out the window and we had to start over. Not to discourage you! : )

June 4, 2008 1:12 AM
 

zellmer said:

That first paragraph cracked me up because that's so how I feel about the nighttime wind down ritual. NOTHING can get in its way. It's inconvenient at times, like when friends invite you over for dinner and they want you to bring the kids and you're all, "Okay, then do you mind if we eat at 5?"

My son is on the exact same bedtime schedule, too. And yes, he wakes up way too early and I have grown tired of waking up at 6am every morning. And tired of having to go to bed at 9 or 10 in order to get enough hours in. But at the same time, I'm grateful that I at least get to sleep through the night. And I bet Axel's nighttime feeding will disappear in the next few months and you'll be getting those 7-8 hours of consistent sleep again. Hallelujah!

June 4, 2008 7:26 AM
 

EG said:

As he gets older the sudden silence when he falls asleep will get more dramatic.  On my Little Man's 1st birthday he chose not to nap, plus there were extra people around and a lot more sugar than normal.  He couldn't calm down.  So I just put him in his crib.  90 seconds of "AAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH," then nothing.  I wish I could've seen it.  Did he actually fall onto the mattress in mid-scream?  Did he make a logical decision to give it up and lay down?

Oh, and when he moves to the toddler room in daycare?  Sleep city.  They wear 'em out in there.

June 4, 2008 11:40 AM
 

LauraLaura said:

Wow, this sounds great. Congratulations. We have an immutable bedtime routine now, too. It's impossible to recall my freewheeling evenings pre-baby, when I wasn't constantly watching the clock.

Question: Is Axel teething yet? If so, does it throw a spanner in the works (does he wake up more often, or require more bedtime soothery)?

June 4, 2008 12:22 PM
 

knockedup said:

Zellmer - we had friends over for a BBQ and ate at 5.  The first group was childless and thought we were nuts.  The second group have a two month old and thought it was great.  

LauraLaura - I am so confused about teething.  Some days I'm certain he's teething, and other days I think he's not.  I've thought he was teething on and off for three months.  He does have a tooth attempting to poke through his upper gums, but it's been hanging out and doing its nasty gum-cutting dance in full view for, oh,  three weeks.  Sometimes I think he wakes up more often at night because of teething, but it doesn't seem to affect his needs at bedtime (over the last month or so).  I do think teething makes him fussier during the day and makes daytime naps harder.  But I've also wondered if the phases of the moon affect his sleep, so what do I know?  Teething sometimes seems like my fallback explanation if I can't figure anything else out.  

June 4, 2008 1:01 PM
 

Melissa said:

Wow, all the times I was reading your blogs about Axel not sleeping, I was thinking of saying all those very same things about getting him to sleep because that's what worked for my son.  I didn't want to preach, though, because every kid is different and one thing a mom doesn't need is more advice.  But all those things you say about routine, tummy sleeping, realizing that sometimes less rocking is more, is exactly what I learned with my munchkin!  

Last week our normal daily routine was altered by me being on vacation and other factors and life was HELL.  It's slowly getting back to normal, but things are still rocky.  Viva consistency!

June 4, 2008 2:58 PM
 

Beth said:

Oz, I'm curious about how you got Axel to sleep without a swaddle, as I know you mentioned it in the early days. My 4.5-month-old is a swaddle junkie and will sleep happily through the night in it, waking only once to eat. Without it, though, his sleep is fitful at best. We've tried the one-arm-out, and it only inspires him to free the rest of his body. Now he's so strong that I'm afraid he's going to end up on his tummy with his arms pinned!

What worked for you (and other readers)? Should we go cold turkey?

June 4, 2008 4:33 PM
 

knockedup said:

Melissa, you're right about consistency! I also think some of it is just development, too - lots of the things that work now didn't work at three months or four months.

Beth - we did one arm out starting at about four months, and were able to get it snug enough to contain him with the fleece swaddle sacks.  He'd break out of blankets, but the velcro on the sacks kept Axel wrapped up.  Then, we just wrapped the sack around his middle, and then we went to no sacks.  We didn't go cold turkey - but I have heard that others do and it works for them after a few bad nights.  Maybe try it for naps first and then at night?  A lot of this swaddle transition for us coincided with Axel's four month sleep regression from hell, which it sounds like you're not having - yea!!!  Because of the regression, I couldn't tell if the swaddling contributed either way, so we just stuck with no swaddle at about five months.  

June 4, 2008 5:03 PM
 

jo said:

You rock for sharing all your magic tricks with us other mamas!!  My little girl is still in the co-sleeper next to me and now I know that I really do need to move her into her room. I, of course, kind of knew this all along but, am so sad to have to make this move. One of many steps towards being her own little person I suppose.  I also miss those swaddling days. It was like a switch would go off in her neurons and she would just power down. Anyway, thanks Oz!!

jo

June 4, 2008 5:43 PM
 

LauraLaura said:

Beth, re. swaddle: We went cold turkey. I was terrified. And the kid had a very fussy first swaddle-free night, but the next night was fine. (We tried the one-arm-out approach, with SwaddleMe velcro sleep sacks, but he just wrestled his way out of those. So, cold turkey it was.)

June 4, 2008 7:09 PM
 

Renee said:

My son is about the same age as Axel and it's so great that you always seem to be posting about the same things that we're going through.  I would highly recommend the book "Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Babies".  The advice that I have clung to is that you're not making your baby cry you're helping him learn how to go to and stay asleep.  It makes those 10 minutes of crying a little bit easier.

June 4, 2008 9:15 PM
 

knockedup said:

Awww, thanks Jo!  I don't think I've done anything magical, just figured some things out that work for us via trial and error.  I cried when Axel moved into his own room, but he didn't mind a bit.  That said, I know co-sleeping (whether in the same room or bed) works for some people for awhile, and they manage to get sleep.  I couldn't quite figure out how myself, but I think that the No Cry Sleep Solution has some stuff about it.  

Renee - I've heard of that book, but haven't read it.  When I was really sleep deprived, I looked into most of the sleep books, but I couldn't focus enough to read any of them.  What I needed was a sleep brochure!  

June 4, 2008 10:11 PM
 

lla.ma. said:

whoo-hoo for so much sleep!!!

i also think a kid is teething one day, fine the next week.  i have this theory that babies would be offended if they knew how much we blamed their fussiness on teething, the equivalent of women and pms.

half hour morning nap? have you thought about getting rid of it?  or delaying it as much as possible?  i was always scared of getting rid of the morning nap until i discovered it gave me a long three hour nap!!

June 5, 2008 12:44 AM
 

Hillary said:

We're right there with you guys and the on-again-off-again teething. I got a belly laugh out of lla.ma.'s theory about babies getting offended that we think it's only teething that's upsetting them.

One thing that's worked for us -- aside from a consistent bedtime routine with books and bottle -- is, sometimes, to just leave our little guy alone. Several nights in the last month or two (he's five months next week) I've been rocking, rocking, rocking while he's been screaming, screaming, screaming. When I put him down in his crib in defeat, to buy my eardrums a few seconds away from the shrieking, he just squirms a little and drifts off. It's like he sometimes just gets sick of being handled.

My sister and one of her boys are the same way.

June 5, 2008 12:03 PM
 

Kit_n_Kumari said:

it's amazing what being tired will lead you to discover! i also discovered that Bug could put herself to sleep if i just let her alone to do so.  appararently, being rocked and patted was... *gasp* too much stimulation and actually keeping her away.

our bedtime routine hasn't changed since Bug was 3 days old and i think that the strength of the "massage, bath, feeding" routine has helped.  on days when we don't get a bath in (for whatever reason) her sleep seems to be compromised, almost like she hasn't accepted its bedtime because there was NO BATH.

i feel all the posters who say they are tired of the 6 am wake-up and a 9 pm bedtime.  but its better than getting up 3, 4, 5, or even 6 times a night, no?

June 5, 2008 7:45 PM
 

jenbrooke said:

I attribute everything to teething! And there are absolutely no teeth yet, not even close. As for sleep, Mathis is down at 8 (and rolls promptly onto his tummy and tucks his knees under him so his bottom's sticking up in the air). And he USED to wake up around 7. But recently he did an evil 6am awakening  and seemed to feel great about that so that's how it's been for the last week or so. Boo.

BTW, I read all of the sleep books - I have no idea how since I was so sleep deprived myself, but I was on a mission - and I loved "Healthy Sleep Habits." It's no-nonsense, to the point, great information. I liked it a lot.

June 5, 2008 9:59 PM
 

cribtales said:

One thing I've learned having had two children now (and I'm sure those with 3+ have even more tales)...sometimes you get a good sleeper, sometimes you don't.  I've read every book (Healthy Sleep Habits was my fave), tried various "methods" -- found success with some, found bunk with others.  But in the end I came to realize something:  some kids sleep well and some do not.  My first was not a great sleeper as an infant/toddler, but now at the ripe age of 4 he is a pretty decent dozer. I was routine-strict with him and in time, with a lot of help from Dr Weisbluth's book, he's a good little sleeper (though still up b/w 6-6:30 most days).  My 2nd I have had to have a lot more flexibility from day one because of the first, but low and behold he is a great sleeper!!  Maybe I learned some things along the way, who knows.  But in the end, the period of infancy is so fleeting, and they all do sleep through eventually, and before you know it you have teenagers who are breaking curfew and then you are reallllllly not getting any zzz's!

June 6, 2008 3:06 PM
 

Susie Felber said:

I think you got it DOWN.  Right on.  I little routine and stiff upper lip now pays off like mad down the line.  :)

June 7, 2008 8:44 AM

in

About the Blogger

Oz Spies

Oz Spies in Denver

Oz Spies lives in Denver, Colorado with her husband, a firefighter; their son, Axel; and a slightly obese dog and cat. She has a MFA in Creative Writing from Colorado State University.

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