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[S553]Sleep With Your Baby
by Louanne Baelde, Lou
During the first few weeks, newborns sleep at lot, mostly in between feedings.

If placing toys in a crib make sure that they are safe and child-proof.
Never place battery operated toys in a crib, as they may leak toxic
chemicals.

Do not use blankets to cover your baby, until she can roll both ways
from front to back, or back to front. Using blankets too early on, can lead
to your child suffocating.

A car ride can be a neat trick if the baby is colicky. Simply place your
baby safely in the car seat and cautiously drive for a bit until the
baby falls asleep. Gently place the baby back to sleep securely in the home
crib, after you arrive back home.


Your baby will start to be awake more and require less sleep after a while, usually after about three months of age. Open the blind or curtain in the baby's room in between naps to help your baby to differentiate between night and day. Talk or sing to your baby between nap times to try to stimulate her.

At night time, allow baby to relax by initiating peaceful times. Even
at that young age, your baby is quite smart. She will gradually be able to
recognize bedtime quickly enough.

Don’t play or talk with your baby, if she wakes up or cries during the night for feedings.
This will be a hard pattern to break later on. After feeding, immediately place the baby
back to sleep.

To lengthen bedtime hours, try speaking and singing to your child for
longer periods of time during the day. By engaging her in longer periods of
activity, you will stretch your child's amount of sleep time.

Allow for few stimulants in your baby's room. Just like adults sleep better
with fewer disturbances, babies are even more sensitive to stimuli. Dim the
lights around bedtime to help your baby to prepare for sleep. Don't
forget that your baby was inside of you for quite a while, hearing your heart beating.
Assist your baby to adjust to this change more easily by trying to imitate
some of the sounds inside the womb. You can do this by running a dryer or a fan.
Relaxation tapes that imitate the ocean or rainfall are great substitutes and will save
you money on electricity.

If you initiate a regular quiet time at night, your baby can adjust to a fairly
constant bedtime. Babies and toddlers thrive on routine.

Sometimes a warm bath or a comfort object such as a soft blanket or favorite
stuffed toy helps when Mom and Dad are out of the room. Please be sure that
you select your sleep time items carefully, always keeping safety in mind.

Be sure to always adapt bed time rituals to your child's age.

Also note that every child is different. Not all babies need the same
amount of sleep. Try to familiarize yourself with how long your baby sleeps and
note when she wakes up. Once you know your baby's rhythm, it will be easier
to establish a sleeping pattern and soon enough you will both be getting your sleep.







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For three or four weeks after birth the infant sleeps more or less, day and night, only waking to satisfy the demands of hunger; at the expiration of this time, however, each interval of wakefulness grows longer, so that it sleeps less frequently, but for longer periods at a time.

This disposition to repose in the early weeks of the infant's life must not be interfered with; but this period having expired, great care is necessary to induce regularity in its hours of sleep, otherwise too much will be taken in the day-time, and restless and disturbed nights will follow. The child should be brought into the habit of sleeping in the middle of the day, before its dinner, and for about two hours, more or less. If put to rest at a later period of the day, it will invariably cause a bad night.

At first the infant should sleep with its parent. The low temperature of its body, and its small power of generating heat, render this necessary. If it should happen, however, that the child has disturbed and restless nights, it must immediately be removed to the bed and care of another female, to be brought to its mother at an early hour in the morning, for the purpose of being nursed. This is necessary for the preservation of the mother's health, which through sleepless nights would of course be soon deranged, and the infant would also suffer from the influence which such deranged health would have upon the milk.

When a month or six weeks has elapsed, the child, if healthy, may sleep alone in a cradle or cot, care being taken that it has a sufficiency of clothing, that the room in which it is placed is sufficiently warm, viz. 60 degrees, and the position of the cot itself is not such as to be exposed to currents of cold air. It is essentially necessary to attend to these points, since the faculty of producing heat, and consequently the power of maintaining the temperature, is less during sleep than at any other time, and therefore exposure to cold is especially injurious. It is but too frequently the case that inflammation of some internal organ will occur under such circumstances, without the true source of the disease ever being suspected. Here, however, a frequent error must be guarded against, that of covering up the infant in its cot with too much clothing throwing over its face the muslin handkerchief and, last of all, drawing the drapery of the bed closely together. The object is to keep the infant sufficiently warm with pure air; it therefore ought to have free access to its mouth, and the atmosphere of the whole room should be kept sufficiently warm to allow the child to breathe it freely: in winter, therefore, there must always be a fire in the nursery.

The child up to two years old, at least, should sleep upon a feather bed, for the reasons referred to above. The pillow, however, after the sixth month, should be made of horsehair; for at this time teething commences, and it is highly important that the head should be kept cool.

During childhood

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Up to the third or fourth year the child should be permitted to sleep for an hour or so before its dinner. After this time it may gradually be discontinued; but it must be recollected, that during the whole period of childhood more sleep is required than in adult age. The child, therefore, should be put to rest every evening between seven and eight; and if it be in health it will sleep soundly until the following morning. No definite rule, however, can be laid down in reference to the number of hours of sleep to be allowed; for one will require more or less than another.Regularity as to the time of going to rest is the chief point to attend to; permit nothing to interfere with it, and then only let the child sleep without disturbance, until it awakes of its own accord on the following morning, and it will have had sufficient rest.

The amount of sleep necessary to preserve health varies according to the state of the body, and the habits of the individual. Infants pass much the greater portion of their time in sleep. Children sleep twelve or fourteen hours. The schoolboy generally ten. In youth, a third part of the twenty-four hours is spent in sleep. Whilst, in advanced age, many do not spend more than four, five, or six hours in sleep.

It is a cruel thing for a mother to sacrifice her child's health that she may indulge her own vanity, and yet how often is this done in reference to sleep. An evening party is to assemble, and the little child is kept up for hours beyond its stated time for retiring to rest, that it may be exhibited, fondled, and admired. Its usual portion of sleep is thus abridged, and, from the previous excitement, what little he does obtain, is broken and unrefreshing, and he rises on the morrow wearied and exhausted.

Once awake, it should not be permitted to lie longer in bed, but should be encouraged to arise immediately. This is the way to bring about the habit of early rising, which prevents many serious evils to which parents are not sufficiently alive, promotes both mental and corporeal health, and of all habits is said to be the most conducive to longevity. A child should never be suddenly aroused from sleep; it excites the brain, quickens the action of the heart, and, if often repeated, serious consequences would result. The change of sleeping to waking should always be gradual.

The bed on which the child now sleeps should be a mattress: at this age a feather bed is always injurious to children; for the body, sinking deep into the bed, is completely buried in feathers, and the unnatural degree of warmth thus produced relaxes and weakens the system, particularly the skin, and renders the child unusually susceptible to the impressions of cold. Then, instead of the bed being made up in the morning as soon as vacated, and while still saturated with the nocturnal exhalations from the body, the bed-clothes should be thrown over the backs of chairs, the mattress shaken well up, and the window thrown open for several hours, so that the apartment shall be thoroughly ventilated. It is also indispensably requisite not to allow the child to sleep with persons in bad health, or who are far advanced in life; if possible, it should sleep alone.
Article Source : Idiot's Guide To Parenting

About Author
Both Louanne Baelde & Julia Sullivan are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Louanne Baelde has sinced written about articles on various topics from Coffee Advantages, Fitness and Gardening. For a large data base of extremely helpful babies and toddlers information articles and tips, please visit
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