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Congratulations on the birth of your new baby. This is a glorious time in your life. Whether this is your first baby or your fifth, you will find this a time of recovery, adjustment, sometimes confusion and frustration, but -- most wonderfully -- of falling in love.
Babies younger than four months
old have very different sleep needs than older babies. This article will help
you understand your newborn baby's developing sleep patterns, and will help you
develop reasonable expectations when it comes to your baby and sleep.
Absolutely everyone has an opinion about how you should handle sleep issues with your new baby. The danger to a new parent is that these tidbits of misguided advice (no matter how well-intentioned) can truly have a negative effect on our parenting skills and, by extension, our babies' development -- if we are not aware of the facts. The more knowledge you have the less likely that other people will make you doubt your parenting decisions.
When you
have your facts straight, and when you have a parenting plan, you will be able
to respond with confidence to those who are well-meaning but offering contrary
or incorrect advice. So, your first step is to get smart! Know what you are doing,
and know why you are doing it. Read books and magazines, attend classes or support
groups -- it all helps.
During the early months of your baby's life, he sleeps when he is tired, it's really that simple. You can do very little to force a new baby to sleep when he doesn't want to sleep, and conversely, you can do little to wake him up when he is sleeping soundly.
A very
important point to understand about newborn babies is that they have very, very
tiny tummies. New babies grow rapidly, their diet is liquid, and it digests quickly.
Formula digests quickly and breast milk digests even more rapidly. Although it
would be nice to lay your little bundle down at a predetermined bedtime and not
hear a peep from him until morning, even the most naive among us know that this
is not a realistic goal for a tiny baby. Newborns need to be fed every two to
four hours -- and sometimes more.
During those early months, your baby
will have tremendous growth spurts that affect not only daytime, but also nighttime
feeding as well, sometimes pushing that two- to four-hour schedule to a one- to
two-hour schedule around the clock.
You have probably heard that babies should start "sleeping through the night" at about 2 to 4 months of age. What you must understand is that, for a new baby, a five-hour stretch is a full night. Many (but nowhere near all) babies at this age can sleep uninterrupted from midnight to 5 a.m. (Not that they always do.) A far cry from what you may have thought "sleeping through the night" meant!
What's more, while the scientific definition of "sleeping
through the night" is five hours, most of us wouldn't consider that anywhere
near a full night's sleep for ourselves. Also, some of these sleep-through-the-nighters
will suddenly begin waking more frequently, and it's often a full year or even
two until your little one will settle into a mature, all-night, every night sleep
pattern.