Friday, 30 January 2009

Sleep Baby Sleep

4
I was thinking about the sleep we've had (or rather not had) since Jacob was born. He's a terrible sleeper who wakes often & even fidgets like crazy while he sleeps.

We've been given lots of advice, but the only thing that we thought may work was when we moved him from his cot to a bed, he slept through the 1st night, then the 2nd & indeed for a full week we thought we'd cracked it. But 1 week was it & then back to normal.

Here's some of the advice others wisely shared yet failed to work:

~ "Keep him up later"
We used to put him to bed at 7pm, which was a bit early, so following this advice we keep him up later. For the first few weeks of this you'd go to the kitchen, walk back to the sitting room & he'd be flat out on the floor, but if you lifted him he woke as though it were midday & he wanted to play.

~ "Don't let him sleep late in the day"
We didn't need to follow this because generally Jacob sleeps for 40-60 mins in the morning & then is bombing around the rest of the day.

~"When he goes to sleep put a large teddy beside him to make him think it's you."
Plainly, & I'm not sure why, but the intellect of this little dude excelled this deceit & it doesn't work.

~ "Leave him crying" (controlled crying method)
Again, we tried this but there's only so many hours of the yelling getting louder that one can take.

~ "Pray"
Honestly, a wise friend told me that I needed to pray about this & that Jacob would start sleeping. Well, without being too rude, (because I do believe in the power of prayer,) I have been praying for Jacob to sleep every night since he was born, but it seems that God has something else in mind as our sleep continues to get broken!
(My Charismatic friend probably reckons I just don't have the faith)

~ "Chloroform"
Though a good idea & I would seriously consider it. It is unfortunately unavailable in the chemist & against the law (but thanks for the suggestion Tim, I know you have the same problem, multiplied by 3).

~ "Lavender"
We put this in his bath for a while & I've even been guilty of putting it in his room, but it doesn't work. He still wakes every few hours!

~ "A herbal mix developed by a Dr. in South of Ireland"
Though I was unconscious for about 10 hours after taking this it had no affect on Jacob. (& yes it is purely herbal & OK to give to children).

~ "Feed him more & make sure he's full"
Yep, another idea that we tried, but one that failed miserably as he squirmed all night because his belly probably felt like exploding.

~ "Feed him less, perhaps he's too full."
Again this failed with the result that he woke more often with hunger, wanting food.

~ "Make sure his rooms warm, the heat'll knock him out."
He kept waking with the sweat.

~"Open his window & turn radiator down, the fresh air'll knock him out."
He kept waking with the exclaimation 'Oh Ssoo Col'!


Have you any ideas you can add, they don't have to be serious, as they probably won't work anyway. Maybe Barbara will remember a few i've forgotten
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About Boaly
Gary has been involved in printing the Scriptures for 20 years, enjoys photography and rambling online

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Earplugs. That's our solution. And putting the offending children in a travel cot downstairs as far away from our bedroom as possible.

Anonymous said...

It's different for every child. Obviously.

Some people find that a few nights of just leaving them to cry for hours makes them realise that crying is not going to get them what they want so they stop.

The old method of course is a bottle of warm milk. If that doesn't work, a bottle of warm milk with whiskey or rum in it. But that's probably illegal now.

Depending on how old he is, we have found that a warm rice-bag helps. We make the rice bags out of material, they are tubes about 2 ft long and about the diameter of a coffee mug. Fill them with rice and sew up the ends then heat them in a microwave (making sure they're not too hot). Place one in his bedto warm it before he gets in and thn lay him next to it and it gives off gentle heat for several hours, very much like the feel of a person lying next to him. Works for our kids.

Alternatively, put him in your bed with you. Hey, it's not good long term but if he'll sleep there it will at least teach him to sleep through the night again.

heartafire said...

I've always heard that the best sleep conditions for anyone (man, woman or child) are a nice cold room and a warm bed. It almost doesn't matter how cold your room is, as long as you have warm covers (goose down is great) ---
When our little people were still in basinettes and cribs, we'd always put a heating pad in first, before putting them down. (Of course, would NEVER leave a heating pad in a bed!)

We have sort of a family bed, truth to tell. We keep our house fairly cool, so one or both will usually come get in bed with us. I know some people don't think this is right, but it is right for us. I love praying for my girls while they sleep and I know this time won't last forever.

One valuable trick (esp. when you REALLY want them to sleep) is Benadryl. It is quite safe, and very effective, when you absolutely must get them to sleep.

Good luck!

Tim Millen said...

I sympathize a lot, as you know brother. But we thought it was bad with our first child, (and she was an awful sleeper), and then we had another one 18 months later, and he's still not sleeping (now 2 years old) and now we've got another one (11 weeks old) and she wakes every three hours through the night. So I really have no solutions to offer you, or else I would use them myself with our 3. However, all I can say is that you actually do get used to it, and your body has a strange way of coping with very little sleep, and perhaps the Lord is using this time in our lives to teach us and mould us more into the image of Christ - if we are willing to let Him.
James Ch. 1:
2 ¶ My brethren, count it all joy when you fall into various trials,
3 knowing that the testing of your faith produces patience.
4 But let patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking nothing.