PS I just had to add a few links due to the responses suggesting Baby Wise and Ferber:
So many health professionals are deeply concerned about the dangerous advice in Baby Wise that there are brochures
http://www.ezzo.info/trifoldbrochure.pdf
and websites
http://www.ezzo.info/feeding.htm
http://aapnews.aappublications.org/cgi/content/abstract/1...
to warn parents about the dangers.
As for Ferber, he has backtracked on his original advice, and you can find that article here:
http://chevychasepace.blogspot.com/2005/11/ferber-retract...
as well as other links to why babies should NOT 'cry it out'.
There are both emotional and physiological reasons why leaving babies to cry it out is a bad idea, which you can find here:
http://www.mothering.com/articles/new_baby/bonding/connec...
Try looking at this from your baby's limited perspective. The only existence he's known is the climate controlled environment of YOUR BODY. Suddenly, he's alone, he can't keep himself warm, he doesn't have the rhythm of your heart, he's learning to regulate his breathing, and the one survival instinct he's born with is to stay close to his food source. The reason that the shirt trick is suggested is babies are programed to smell mommy. Within minutes of birth, if breast pads with mothers milk are laid on either side of a baby, he will turn toward his mother's!
Safe co-sleeping is not a danger to baby. It is the way we were designed to parent, and the way the rest of the world (with lower, and in some cases nearly non-existent, incidences of SIDS) does it. http://www.babyreference.com/Cosleeping&SIDSFactSheet...
Having said that, safe co-sleeping requires common sense. No water beds, no beds near walls, no overly heavy comforters, no smokers in the bed, no one drunk in bed, etc.
As for it being a 'bad habit to break'; personally, if my husband goes on a business trip, I don't sleep well. I'm used to him keeping the bed warm and holding me. Why wouldn't babies/children prefer the safety of their parent's bed too? They are small and vulnerable. However, they exert their independence when they are developmentally ready, and one of those ways is that they want to sleep in a 'big bed' eventually. I swear, they won't want to take you to college with them!
Here's how co-sleeping looked at our house:
We co-slept with our dau. I was more concerned that there would be a fire or break-in or something and I wouldn't be able to get to her. Plus, MY body craved her nearness. My arms wanted to hold her and my breasts needed her to eat!
By toddler age, she had her own room set up, with age appropriate bedding, and she hadn't been actually IN our bed for awhile. By the time she was about 12-18 months old, she slept like a bucket of frogs, so she was in a futon BY our bed. She could sleep in her own bed anytime she wished, and we always asked.
Some times she would start out there, but end up next to us. Just like with breastfeeding, there is no trauma if the transition is child led (not child DICTATED...there is a difference!) per their developmental stage. Eventually, more nights were spent in her own room, and she was there all night. When we moved, she wanted to sleep with us again for awhile (she was about 5, but that makes sense if you think about it...she needed to get used to the new space with the security of us there) and we let her. (Again, NEXT to the bed to avoid injury to the parental units. She still sleeps like that and frankly I'm concerned for her future husband.)
She always knew she COULD sleep near us, so we never had sleep issues. No nightmares for her, no sleepless nights for us.
The only problem is we got harassed by people who didn't understand co-sleeping, like my husband's parents of the 'let them cry it out and self-sooth' ilk, as if THAT isn't a contradictory statement! Or the people who wondered when we'd have sex if we co-slept. (As if the bed at night is the only place for sex! No imagination, I swear!) Frankly, my bed was, and is, my sanctuary. By the time night came and I crawled in, all I wanted to do was sleep! That said, I've been with my husband 23 years, and our sex life if just fine, thank you very much. I will admit we had to be creative for a few years, but I don't regret it at all. Knowing my dau never once felt insecure or unsafe was worth it.
K. Wildner
www.fearlessbirthing.blogspot.com
PS I just had to add a few links due to the responses suggesting Baby Wise and Ferber:
So many health professionals are deeply concerned about the dangerous advice in Baby Wise that there are brochures
http://www.ezzo.info/trifoldbrochure.pdf
and websites
http://www.ezzo.info/feeding.htm
http://aapnews.aappublications.org/cgi/content/abstract/1...
to warn parents about the dangers.
As for Ferber, he has backtracked on his original advice, and you can find that article here:
http://chevychasepace.blogspot.com/2005/11/ferber-retract...
as well as other links to why babies should NOT 'cry it out'.
There are both emotional and physiological reasons why leaving babies to cry it out is a bad idea, which you can find here:
http://www.mothering.com/articles/new_baby/bonding/connec...