to homepage
projects gps diaries
projects smith blog gps diaries
Desperately Seeking Sleep…


The time had come. My brain was craving some hard-core, uninterrupted sleep. Sleep that I hadn’t experienced in about a year. Possible? Yes. Hard work? Not really.


Isabella had just turned 15 months old but I felt like I was 50 years old. I had been getting up once (usually) in the middle of the night to nurse her. While I would only be up for about 10 minutes and immediately fall back asleep, it was enough to interrupt my dreaming cycles and make me feel eternally groggy. The dark circles were too much to bear. Ugh.


I had read a couple of books and bugged family and friends on the subject and the two most common responses were, "Hmmm….well, my little Johnny has been sleeping through the night since he was 3 months old." (argh, the "perfect" child) , or, "Yah, you just gotta tough it out and let them cry." (sounded harsh).


I first picked up, Babywise, by Gary Ezzo and Robert Bucknam…ok, can you say "militant"? Ed and I knew that we wanted to follow a much more attached style of parenting: feeding on demand, some possible co-sleeping, etc. Well, all of that is out of the question in Ezzo’s book. "Let’s ditch the sleeping training for awhile.", I said as I gleefully gave that book back to a friend.


As time went by and Isabella hit the 10-month mark, I was still very content to snuggle with her at 2am, but there was a glimmer of wanton lust for a full night’s sleep. I chatted with a co-worker, Chrissy (who is the mother of twins and is the queen of schedules) and she suggested I try out, Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child by Marc Weissbluth. This guy is not a scintillating author by any means, but he has some pretty interesting theories.


"Sleep begets sleep.", is the one that really sticks in my head. The idea is that if you patiently work with your child to develop healthy sleeping habits they will stay with them for a lifetime, therefore making a better person who will solve all the world’s problems and go onto be a rocket scientist. Ok….perhaps I’m going over the top.

Here are some quick tips that Weissbluth suggests:

  • Don’t wait until your child is over-tired. The kid gets overstimulated, thus making for a more difficult bedtime.
  • Try an EARLIER bedtime. Ok, this is counterintuitive, but just go with it. Each person has their own circadian rhythm and if your child is waking often in the night perhaps you haven’t synched their bedtime up with their sleeping rhythm. Move the bedtime in 20 minute increments…you just might hit the mark!
  • If your child wakes up from a nap crying like they are annoyed, not an urgent cry, just wait for a few minutes. This is a signal that they really aren’t ready to wake up. They need more sleep.


One of the first things that we did was try the napping thing. Isabella would sometimes wake up from a nap and cry a bit. We would hold off going into pick her up for a minute or two, and sure enough, she ended up falling asleep for another 30 minutes and when she did wake up, she was smiling and happy.


The rule that seems to "slip" in our house is the going to bed earlier. Initially Isabella’s bedtime was 8:30pm, but trying to move that to 8pm has proven to be elusive. Often times we get wrapped up in cleaning up from dinner or playing and before we know it, it’s 8:25. Oops.


The other theme that runs through not only Marc Weissbluth’s book, but through various parenting conversations is the "Let them cry it out" tactic. It’s a tough phrase, admittedly, but it’s not detrimental, at least no long term studies have proven it so. The thing that you have to remind yourself, while you’re listening to your child wail at 2am and you’re in bed with your husband holding your hand to keep you from jumping up, is that you’re really training your child to develop healthy sleep patterns that span a full 8+ hours. Their brains need it. That’s your mantra.


Here’s our sleeping journal:
Night One:
Like clockwork, Isabella wakes up at 2am and cries, "Mama". She’s expecting me to come into her room like I always do and nurse her. Man…she’s conditioned. Both of us are. We just let her cry. I can’t remember if Ed went in and checked her, but she whimpered/cried off and on for about an hour. Eventually she fell asleep until 8am and woke up smiling and in good spirits. Ok, she doesn’t hate us. Yet.


Night Two:
Again, around 2am Isabella wakes up and Ed goes in to comfort her. She just gets pissed. She’s wailing, but it only lasts for about 45 minutes and then she falls asleep.


Night Three:
Um…I kind of fell off the wagon. I KNOW I shouldn’t have been the one to check in on her, but my thought process (Yah, coherent thought processes at 3am? Not.) was that I needed to break her of the visual habit of everytime I go into her room she’s going to nurse. I consoled her, left the room, and went to the bathroom. She was NOT pleased. In the end, I gave in and nursed her. Whatever. I don’t want to talk about it.


Night Four:
"Ed. What time is it?"
"6am"
"Did you get up with Bella?"
"No. Did you?"
"No. Oh my god. She slept through the night!"


Night Five:
Slept through the night.


Night Six:
Slept through the night.


Night Seven:
Slept through the night.

Are we onto a new pattern? Possibly.
Am I feeling better? Definitely.
Do I miss nursing her in the middle of the night? Heh, are you high?
So who knows…Isabella may very well have learned this sleeping through the night thing is good, but the pessimistic part of me is waiting for her to go back to her old habits. I just need to be strong and supportive so that I don’t allow us to get back into the old habits.
Remember your new mantra?
Their brains need it.
You need it.
Happy sleeping.


Amy
July 2003