Do you co-sleep?

Look at history and still lots of cultures, co-sleeping is really natural and normal.

When Jasper sleeps with me, even asleep, I know he's right there and I couldn't roll on him... you just cant... the risk comes when mum or dad are drinking, smoking or on drugs.. so its fine as long as you're being sensible.

When Jasper was very little, I set him up how the MWs told me to in hospital.... I put two towels under each of his sides so he couldn't roll and I put a pillow between my knees so I coudn't roll and we both couldn't roll into one another!!!

Now he's big and strong and loud, theres no way I could squish him without him telling me about it!

ALSO for me, it felt safer, Jasper had sleep apnea when he was a week old, I needed him somewhere I could check his breathing easily all night.

AND at the end of the day, it soooooooo lovely.... waking up with beautiful baby boy, smiling and happy to be in mummy and daddy's bed. We havea really solid routine and he sleeps in his own cot all of his day sleeps and so sleepin half the night with us is fine.
 
i have never co-slept untill last night, I wasnt planning to but tyler fell asleep in bed with me so i left him there and he slept from 9 till 7 this morning :) xx
 
I think you have to have alot of mutual respect to continue. If either of you start to stray from the comfort of sleeping together then it can be far from a pleasent experience. Every time Caitlyn learns something new, she would rather do it on my head all night than sleep...

Other times we have wonderful nights and it reminds me why I want to be close to her.
 
I fall asleep occasionally in bed with Aiden when I feed, but my doctor told me the other day, doctors did a study and your baby is 50 percent more likely to get SIDS when they co-sleep in bed with you... Im not sure how true this is, but I myself was afraid of smushing him =( so he sleeps in his crib
 
I fall asleep occasionally in bed with Aiden when I feed, but my doctor told me the other day, doctors did a study and your baby is 50 percent more likely to get SIDS when they co-sleep in bed with you... Im not sure how true this is, but I myself was afraid of smushing him =( so he sleeps in his crib

They've done loads of studies and some show there's a higher risk while others show there's a lower risk, and a lot depends on how you interpret the results. It's like everything you do for your child - you have to make a judgement call.
 
summer wnet in her moses basket from day 1 and i wouldnt co-sleep with her when she was very little but when she was about 5 months or so and started teething real bad she would end up in bed with us most nights but we stopped this last month or so and she now stays in her cot all night. i never put her to sleep in my bed i would make sure she always went off in her cot on her own then when she woke up she would come in with us.
 
I have never co-slept. TBH i have never needed to so i feel i couldn't ever comment on doing it as i have never exeperianced a non sleeping in own bed baby! If that makes sense. I'm sure there are pros and cons with it , but isn't there with everthing! I now have Lexie in her cot in her own room at 3 months and i'm sure there is right and wrong in that! If your MIL says anything kindly ask if she would like to have her for a night!!!
xxxxxxxxxx
 
Sorry... I dont co-sleep. Jasmine has been in her crib since she was 1 week old. I dont think it is very safe for 1 and on top of that I believe in setting a good routine from the beginning. She is perfectly comfortable and happy in her bed, its her space and she has always been in there, she goes to bed at 7pm now and doesn't wake until 7am or so.

Babies spend such a short time waking through the night, She slept through before she was 2 months... so 2 months of waking in the night was hard, but I made it through.

Everyone is free to do as they wish though.

I agree, Chloe has slept on her own from the word go- we were in hospital for 3 days and she was in the cot there and in her moses basket here. Until she was 6 months she was right next to me in her basket. She has slept through since 8 weeks and has been in a great night time routine.

I never considered co sleeping as I wanted to set a routine straight way and I felt it was dangerous, but its something the individual parent must decide for them and their circumstances
 
Dec was in his own moses basket/cot/bed from day one, not that I have anything against co-sleeping but I had learned from my mistakes, I co-slept with Dan and I couldnt get him out of my bed until he was 5 years old, and believe me sleeping with a 2/3/4/5 is not fun .
 
I dont intend to co-sleep past 2/3 months. I dont think it would do my relationship any good
 
I vote yes. I do co sleep, it did take me a while to settle down about it though, in the beginning I tried putting her in a crib, she woke up every 15-20 minutes and I was told to let her cry it out, that she would eventually fall asleep. Well that and the colic was driving me crazy and to top it off I struggled so much with breastfeeding. I accidently fell asleep with her in my bed, it was like 3-4 hours that she slept. It was so nice and I was so worn out from trying to get her to sleep in a crib, she doesn't cry herself to sleep. and she would cry every night from 6pm-10:30pm, so by the time I settled her and tried to put he to bed in her crib, I just didn't have the stamina to really enforce it and as soon as she started crying I would just take her to bed with me. Luckily the colic stopped after a couple months. But I just have always found her to be such a great sleeper with me. And to this day I have trouble sleeping without her. I also found that it helped with my depression, after she was born I had terrible depression and separation anxiety. After sleeping with her with me for 9 months, it was hard to sleep alone.
I always know she's there, she doesn't wake up screaming like she did when I'd put her in a crib, she wakes up smiling and happy. Its easier to feed her. And We both sleep better. Also as a single mom, it made nights easier for me.
The cons, she doesn't sleep well without me. The only way she'll nap in the day is if I lay dow with her. I have to go to bed when she wants to (between 6pm-8pm) and I can't leave her alone in bed.
Sorry long rant!
 
Strange thing is Meadow sleeps perfectly in the day. I can put her down in her bouncer chair and she will settle herself. If I put her in her crib at night when shes fast asleep she wakes up straight away!
 
I fall asleep occasionally in bed with Aiden when I feed, but my doctor told me the other day, doctors did a study and your baby is 50 percent more likely to get SIDS when they co-sleep in bed with you... Im not sure how true this is, but I myself was afraid of smushing him =( so he sleeps in his crib

They've done loads of studies and some show there's a higher risk while others show there's a lower risk, and a lot depends on how you interpret the results. It's like everything you do for your child - you have to make a judgement call.

Thats right... I do find co-sleeping is more accepted in the UK then here in Canada... In Canada it is advised more of the time that co-sleeping is dangerous and a higher risk of sids.
 
I do sometimes if she's very unsettled and wants to be close to me. I'm trying not to though cause I have a rubbish quality of sleep when she's in the bed. x
 
We used to bring him in with us when we slept in his room but not anymore. He comes in if he's poorly or teething (because he sleeps better, we'd all be up all night if he was in his own room) and he comes in with me for an hour while Daddy gets ready to go to work, thats just because when Seth is awake he doesn't let me cuddle him anymore lol

I always was dead against it but I changed my mind when I had him and we got into bad habits with it.

xxx
 
We use to, but not anymore. I miss co-sleeping at times. Recently though we have been sleeping togather on the couch because we both had a cough.
 
i have never......maley has been a good sleeper and sometimes in the morning i get her in our bed if im tired and had a late night :blush: but she hates it in our bed!!!!!

Even though i never co-slept at all...i did sometimes wake in the night panicking and dreamt that she was in the bed and i couldnt find her...that put me well and truly off of even trying it.
 
CO-SLEEPING RESEARCH
The physiological effects of sleep-sharing are finally being studied in sleep laboratories that are set up to mimic, as much as possible, the home bedroom. Over the past few years, nearly a million dollars of government research money has been devoted to sleep-sharing research. These studies have all been done on mothers and infants ranging from two to five months in age. Here are the preliminary findings based on mother-infant pairs studied in the sleep-sharing arrangement versus the solitary-sleeping arrangement (Elias 1986, McKenna 1993, Fleming 1994; Mosko 1994):

1. Sleep-sharing pairs showed more synchronous arousals than when sleeping separately. When one member of the pair stirred, coughed, or changed sleeping stages, the other member also changed, often without awakening.

2. Each member of the pair tended to often, but not always, be in the same stage of sleep for longer periods if they slept together.

3. Sleep-sharing babies spent less time in each cycle of deep sleep. Lest mothers worry they will get less deep sleep; preliminary studies showed that sleep-sharing mothers didn't get less total deep sleep.

4. Sleep-sharing infants aroused more often and spent more time breastfeeding than solitary sleepers, yet the sleep-sharing mothers did not report awakening more frequently.

5. Sleep-sharing infants tended to sleep more often on their backs or sides and less often on their tummies, a factor that could itself lower the SIDS risk.

6. A lot of mutual touch and interaction occurs between the sleep-sharers. What one does affects the nighttime behavior of the other.

Even though these studies are being conducted in sleep laboratories instead of the natural home environment, it's likely that within a few years enough mother-infant pairs will be studied to scientifically validate what insightful mothers have long known: something good and healthful occurs when mothers and babies share sleep.
- https://www.askdrsears.com/html/7/T071000.asp
 
7 BENEFITS OF CO-SLEEPING: MEDICAL AND DEVELOPMENTAL
There is no right or wrong place for baby to sleep. Wherever all family members sleep the best is the right arrangement for you. Remember, over half the world's population sleeps with their baby, and more and more parents in the U.S. are sharing sleep with their little one. Here's why:

1. Babies sleep better
Sleepsharing babies usually go to sleep and stay asleep better. Being parented to sleep at the breast of mother or in the arms of father creates a healthy go-to-sleep attitude. Baby learns that going to sleep is a pleasant state to enter (one of our goals of nighttime parenting).
Babies stay asleep better. Put yourself in the sleep pattern of baby. As baby passes from deep sleep into light sleep, he enters a vulnerable period for nightwaking, a transition state that may occur as often as every hour and from which it is difficult for baby to resettle on his own into a deep sleep. You are a familiar attachment person whom baby can touch, smell, and hear. Your presence conveys an "It's OK to go back to sleep" message. Feeling no worry, baby peacefully drifts through this vulnerable period of nightwaking and reenters deep sleep. If baby does awaken, she is sometimes able to resettle herself because you are right there. A familiar touch, perhaps a few minutes' feed, and you comfort baby back into deep sleep without either member of the sleep-sharing pair fully awakening.

Many babies need help going back to sleep because of a developmental quirk called object or person permanence. When something or someone is out of sight, it is out of mind. Most babies less than a year old do not have the ability to think of mother as existing somewhere else. When babies awaken alone in a crib, they become frightened and often unable to resettle back into deep sleep. Because of this separation anxiety, they learn that sleep is a fearful state to remain in (not one of our goals of nighttime parenting).

2. Mothers sleep better
Many mothers and infants are able to achieve nighttime harmony: babies and mothers get their sleep cycles in sync with one another.
Martha notes: "I would automatically awaken seconds before my baby would. When the baby started to squirm, I would lay on a comforting hand and she would drift back to sleep. Sometimes I did this automatically and I didn't even wake up."
Contrast sleepsharing with the crib and nursery scene. The separate sleeper awakens – alone and behind bars. He is out of touch. He first squirms and whimpers. Still out of touch. Separation anxiety sets in, baby becomes scared, and the cry escalates into an all-out wail or plea for help. This piercing cry awakens even the most long distance mother, who jumps up (sometimes out of the state of deep sleep, which is what leads to most nighttime exhaustion), and staggers reluctantly down the hall. By the time mother reaches the baby, baby is wide awake and upset, mother is wide awake and upset, and the comforting that follows becomes a reluctant duty rather than an automatic nurturant response. It takes longer to resettle an upset solo sleeper than it does a half-asleep baby who is sleeping within arm's reach of mother. Once baby does fall asleep, mother is still wide-awake and too upset to resettle easily. If, however, the baby is sleeping next to mother and they have their sleep cycles in sync, most mothers and babies can quickly resettle without either member of the sleepsharing pair fully awakening. Being awakened suddenly and completely from a state of deep sleep to attend to a hungry or frightened baby is what leads to sleep-deprived parents and fearful babies.

3. Breastfeeding is easier
Most veteran breastfeeding mothers have, for survival, learned that sharing sleep makes breastfeeding easier. Breastfeeding mothers find it easier than bottlefeeding mothers to get their sleep cycles in sync with their babies. They often wake up just before the babies awaken for a feeding. By being there and anticipating the feeding, mother can breastfeed baby back to a deep sleep before baby (and often mother) fully awakens.
A mother who had achieved nighttime-nursing harmony with her baby shared the following story with us:
"About thirty seconds before my baby wakes up for a feeding, my sleep seems to lighten and I almost wake up. By being able to anticipate his feeding, I usually can start breastfeeding him just as he begins to squirm and reach for the nipple. Getting him to suck immediately keeps him from fully waking up, and then we both drift back into a deep sleep right after feeding."

Mothers who experience daytime breastfeeding difficulties report that breastfeeding becomes easier when they sleep next to their babies at night and lie down with baby and nap nurse during the day. We believe baby senses that mother is more relaxed, and her milk-producing hormones work better when she is relaxed or sleeping.

4. It's contemporary parenting
Sleepsharing is even more relevant in today's busy lifestyles. As more and more mothers, out of necessity, are separated from their baby during the day, sleeping with their baby at night allows them to reconnect and make up for missed touch time during the day. As a nighttime perk, the relaxing hormones that are produced in response to baby nursing relax a mother and help her wind down from the tension of a busy day's work. (See
5. Babies thrive better
Over the past thirty years of observing sleepsharing families in our pediatric practice, we have noticed one medical benefit that stands out; these babies thrive . "Thriving" means not only getting bigger, but also growing to your full potential, emotionally, physically, and intellectually. Perhaps it's the extra touch that stimulates development, or perhaps the extra feedings (yes, sleepsharing infants breastfeed more often than solo sleepers).
6. Parents and infants become more connected
Remember that becoming connected is the basis of parenting, and one of your early goals of parenting. In our office, we keep a file entitled "Kids Who Turned Out Well, What Their Parents Did." We have noticed that infants who sleep with their parents (some or all of the time during those early formative years) not only thrive better, but infants and parents are more connected.
7. Reduces the risk of SIDS
New research is showing what parents the world over have long suspected: infants who sleep safely nestled next to parents are less likely to succumb to the tragedy of SIDS. Yet, because SIDS is so rare (.5 to 1 case per 1,000 infants), this worry should not be a reason to sleep with your baby. (For in depth information on the science of sleepsharing and the experiments showing how sleep benefits a baby's nighttime physiology. (See SIDS)
Co-sleeping does not always work and some parents simply do not want to sleep with their baby. Sleepsharing is an optional attachment tool. You are not bad parents if you don't sleep with your baby. Try it. If it's working and you enjoy it, continue. If not, try other sleeping arrangements (an alternative is the sidecar arrangement: place a crib or co-sleeper adjacent to your bed).

New parents often worry that their child will get so used to sleeping with them that he may never want to leave their bed. Yes, if you're used to sleeping first-class, you are reluctant to be downgraded. Like weaning from the breast, infants do wean from your bed (usually sometime around two years of age). Keep in mind that sleepsharing may be the arrangement that is designed for the safety and security of babies. The time in your arms, at your breast, and in your bed is a very short time in the total life of your child, yet the memories of love and availability last a lifetime.

Back to topARM'S REACH® CO-SLEEPER® BASSINET
An alternative to sleeping with baby in your bed is the Arm's Reach® Co-Sleeper®. This crib-like bed fits safely and snuggly adjacent to parent's bed. The co-sleeper® arrangement gives parents and baby their own separate sleeping spaces yet, keeps baby within arm's reach for easy nighttime care. To learn more about the Arm's Reach® Co-Sleeper® Bassinet visit www.armsreach.com.
Back to topCO-SLEEPING AND SIDS
Since research suggests that infants at risk of SIDS have a diminished arousal response during sleep, it seems logical that anything that increases the infant's arousability from sleep or the mother's awareness of her infant during sleep may decrease the risk of SIDS. That's exactly what sleeping with your baby can do. Here are the vital roles a sleep-sharing mother plays:

DR. SEARS SIDS HYPOTHESIS:

I believe that in most cases SIDS is a sleep disorder, primarily a disorder of arousal and breathing control during sleep. All the elements of natural mothering, especially breastfeeding and sharing sleep, benefit the infant's breathing control and increase the mutual awareness between mother and infant so that their arousability is increased and the risk of SIDS decreased.



Mother acts as pacemaker. A major part of my sleep-sharing hypothesis is that mother can act as a breathing pacemaker for her baby. Picture what happens when mother and baby sleep side by side. Mother acts like a breathing pacemaker for her baby during sleep. Together they develop what we call "sleep harmony." Both members of the sleeping pair have simultaneous sleep stages, perhaps not perfectly attuned and not all night long, but close enough that they are mutually aware of each other's presence without disturbing each other's sleep. Because of this mutual sensitivity, as baby normally cycles from deep sleep into light sleep, the presence of the mother raises baby's arousability and awareness. As previously discussed the lack of arousability or ascending out of deep sleep may characterize infants at risk for SIDS. Countless times a mother has said to me, "I automatically awaken just before my baby starts to stir and I nurse her back to sleep. Usually neither of us fully awakens, and we both quickly drift back to sleep."

-https://www.askdrsears.com/html/7/T071000.asp
 
Never have and never will , some get too atached and will be sleeping with a 3 year old later on .. NO thank you :lol:
Both my children went straight into a moses basket and then cot , if they know they could sleep with mummy i 100% know they would rather that then on there own.
But because of the fact thats incredibly dangerous ( i know someone that has lost there LO from it) so even though others may think its fine i still dont :p

Each to there own , but im damn glad from day one i have shown them them where bed is and where it always will be!
 

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