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Twenty years later, I still have vivid
memories of my first year as a parent, dreading bedtime.
Our daughter would fall asleep with
little trouble. That wasn't the problem, especially after my husband
and I figured out that waiting for her to fall asleep when she was
tired was easier than trying to "put" her to sleep when
we were tired. But would she stay asleep for a few hours, or would
she awaken to nurse after 45 minutes?
We approached every night with apprehension.
Some nights she would sleep for a few hours and I would say triumphantly,
"See, she's getting into a good pattern now!" But as the
weeks went on, the pattern became harder to detect. Of course we
got the usual contradictory advice - wean her, nurse her more often
during the day, start solids, let her cry it out.
Several friends encouraged me to take
our baby into bed with us, to make it easier to nurse her. But to
me, that seemed counter-productive. If she were in bed with us,
surely our movements would stimulate her to wake and nurse more
often - not at all what we wanted.
Finally, when she was about five
months old and I once again believed that she had settled
into a "pattern," we joined my parents for a Florida
vacation. The sun and sand were wonderful and relaxing, but
in the mornings I cried to my sympathetic father that we had
ruined her pattern by leaving home, and that I was exhausted.
Everything was unfamiliar to our baby - no wonder she woke
frequently at night to make sure that we were still there!
My father, a pediatrician, reminded
me that many mothers he knew felt more rested when they took their
babies into bed with them. Desperate, I decided to try it.
At first, it was hard for me to get used to sleeping with a noisy,
active baby. (My husband didn't mind - he moved another bed into
our room and if he couldn't fall back to sleep in our bed, he would
move over.) But while I was just as tired, at least I was warmer,
since I no longer had to get out of bed so many times.
The months wore on, until one morning a well-meaning friend asked
me the dreaded question, "How many times does she wake at night?"
I realized I didn't know the answer. I had slept through her nursing
sessions so successfully that I wasn't even aware of how often she
nursed! This was a milestone.
Another milestone occurred one
night when we slept in a hotel room with two double beds.
We slept better there than we had since our daughter was born,
so we immediately invested in another double bed for our own
room.
After that, we never used a crib
again. Our three other children shared our bed(s) from the
moment of their births, and my early family bed dread was
a thing of the past. I changed my definition of "sleeping
through the night." The baby slept through the night
as long as she kept her eyes closed. If she woke up, nursed,
and went back to sleep, that was sleeping through the night.
By that definition, our babies all slept through the night
by about 6 weeks! I slept through the nursing too and felt
much more rested in the morning.
SEPARATE
SLEEPING IS A NEW CUSTOM
Like any college-educated mother, I
used our bedroom as a laboratory at night and I read the professional
literature about our experiment during the day. Just because it
was more restful, cozier and more comfortable, did that mean that
it was the best thing for the baby?
I learned from Tine Thevenin's classic book, The
Family Bed, that "separate sleeping is mainly
a social custom" and has been the norm in the West only
for a hundred years or so. Thevenin shows from her own studies
and others that fears of "overlying," a term with
a biblical ring, are not well grounded. These deaths are not
caused by mothers sleeping with their babies, but are rather
cases of SIDS, which consistently occur around the world at
the rate of 2-3 per 1000 live births.
Thevenin's book was first published in 1976; since then there
have been several studies on the topic. Dr. William Sears,
in his popular 1990 book, Nighttime
Parenting, advocates co-sleeping as a way for parents
to actually lower the risk of SIDS in their babies. According
to Dr. Sears, "anthropological studies have shown that
the rate of SIDS is approximately three to four times higher
in cultures where mothers do not sleep with their babies."
Dr. James McKenna, Professor of Anthropology at the University of
Notre Dame, and the author of a sleep laboratory study of co-sleeping,
said in a statement in September 1999 that special precautions need
to be taken to minimize catastrophic accidents such as making sure
that mothers do not smoke and are not desensitized by drugs or alcohol.
"However, the need for such precautions is no more an argument
against all co-sleeping...than is the reality of infants accidentally
strangling...alone in cribs a reason to recommend against all
solitary...infant sleep."
Even Penelope Leach, the world-famous
child care expert, recently wrote in the New York Times: "Being
close at night helps parents bond with their babies... As long
as the parents don't drink, smoke, sleep with thick comforters or
put babies on their stomachs, there is no real evidence against
sleeping with a baby, as most people in the world do."
My husband and I also wondered about
the psychological effects of sharing the marital bed. Our
marriage seemed to be thriving, but what about others?
According to Sandra Rigazio-Digilio, PhD, professor in the
Marriage and Family Therapy Program at the University of Connecticut,
"In healthy families, this nighttime togetherness can
be a bonding experience for children and parents. If...both
partners agree this will make feeding easier and make a child
feel bonded, then this can...increase the well being of
family members. However, if cosleeping is being used
as a way to keep parents apart...it is inappropriate."
On a recent 20/20 show, one parent
said:
"The more we thought about it,
and especially when you look down at this little tiny baby and people
are starting to tell you, 'Oh, you've got to start to separate yourself.
You've got to put that baby in this other room.' And you look down
at this little baby, and it just doesn't make sense. You know, the
baby needs someone with them all the time, and that's the way it
really should be."
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