3 Simple Ways to Get Your Baby on a Great Sleep Schedule

3 Simple Ways to Get Your Baby on a Great Sleep Schedule

Getting your little one on a consistent routine (especially now) is important for many reasons.

  • It helps establish predictability in your day which creates safety and security for your child (we as humans all thrive on set routines).

  • It takes advantage of sleep windows throughout the day, when the body is most primed for sleep and when sleep pressure is ideal creating the best conditions for sleep.

  • It builds in time for rest in your day not only for your child but for you as well.

It can make a world of a difference in helping your child sleep but sleep schedules alone are not going to get you the day sleep you and your baby so desperately need.

You need to set them, prepare for them, and keep them consistent (no matter what).

Here are 3 simple ways to help achieve a great sleep schedule:

3 Things you can do to set yourself up for a great year of SLEEP!

3 Things you can do to set yourself up for a great year of SLEEP!

It’s the new year! A new decade in fact!

Have you been thinking about how you want to make this year great? Or have you just been getting by?

Both are fair and both can take up room in our thoughts.

If there is something you want to change, let this be your sign that you have the power, the support and the opportunity right now to change it.

In a few weeks you could be looking at a completely different life, maybe one where you have more energy? Are feeling confident and the sleepless nights are behind you. Yah mama!

There is nothing wrong in asking for help. We all need some guidance because change is hard but sometimes change is necessary. If what your doing is not working for you. Change it.

Here are 3 ways you can start laying the foundation for a great year of sleep for yourself and your little one (who needs sleep just as much as you do btw)….

How to Resolve Sleep Issues for good: Getting to the root cause

How to Resolve Sleep Issues for good: Getting to the root cause

Band-aid approaches don't work.

Example: You pick up a sleep training technique that your friend swears worked amazingly for her. You try it. Your baby cries for hours. You give in. You're frustrated. You try to modify it. You're. Confused. You try something else. You throw in the towel and resign yourself to never sleeping again—the end.

Sound familiar?

Well, let me tell you why these band-aid approaches don't work.

To clarify, this is what I mean by band-aid approaches: A sleep training approach you googled, found in a book, tips on mommy fb groups, random advice your friend gave you.

These are just SNIPPETS of what need to be comprehensive plans and steps that you need to take. Not the entire plan.

Often we are just addressing one symptom: wake-ups, unsettled sleep, bedtime protests, crappy naps, non-existent naps.

There are symptoms of a deeper issue. Just like chronic headaches are a symptom. Just treating a symptom will not eliminate the problem; it will likely keep coming back unless your doctor assesses you to find the root cause. Fixing the root cause is a better long term strategy for improving the problem. Drugs will only give you short term relief, and you might spend your days covering over issues that seem never to go away or get worse.

One-off sleep behavioral approaches are also not made for your child; they don't consider your child's situation, temperament, needs, and lifestyle. This is where I see a lot of problems.

There are many solutions out there, but if you don't know all the options, you won't choose a solution that works for your family—undermining your long-term success.

Let me share an example I see too often: …..

7 Things we turn to that cause unsettled sleep!

We all doubt ourselves, mostly because as parents we don’t study sleep or even have the time to think about it until we are overwhelmed, sleep deprived and frustrated.

This causes parent’s to desperately try to get their little one to sleep in any way possible…

Maybe if I let her show signs she is sleepy….

I transfer her to her crib ever so quietly….

I’m up anyway, so I assist her a little at the beginning of the night, so she sleeps longer…

I let him sleep as much as possible during the day…

I feed every 2 hours to make sure he is not hungry…

I get them up to start the day at dawn…

Do you do any of these?

Do they work?

Often they don’t. Some might but are not sustainable unless you are OK with waking up every 2 hours overnight? I’m going to assume that you value your sleep and would rather sleep all night long if you are reading this.

So how can each of these cause the opposite effect of what you are looking for?

These are short-term band-aid strategies. Things we do because (understandably so) we are DESPERATE to get some sleep or avoid a crying child. Am I right in my assumption?

So let’s talk about band-aid solutions vs. long term solutions. Band-aid solutions are ad hoc; you regret them instantly, don’t want to continue to do them or “wing it”.

Long term solutions are thought out with an understanding of what is going on. They meet the needs of your baby and set them up for success. They help them develop vital skills that will yield great results for years to come.

Which one do you want?

Let’s talk about why these things MAY cause unsettled sleep…

Maybe if I let her show signs she is sleepy….Once your little one shows signs, IT'S OFTEN TOO LATE! They are overtired, and they will likely release stress hormones that will prevent them from getting restful sleep and keep them in a very light stage of sleep. This is why overtired children often wake up early.

I transfer her in her crib ever so quietly….and then they wake up. Unless you have a newborn, transferring a baby to their crib while they are in a light stage of sleep will result in a startled baby and frustrated parent! If they do transfer well, then YAY! But they are likely to wake up after one sleep cycle and cry for another round. All. Night. Long. The best place for babies to fall asleep is where they will wake up in two hours again unless you want to hold to sleep many times overnight and through naps.

I’m up anyway, so I assist her a little at the beginning of the night, so she sleeps longer…this is a common one. Parents are up anyway, so they figure if they assist their little one to sleep, they will sleep longer stretches independently. We know that babies wake up fully or partially every 90-120 minutes, and if they are assisted at the beginning of the night, we can’t expect them to do it on their own selectively at the end of the night/at 3 am. So it’s MORE important to have them re-settle in the way you want them to re-settle all night long at the beginning half of the night. It will seldom get you a long stretch but cause more fractured sleep.

I let him sleep as much as possible during the day…Never wake a sleeping baby! NOT, yes, please wake a sleeping baby. This is a complete myth. If your little one is sleeping too much during the day, they will have less sleep drive at night and can wake more frequently. We want to even out total day sleep requirements but not take away from night sleep to give to naps. Night sleep is most important as it’s where we hit our deepest stages of sleep.

I feed every 2 hours to make sure he is not hungry…Unless you have a newborn (and even then newborns usually wake up to each every 3-4 hrs), then your baby (over four months) is likely, not hungry every two hours. However, they can be easy to settle with a feed because it’s the sucking that puts them to sleep. This can cause something called “reverse cycling,” where babies start to get most of their calories in during the night, so start to eat less during the day and it can become a bit of a cycle. The good news is that this is easily fixed but requires careful planning to even out feeds and times.

I get them up to start the day at dawn…Please don’t get up for the day at dawn unless you have to or you are a morning person and want to (if this is you, take some time for yourself while your baby sleeps). It sometimes feels like the easier option to start your day when your baby wakes up, but it cements that time as “wake up time” for their body. Our bodies use external cues to know when to get up for the day; food, light and social interaction signal that it’s morning time! You don’t want to reinforce this wake-up time but instead treat it as a night time wake up and encourage sleep cycles to shift later.

Please don’t feel bad if you do these things. We don’t know what we don’t know, and if you are happy to continue doing it, then absolutely you do you! However, if it’s not working for you, and you want to make a change, then these are the first things I would change.

The best thing to do is to develop a plan, but that depends on your family, the approach you feel most comfortable implementing, and your baby.

Reach out to get you clarity and a step-by-step action plan, so you don’t have to feel frustrated, overwhelmed, or exhausted.

Lil xx

Your Sleep Consultant.

 




The Big Kid Bed Transition - 3 must do's!

The Big Kid Bed Transition - 3 must do's!

Making the transition to a big kid bed can be an exciting milestone!

Parents are often unsure when to take this next step and it’s usually followed by anxiety - as is often the case with every decision we make, we question ourselves.

Is this the right time? What do I do if my child wakes up? Is this going to ruin sleep for all of us????

A good way to avoid the what if’s, is to have a plan and think about it ahead of time.

How do you know your child is ready?….

Give the Gift of Better Sleep: 5 products to add to your Christmas list and 5 products to remove

Give the Gift of Better Sleep: 5 products to add to your Christmas list and 5 products to remove

When it comes to sleep…not, all baby products are the same.

When assessing your baby's sleep environment, I look for both things that hinder and help sleep.

There are baby products that will help you and those that will hinder your efforts to help your little one sleep better. The truth is that environment matters.

Our brains are wired to respond to them, and the first thing we should look at is, are we providing the best environment that will promote sleep? Or are there things in our environment that are waking up my baby's brain and making it more difficult for them to fall asleep?

I'm going to give you my top picks for helping to promote a great sleep environment and the products that you should avoid if you want to improve sleep.

Ready??

My Struggle With PostPartum Anxiety

At the height of my anxiety, I remember leaving my house for the first time in 4 months, driving two blocks to the grocery store, and sitting in the parking lot crying.

It was a cold winter day. I had bought this nice new stroller, the latest craze, and the best one on the market at the time. I had never used it because I had locked myself up in my house since my son got out of the hospital.

We had a rocky start with him developing a fever the day after being released from the hospital. We were given the okay to leave the hospital despite struggling for days with breastfeeding and latching. The hospital was “baby-friendly,” which meant they did not promote formula, they didn’t carry it, and in the mandatory class, breastfeeding was positioned as the best and only choice.

I was new to the new mom thing, I was new to the breastfeeding thing, and I bought into the idea that him latching would happen on its own and it would be easy, eventually. I just had to “stick it out.”

Well, it wasn’t easy. When we arrived at the emergency room, we spent four long hours trying to get blood from my son’s tiny veins. They brought in many different doctors and nurses to “try” my husband held my son while I stood in a corner sobbing. I had just had a c-section but don’t even remember any pain because I was so distraught. They found a vein eventually put him on IV, a nurse went out and brought in some formula for us, and we stayed on the PEDS floor for five days. Our stay also required spinal tabs and a series of tests, the reason for our visit- severe dehydration. My son had lost over 15% of his body weight, and we needed to get him nutrients to gain weight again.

The amount of guilt I felt was debilitating. Whenever I remembered my son crying all night long the first few days at home, knowing now that he was starving, I sent chills down my spine and made me (still makes me) cry.

Because of this, I spent all day and night pumping, feeding, and attending to my baby 24 hrs.

The mom guilt, coupled with a few bouts of mastitis - one that sent me to the hospital for an ultrasound, brought on some severe anxiety. Together with a lack of sleep, I was a complete mess.

I developed a fear of leaving my house, was either crying or sleeping sitting up, and felt the lowest I had felt, ever. This situation went on for four months and peaked when I attempted to take a grocery store trip.

I made it inside with my little boy in the car seat, got my groceries, and go back to my car. I put my son in and felt so anxious my breathing quickened, and I just wanted to get home. This world was far too dangerous to expose him to. As I put my new shiny stroller away, I couldn’t figure out how to fold it. I tried every button. I started to panic. My trunk was open, and my son would freeze; how could this happen. I tried to put in the stroller fully open in the trunk, but it was too big. My next thought was to leave the stroller all together; I didn’t care. I cried and felt light-headed. I pulled and pushed, and it finally folded. I closed the trunk and sat in my car for 5 minutes, sobbing. I had not slept all night, my boobs were leaking, and my little one was taken out of our “safe” environment. I was the worst mom ever, not cut out for this.

Sleep deprivation had taken it’s toll. It had made my anxiety worse each day. I felt I would never get out of this cycle as my little one depended on me rocking him every two hours, so by the time I had finished pumping, I was back to rocking. I felt this was my duty to sacrifice my well-being for my child, mostly because of guilt.

But now I realize I was not helping him. In fact, during those 4-5 months, I felt less of a bond with him. Possibility because I was NOT OKAY. I now know that this is common in mothers with PPA. I felt immense guilt for not feeling well, which caused me to feel less attached, and I try to overcompensate for that by giving all of me, which became a cycle.

One night I fell asleep on the couch as I went to get him a bottle and didn’t wake up. I was such in a deep sleep that I didn’t hear him cry (thank goodness I wasn’t holding him, and he was safe in his bassinet). I slept for 5 hours and woke up to painful breasts and confused as to where I was. I then decided that I needed to make some changes. I reached out for help.

I started by fixing my sleep deprivation, I learned about sleep, took a sleep course, and started implementing some of the same sleep strategies I teach today, and I STARTED SLEEPING. Within a few weeks, we were sleeping 12 hours with one feed at night. I woke up, I felt better, and I got a hold of the anxiety. As I suspect it will always be, my guilt was still there, but I was a new woman. I started having more time during naps to catch up on me things, like showering! I found a community of moms and used that new stroller to go out for walks. I overcame my PPA, and sleep deprivation and sleep transformed my life.

I was over the hump. There would still be hiccups, but now I was rested and could approach them with a clear mind. My bond and attachment with my baby significantly improved. I realized that for our attachment to be strong, I didn’t have to be “attached” to my baby 24/7. It was the QUALITY of time we spent together. I was able to respond in a much more intentional way. I was no longer reacting out of guilt, but I was taking time to stand back and assess what my child needed at that moment, and sometimes it was sleep.

My second post pardon experience was hugely different, although I had a two-year-old to run after. It had its own challenges, but no PPD, and I was well rested from the beginning (as much as a newborn mom can be). I also decided not to breastfeed and formula feed, which allowed my husband and I to switch off and split the feedings. I started my business during this newborn phase and really enjoyed motherhood so much more this time around. I took in both my kids and had the energy to keep up with them and help other moms while my daughter napped.

Many of the moms I speak to tell me this:

-They are doing something wrong

-There is guilt

-There is frustration

-There is a feeling of not doing it right or not being a good mom

I want to tell you that YOU ARE DOING A GREAT JOB. There is nothing wrong with reaching out for help. In fact, I think it’s necessary. We can’t do it all, and we need to ultimately make the best choices for our family.

If that choice is getting more sleep, then I’m here.

 

Teething Pains

Teething Pains

Teething sucks. Teething pain is experienced both by babies AND their parents who 1) hate seeing their babe in pain and, 2) dread the teething related wake ups at night.

But what if I told you that while teething pain can cause discomfort, it’s rarely the root cause of sleep problems. Yup, in fact it’s largely misdiagnosed and attributed as the culprit of all different kinds of illnesses and sleep issues.

The Two Things Getting In the Way of Sleep Success

The Two Things Getting In the Way of Sleep Success

Has it been weeks or months and you haven’t seen any improvement in sleep?…maybe it’s time to ask yourself why and re-evaluate what your currently doing.

Here’s the honest truth. Parents often come to me when they are at the end of their rope. Exhausted, sleep deprived and desperate for some relief. They also all notice their baby is also sleep deprived, unhappy, fussier and also just wanting some rest, and they just don’t know how to give it to them.

Many have tried something they found off the internet or in a book and after many weeks or even months of tears, it just isn’t working out.

This is very common unfortunately.

Why? Because babies are humans and each is different and unique. Also, because WE are humans and need some guidance and support (we’re not supposed to know it all) and lastly because sleep is not linear. Sleep is complicated! but if you know how to navigate it, it doesn’t have to be complicated.

Here are the two main reasons why attempts to improve sleep at any age fail..

Top Adult Sleep Questions Answered

Did you know that I not only help parents get their babies sleeping but, I also study adult sleep?

Sleep is my specialty.

Not only can I get your little one’s sleeping and help educate on infant and toddler sleep, but I help parents sleep.

Sleep is sleep.

Once I get their babies sleeping 12+ hrs at night, parents often come to me not because their child is not sleeping…but because THEY are not sleeping!

I know, I know...what parents often say “after the kids go to bed is finally MEEE time, my Netflix and relax time, I can’t give that up!!”

You don’t have to.

Take these tips and start with making small changes. Life is about balance, watch tv before bed but maybe buffer 15 minutes of a wind-down before settling in for the night.

Small changes create significant results, and you don’t have to give up the occasional glass of wine, coffee, or late night.

Here are some of the top questions I get and my answers!

How much sleep should I be getting at night?

Adults should get between 7-9 hours of sleep at night.

We often don’t get the amount of sleep we regularly need, sometimes because our babies are not sleeping well (but I can fix that), but mostly because we live in a culture where sleep is not prioritized, we are using lack of sleep as a badge of honor. That’s not all, technology including blue lights are also tricking our bodies into thinking it’s not yet time for sleep, causing us to be off rhythm with our biological clocks. Not to mention artificial sleep disruptors like caffeine, alcohol, drugs…

Prioritizing anything over sleep witch is a non-negotiable biological necessity, can be detrimental to our health and our little ones health. Period.

How do I know I’m getting enough sleep?

If you wake up, feeling rested, energized, and ready for the day. You have had enough sleep!

This means you’re not reaching for and NEEDING a coffee anytime in the morning or ready for a nap mid-morning.

Try it. Skip your morning coffee. Do you feel tired? Sluggish? If you do, you need more sleep.

Should I take a nap during the day?

Whether you should take a nap depends on you and on your body. If you are sleep deprived or didn’t get enough sleep the night before, you might want to take a short catnap during the day.

If you take a nap and you find it affects your nighttime sleep or you have trouble falling asleep at night, it’s not worth sacrificing night sleep, which is more restorative and beneficial for your body.

Taking a short nap is better than taking a 2 hr nap during the day. Again you don’t want to sacrifice the quality of your sleep at night.

Short naps between 10-20 minutes are ideal.

Try not to nap after 3 pm.

No human, including babies, sleeps well in a distracting environment (even if we think we do), so a dark, quiet place with little distractions is always best.

Can you catch up on sleep on weekends?

No sorry, you can’t. This is a myth. You can’t accumulate sleep debt and then hope to pay it off on the weekends. It just doesn’t work that way. Once sleep is lost, it’s lost. You can’t “sleep it off.”

According to Neuroscientist Mathew Walker, this “social jet lag” or “sleep bulimia”, sleeping less during the week and trying to sleep it off on the weekend can cause a far less healthy life.

The recommendation is to get consistent sleep every day of the week.

Go to bed at the same time and wake up at the same time always.

What can help me sleep better?

Getting our bodies circadian rhythm working in sync with our natural sleep-wake cycles is critical!

  • This means going to sleep at the same time each night and waking up at the same time.

  • Reducing exposure to blue light (phone, tv, or any technology) at least an hour before bed.

  • Lot’s of sunlight exposure during wakeful times and darkness during sleep.

  • Keep naps shorter than 20 minutes or if they affect sleep, avoid them (for adults only, children have different sleep needs)

  • Avoid caffeine in the afternoon.

  • Reduce anxiety by writing down thoughts before bed, practicing gratitude, or breathing/meditation.

  • Exercise (better in the early part of the day)

How to fall asleep faster at night?

  • A bath helps lower body temperature and prepare for sleep.

  • Magnesium helps to relax the muscles and achieve better sleep.

  • Breathing/meditation before bed.

What do I do if I can’t fall asleep or wake up at night and can’t fall back to sleep?

  • Focus on not “going back to sleep” but instead breathing deeply for 4 seconds in, holding for 4 seconds, and out for 4 seconds. Just relax.

  • Don’t ever stay in bed tossing and turning. Get out of bed and change your environment. Read in dim lights. Don’t look at your phone or turn on the tv.

  • Journal, write down some of the thoughts that are keeping you up or might be causing anxiety. Write them all down.

If you snore, get up frequently (more than two times at night), or suffer from insomnia (this could be linked to PPD or PPA) or excessive sleepiness during the day, see your doctor.

*This is not medical advice. Please see your doctor if sleep quality is poor, and you are excessively tired.

Reach out if you want to chat about first resolving any sleep problem you are facing with your child, and we will get that sorted so that you can focus on your sleep and your self-care (if that includes Netflix - YOU DO YOU! I support you 😉)

Lil.

 


Getting Sleep Back On Track For "Back-To-School" During Covid Times

Getting Sleep Back On Track For "Back-To-School" During Covid Times

Sleep during COVID has been…well messed up!

We’ve been home with our children for months, schedules and routines have been interrupted and then on top of that…SUMMER! Usually, a time when we throw caution to the wind when it comes to sleep. For many families this has been therapeutic, enjoying summer nights after a stressful COVID quarantine. We needed a little fun and escape from the indoors!

However, now as we prepare for the fall and back-to-school (whatever that might look like for your family this year), we are starting to feel the toll on quality and quantity of sleep. We want to get our children on some sort of schedule or routine, we want to start sleeping better knowing school is approaching and whether your children are physically attending school, you’ve opted for pod learning or online learning, getting the family back on track can be difficult. It’s necessary, however, so you all feel not only rested but organized and let’s face it, humans love routine, we love predictability and guess what…babies and children THRIVE on it!

So let’s get you back on track with some easy steps you can start implementing ahead of time, to make the transition as easy as possible…

Sleep: A universal human need

Sleep: A universal human need

Why do babies and parents need sleep?

Everything we read online points to sleep deprivation being a prerequesite to parenthood, like chronic sleep deprivation should be expected and accepted. WHY??

While, it’s true that sleep might be interrupted especially during the newborn phase, there are many things you can do to maximize sleep for you and your baby. There is so much we know about sleep now.

Night Time Skills - Standing in Crib, Rolling and Parties All. Night. Long

Night Time Skills - Standing in Crib, Rolling and Parties All. Night. Long

Why? Why? Why?

Just when things start to settle down. You finally get on a nice routine, sleeping longer stretches, nights seem more consistent and you take a breath and look at the monitor.

Only to see two little eyes standing in the crib peering back at you as if they can see into your soul! Scary.

It is scary, especially if your little one has no idea how to get back down and therefore screams in frustration or just finds it hilarious. Sound familiar? Yes this is stressful but really it’s a great achievement and significant developmental milestone for your little one! YAY!!!

Or how about this, your baby decides to kill it at the rolling over game exactly at 3am! Yay for rolling but now they’re stuck. They scream until they are saved (turned over) and just as you’re drifting back into dreamland..guess what…they roll themselves back on their tummies. Stuck again!

This becomes a fun game…for no one.

So what do you do in these scenarios?

Let me tell you!

Early Morning Struggle Bus? Understanding Early Morning Wakings

Early Morning Struggle Bus? Understanding Early Morning Wakings

I often talk to tired mamas getting up as early as 5 am everyday, but not by choice! They have a little human alarm clock that is very predictable and set to go off at the same time everyday before dawn. Does this sound like your situation? So what do you do? Other than hook up a coffee IV and push past your day exhausted?!

Well, let me explain to you why early wake-ups occur in babies and toddlers and give you some tips on how to prevent them.