Our daughter is 20 months old and to us she is pretty
perfectPerfect choice. However, she started sleeping in our bed at 6 months, when her
teethBroken or knocked out tooth
Dental care - adult
Dental x-rays
Development of baby teeth
Development of permanent teeth
Plaque and tartar on teeth
Teething
Teething symptoms
Toothaches started to come because she would wake every hour and no one was getting any sleep. Due to this we put her in our bed, she would nurse/pacify on the breast at night and my husband (and sole bread-winner-early riser)never even know she was awake anymore! So, she began sleeping through the night and we tried to return her to her crib (because everyone told us she should, not becuse we wanted to) but she would wake up when we would move her and getting her to sleep was even worse than before her
teethBroken or knocked out tooth
Dental care - adult
Dental x-rays
Development of baby teeth
Development of permanent teeth
Plaque and tartar on teeth
Teething
Teething symptoms
Toothaches where coming in. By then (about one month) my husband and I had grown used to her being in bed w/ us and we loved it! We don't drink or use drugs and our matress is only 4 years old and very solid and there's no
separationPlacenta abruptio
Separation anxiety from the
headHead and face reconstruction
Head injury
Head lice
Indications of head injury
Radial head injury-borad and the matress and she sleeps in between us both. She has an amazing vocabulary, has only had a
feverAllergic rhinitis
Coccidioidomycosis
Febrile seizures
Fever
Fever blister
Fever blisters and canker sores
Herpes labialis (oral herpes simplex)
Histoplasmosis
Malaria
Rheumatic fever
Scarlet fever once and a "cold" due to her teeth (according to her Dr.)and is a very friendly, outgoing child. I am still nursing her and will continue until she is two years old.
I am writing to ask three questions: Is there a psychogical risk in a child sleeping with her parents i.e. low self esteem, lack of independece, or is it the opposite as a child psychologist once told me and it is a positive thing because she feels wanted and protected? She seems to be such a secure child...and we love it so.... Second question: What's the drop-dead age at which we should steer her to sleep in her crib or todler bed if she never asks ?(we ask her all the time just to check but we're happy when she says she wants us.) Third question: Can you please recommend books or articles that have been published on the subject evn if some are pro and some are con so that we can decide how to proceed before her 2nd birthday.
Thank you for any help you can give!!!!
This thing that americans have against sharing the bed with children is only a cultural thing, there are many different cultures in the world that approve and practice bed sharing and their kids grow up perfectly normal. And regarding intimacy ... I think you have some other rooms in your house, beside your bedroom, don't you?
I think that you should read the books of William and Martha Sears, they wrote a lot about bed sharing, and so many other things. I found myself in their style of parenting, in a world where every one else I knew was telling me that I should have let my babies cry-themselves-out to sleep and that it was not good sharing the bed with them.
Try the Sears!
Good luck for everything!
as a baby, our first child had troubles falling asleep and staying asleep, but she was fine if she could share our bed, so we let her sleep with us every time she wanted to; she is now almost 7, she is a great sleeper and she is been perfectly fine sleeping alone in her bed in her own room since a long time. We did the same with our second, he's now three and sleeping more and more in his own bed.
They both know that they can share our big bed any time they need to, they feel safe knowing this, and I am sure that this is the reason they also feel safe sleeping alone.
Trust your instinct: if your baby, you and your husband are all happy, you can't be wrong.
You seem to not want to hear it because it's not the answer you want.
I think you ARE putting your needs ahead of your child's, and just because your child says she's happy with the arrangement doesn't mean it's a good thing. I'm sure if she had her way, she'd eat candy and soda for every meal, but that doesn't mean it's good for her.
My son was never in my bed until he was 2. When he got sick and I needed to monitor him overnight regularly, I took him to sleep with me. As far as sleep-disorders goes, he has a major sleep disorder, present from before he ever slept in my bed. He continues to sleep with me periodically because he is better rested when he is not alone all night. If I have more kids, this time I won't feel guilty about a family bed because we - as a family - find it works for us.
I think the only time a family bed is a problem is if a)it interferes or is a problem for the family relationship, or b)if they don't learn good sleep hygiene (a problem no matter where a child sleeps). Otherwise, if your child is happy and healthy, more power to you.
My son is almost 2 1/2 and he sleeps with us almost all the time. My husband works shifts, so many nights it's just my son & I-- when Daddy's home we sometimes wish we have a King size bed... ha.Ha, but in his won bed he gets up a zillion times throught he night (ans therefore so do we) but in our bed-- he sleeps "like a baby"!
As far as for Erin F's comment that the Dr did answer my question but I just didn't want to hear it, well, that's not accurate. The Dr. only answered two of my questions, but not my primary question. I wanted to know what were the negative effects of co-sleeping with a baby, why is a a "bad" thing. He or she spoke about the baby interfearing in my intimacy with my husband but never said specifically why it was harmfull to a child.
I have now further discussed this with her pediatician whom explained to me that as as precaution for babies not to be accidentally axfixiated, fall off the bed or be wedged into the headboard, they have to discourage and warn parents NOT to sleep with babies. As far as any future psychological problems it may cause (my original, unanswered question to this site) he says that there aren't any, and that in fact, studies indicate that children that feel welcomed into their parents bed are more secure as adolescents and adults. Good enough for us...
As far as the comment about allowing our daughter any indulgence she craves (ie "letting her eat candy for dinner")- There's a clear difference in making our daughter feel that her prescence is wanted vs. being an irresponsible parent raising a capricious child to whom the word "NO" is never said. We are responsible parents who cared enough to research the whole co-sleeping thing and it's not dangerous and does not have a disastroud end as bad eating habits do. She knows who the parents are in our family, us. We have followed every guideline set by all medical foundations: she's being breast-fed until 2, she's never allowed any juice, she only slept on her back, no pillows, blankets, etc...This co-sleeping thing was the only "rule" we broke and we noticed that at least this way she slept. Finally when she got a little older and sturdier, so did we. After all, sleep is just as important as food since sleep also nourishes the body.