Harvey Karp

The Happiest Baby Guide to Great Sleep

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  • b9509926475has quoted7 years ago
    but 10 percent pop up between 5 and 6 A.M.
  • b9509926475has quoted7 years ago
    you think bedtime may be too early:
    Take a long walk in the bright sunlight every morning.
  • b9509926475has quoted7 years ago
    If you think bedtime may be too early:
    Take a long walk in the bright sunlight every morning.
    Move the morning and noon feeds later by fifteen minutes (to nudge back the naps).
    Use rumbly white noise at all sleep periods.
    Keep your house lights bright until 7:30 P.M. (to delay melatonin release and sleepiness).
  • b9509926475has quoted7 years ago
    Two classic ways to do this are cluster feeds and dream feeds.
  • b9509926475has quoted7 years ago
    Cluster feeds are a series of quick milky meals given every one to two hours from 4 P.M. to bedtime. They’re meant to load your baby’s system with calories to keep her well stocked with nutrition through the night.
  • b9509926475has quoted7 years ago
    So make sure you use harsh, rumbling white noise, as loud as a shower, for all naps and nights. And if your infant is still waking, cover bright lights (put a towel over VCRs and clock radios, put dark shades on windows, and dim the hall light outside her door). Make sure the room isn’t too hot or cold, and use a humidifier if the room is very dry or her nose is stuffy.
  • b9509926475has quoted7 years ago
    And that’s just on a normal day! You may also need to bend the rules if your baby is ill. And if company comes, all bets are off.
    So don’t feel like you need to run your schedule like a Marine drill sergeant. But if you and your baby’s other caregivers can stick reasonably close to a flexible timetable and regular routines, you’ll all sleep better.
    This is especially true at night, because responding to crying one night and holding back the next will accidentally teach your munchkin to cry more. (“I’m confused. Sometimes she comes when I yelp. Hmm … let me try it louder and harder!”)
    So try to be consistent … and predictable. Use dim lights, warm milk, the 5 S’s, storybooks, and loveys … along with a
  • b9509926475has quoted7 years ago
    She may be troubled by:
  • b9509926475has quoted7 years ago
    Scary situations, including barking dogs, loud noises,
  • b9509926475has quoted7 years ago
    I know this goes against every parental instinct! But it is the key step in your little one’s education on how to soothe himself back to sleep when he wakes at night.
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