Sentences with phrase «by their beds until»

Her bassinet was by my bed until she was 4 months old, and then we moved her to her own room.
Mom will sit by the bed until the child falls asleep.
Specifically, if they want to keep the baby close by their beds until they are at least 6 months of age.

Not exact matches

Trying to completely overhaul your mornings, by (for example) getting out of bed at 4 a.m. when you normally sleep until noon, can make it difficult if not impossible to stick to your new routine.
I'm in bed by 11:30 but don't really sleep until 1.
Hugh was struggling to support his growing family... And there was I, absolutely stuck in bucology, with the washing machine freezing at least once a week, the kitchen never above 55 degrees when the wind blew from the northwest, not able to write until after my little ones were in bed, by which time I was so tired that I often quite literally fell asleep with my head on the typewriter.»
Our country remained as one of the poorest countries for very long because the Cap, told us that our oil was not in a com - mer - cial qua - nti - ties, it was like that until the Com, have become to find it was not as the Cap, told us, who must have been br - i - bed to say so by a richer neighboring country...
Our country remained as one of the poorest countries for very long because the Capit - a-lists, told us that our oil was not in a com - mer - cial qua - nti - ties, it was like that until the Com - mun - ists have become to find it was not as the Capit - a-lists, told us, who must have been br - i - bed to say so by a richer neighboring country....
Carbone's approach starts by baking medium - size Yukon Golds on a bed of salt until tender.
I bought this sometime ago (well before Christmas in fact) and it's been sitting by my bed, much read but little used — until now!
Disclaimer — I had to help get my kids ready for bed around the 3rd inning and didn't come back until the 5th but in the first he made two bad pitches and paid the price with two doubles and one of the runs probably scored because of a terrible route run by Tucker.
After weeks of many, many, many contractions each day, and many moments of thinking we were in full - on labor (oh... the birthing tub that was filled up and then drained so many times by my sweet husband)... the actual day of labor amounted to a total of 43 minutes from the time I woke up with a start until I was snuggled back in bed with a baby.
My son co-slept and breastfed until age 3 and after that it was fairly easy to get him into his toddler bed by moving it one foot a night from next to mine to his room.
My daughter started out in a bassinet by our bed, and that worked fine for a little while until the first couple growth spurts when she wanted to eat every twenty minutes.
but we rocked him to sleep in the chair by his bed for another almost 5 months and then he got so big he didn't care to so we put him in his crib after a nursing session and lay next to crib (one of us, likely my hubby) until he falls asleep.
Currently my twins last feed at around 6:30 PM, they are in bed by 7:30 and usually do not wake up until 5AM.
How did they turn out a generation of freshly bathed, powdered and pajama - clad children, who were always tucked into their own beds by 8 p.m. - right after «Bewitched» - where they dutifully stayed until morning?
By the time I delivered, my husband and I had everything we needed already purchased: diapers, formula (we had to supplement for a while until I produced enough milk to feed both babies), clothes, wipes, beds, and more.
If you're one of those people who is on the laptop or tablet until you fall asleep, keep a pair of UNITY BluTech lenses by the bed.
You can try scaling back your responses to him by waiting a little bit longer to go in each time he calls and going a little farther from his bed on each visit, until you can reassure him from the doorway without actually going in.
Stay by your child's side until she falls asleep at bed - time and during naps.
If your baby has been in your bedroom until six months old, it might be a good moment to move her into his own room; it's amazing how often adults can wake older babies up even just by turning over in bed.
It has gotten to the point that I am the only one who he can fall asleep with and if he is asleep and I try to put him in his bed, even after he is in a deep sleep, he will wake up immediately and scream until he is picked up and held, by me.
Nowadays we are in bed by 8 p.m. and my nine month old sleeps until 6 or 7 in the morning.
It is difficult if we have to work until 5:00 because the kids go to bed by 7:30 - 8.
Don't really want to have to do this every night, but I guess I'll have a cut - off time when I need to do it (I.E. if I put her to bed at 8:30 and she doesn't go to sleep by 10, then I need to stay in there with her until she sleeps).
It turned out that we were keeping them up until 8:30 or so, and they were ready for bed by 7:30.
Or he may be one of those kids (like my older son) who needs someone to help him fall asleep (by nursing, or rocking, or sitting in his room) until he's 3 years old, and then suddenly he just starts going to bed easily by himself.
We have a cot for him right next to our bed and for the last 2 night we've been trying to get baby to fall asleep in his cot, which of course has resulted in a huge crying and screaming fest, but either me or his dad are by his side with a comforting hand on his stomach and soothing hums or shhhhs until he finally falls asleep (first night it took an hour and 15, and last night it was about 30 minutes).
I'm not sure if you are still looking for advice, but I have experience with it... My 8 yr old stayed in the bed with me (and hubby) since day 1, when I got pregnant with my second when he was 16 mths old, we set up his room with a toddler bed (he could get out of his playpen since 9 mths un-assisted, and never had a crib) so we made sure it was fun and playful and gave him that option, we also set up a separate cot beside out bed, so he could be with us still (I was not comfortable being pregnant with a toddler and hubby in bed then, knowing I would have a baby soon) since I was pregnant I was able to talk about it to him and explain why he was going to have to one day move to his own bed (in our room or his) by the time I had the baby he was starting the nights in his own bed and if he woke up he would come into his cot beside our bed... I let him continue like that as long as he wanted, it took time but I did not push him at all, same with breast feeding I let him make the choice... when I left my hubby (now ex) the boys were both big enough (2 and 4 yrs) for me to be comfortable with them both in bed with me, and I was still nursing my younger one until he was around 3.5 yrs old, so we just had a big bed with us all piled in, I miss those days so much: (so how did I finally get them both out of my bed?
And don't believe people who insist that the longer your child sleeps with you, the harder it will be to get them out — this is almost always said by people who have never co-slept, think it's dangerous, or know one person with a horror story about how their child snuck in and climbed in bed with them until they were 8 (which breaks rule # 3 anyway).
Tonight I managed to get him to stay in his bed by sitting near his bed for an hour until he was asleep.
We would have a cup by the bed for when he woke up, but he wouldn't even consider it until he took a few bites of some banana.
Recently we've had success in putting him back to bed if he gets his last feed no later than by 6 am (starting time), and then he'll sleep until around 8 am or 8:30.
First, don't wait until the night before school starts to try to lay down the new / old law and have everybody in bed by 8:00.
While this isn't something that you can rush, take comfort in the fact that by the time they are nine months old, 70 percent of babies sleep through the night (meaning they sleep nonstop from the time they are put to bed until a reasonable morning hour, such as after sunrise).
Right now my daughter nurses around 8:15 / 8:30 pm and in bed and asleep by 9:30 (with a few times of shhhhing and patting) and then wakes around 1:30 / 2:30 am and then not again until around 6:30 am.
I know there will come a day when she will want her own bed but until then, I'm happy to comfort her just by being there (sometimes she wants to cuddle, sometimes not).
I started by making her waketime 1.40 min and then going up with 5 min each time, if that is not working I'll go back until she sleeps 1.5 hours and up... If she wakes up earlier is it because she was in bed to early or to late.
A big sleep now until almost 6 pm feed bath then bed by 7:30.
Now he refuses to go to sleep (I know he still needs a nap cause by 3 he has meltdowns all the way until bed.
Both my husband and I wore Ben in a sling, I breastfed on demand and we safely co slept for the first 10 + months (until he was annoyed by our snoring and tossing in the bed).
i would repeat the same process of getting her down to sleep and she would repeat waking up until it was time for ME to go to bed and by then i was tired AND frustrated AND had gotten no personal time / down time.
We are trying to adjust his bed time by limiting his naps during the day (he currently has 3 naps daily between 1 - 2 hours), and putting him down at the earlier cycle (usually around 2 am) but even when he goes to sleep, he's up after half an hour and then up until 5 am.
I would sit every nap and night by his bed, tell him to close his eyes and sit there until he was asleep.
The Campaign for Youth Shelter, a coalition effort by a number of advocacy groups, are pressing the state and city to grow the supply of emergency beds each year by 100 until waiting lists at shelters around the city disappear.
I'm in bed by midnight but Sam doesn't return from the bars until at least 2 am.
During the 2013 mayoral primary campaign, de Blasio and all of his Democratic rivals committed to increasing the stock of available emergency beds by 100 every year until waiting lists at the small number of available youth shelters were eliminated.
Try a simple meditation by sitting in bed, breathing deeply, and repeating a mantra like «I am» until the rest of your inner dialogue quiets down.
This system was foolproof until the invention of the light bulb, and now the vast night sky dimly lit by stars and moonlight has been replaced by Netflix in bed.
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