Sentences with phrase «make cosleeping»

In that case, I think you either muddle through or you find a way to make cosleeping work for you and do it as safely as you can.
And I love how you were able to make cosleeping work for you!
I have an article called «Co-sleeping» at the Attachment Parenting Canada website (www.attachmentparenting.ca) that lists risk factors and how to make cosleeping safer.
-RRB- that lists risk factors and how to make cosleeping safer.
Just saying, huge boobies and severe ptosis haven't made cosleeping even slightly a problem for us;)

Not exact matches

Now, I'm a big proponent of bedsharing — I think it's, as the saying goes, «just the best thing since sliced bread» — but what I value more than allowing a child to sleep with her parents is giving permission for parents to be able to make the choice of how a child cosleeps.
Cosleeping helps foster a bond between my sons and I that wasn't necessarily formed in the womb but can be made strong now as it allows us to relax, sense and trust one another.
I don't even think I'm really making milk anymore, but it's super comforting for him, and allows me to go back to sleep (he sleeps in his crib, but we will cosleep when I nurse).
We began cosleeping after coming home from the hospital, because we felt more comfortable having our baby near us and it made breastfeeding — and getting sleep — easier.
Most of them were cosleeping, a practice that made nighttime pottying easier, but also cultivates a deeper connection of trust and responsiveness between moms and babies, and makes nighttime nursing a breeze.
He's not hungry, he's not interacting with either me or my husband (we cosleep), he just looks at the ceiling and sucks his fingers while bicycling his legs and making noises.
In my own work I stress that a distinction must be made between the inherently protective and beneficial nature of the mother - infant cosleeping / breast feeding context, and the conditions (of the mother and the physical setting including equipment) within which it occurs - which can range from extremely safe to unsafe and risky.
(Simplistic arguments against all forms of cosleeping, in this case, do not make sense, nor are the recommendations «practical» for those for whom they are intended.)
In short, and as mentioned above, cosleeping (whether on the same surface or not) facilitates positive clinical changes including more infant sleep and seems to make, well, babies happy.
It makes them happy to cosleep which generally means it is biologically appropriate and the environment that maximizes the chances of protection and well - being.
Even here in whatever - city - USA, nothing a baby can or can not do makes sense except in light of the mother's body, a biological reality apparently dismissed by those that argue against any and all bedsharing and what they call cosleeping, but which likely explains why most crib - using parents at some point feel the need to bring their babies to bed with them — findings that our mother - baby sleep laboratory here at Notre Dame has helped document scientifically.
That said, every family is different and it's good to read some facts on cosleeping that make sense.
Bedsharing is another form of cosleeping which can be made either safe or unsafe, but it is not intrinsically one nor the other.
So, I then made the conscious decision to cosleep for my own sanity and did lots of research to find the best ways to minimize risk.
And a friend of mine made a soft fabric basket for me to use like a Moses basket for cosleeping when my daughter was little.
Recently I have made a more specific effort to understand fully the concepts and practices behind AP and have realized how important it is for babies and children to feel protected and cared for at all hours of the day and often continued cosleeping is part of this.
Fast forward a few years to when I began having children of my own and needed to make parenting decisions about everything from breastfeeding to cosleeping to discipline.
-LSB-...] bittersweet post about an (abrupt) child - led end to a cosleeping relationship — of course this made me want to stare at my daughter in the middle of the night -LSB-...]
While previously and currently making headlines every now and then, cosleeping has been viewed as dangerous and should be avoided at all costs.
Maybe the cosleeping made the difference?
Knowing that I was going to be picked up from the airport along with Dr. James McKenna, well - known cosleeping expert and author of Sleeping with Your Baby, I made a dash to the bathroom at the Nashville airport to change out of my jeans, tank top, and sandals into an outfit in which I would be more comfortable shaking hands with a renowned parenting expert.
If you choose to use a cosleeping bassinet, make sure it provides a firm surface for baby to sleep.
That being said, cosleeping is not right for everyone, and I respect the choices parents make.
I have never understood the thought that it is easier to get up and make a bottle than it is to latch a baby on (cosleeping or no).
Anyways, my point is cosleeping is fantastic... As long as diapers are also being changed consistently... I myself could only wake up enough periodically to make sure this was done.
Cosleeping has always made traveling easier for my family.
I made the deliberate decision to cosleep when he started to experience separation anxiety around 6 months and I was getting out of bed to resettle him every couple of hours (before this he would wake twice a night which was fine).
Clearly cosleeping and adult beds can be made to be safer.
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