If you are diligent in implementing my advice, the chances are your baby will wean himself /
herself off nighttime feeds somewhere between 10 to 13 weeks of age!
The solution is to wean your baby
off nighttime feedings.
I still don't hand
off nighttime feedings, though — I don't want to be reckless with my supply just because it * seems * perfectly established, and honestly, I'd have to wake up and pump anyway, because OW.
Not exact matches
At 8 weeks old, we still expect
nighttime feedings, especially if you are breastfeeding, so your goal in the early days is to help your twins learn to lay flat and be put down semi-awake to get themselves
off to sleep.
It can even happen if
feedings get thrown
off by an hour or two, especially when your baby starts (gloriously) sleeping through the night and therefore skips the
nighttime feed.
off during
nighttime feedings, night - lights create a consistently dark nursery environment, helping baby to stay in sleep mode and develop a better sense of night and day.
By allowing you to leave the lights... MORE
off during
nighttime feedings, night - lights create a consistently dark nursery environment, helping baby to stay in sleep mode and develop a better sense of night and day.
If baby's a
nighttime nurser, attach a dimmer switch to a lamp and turn it on and
off slowly for
nighttime feedings.
But thanks to
nighttime feedings the boys spent the first year of their life sleeping in bassinets in my room and the only time I used the nursery was to show it
off to visitors.
Fanjolina - my dd was exactly the same but now, at the grand old age of 9 weeks, the
nighttime roaring has eased
off, and the evening cluster
feeding has levelled out too and she's much less fussy.