In many times and places, including in the USA in earlier days, travelers
often shared beds when there were more travelers than beds.
And when you think about it — adults
often share beds and find quite lonesome to sleep alone, but we expect our kids, even when they are very young to sleep alone.
When I go back, much to my husband's ridicule,
he often shares my bed.
Or the woman he met in class one summer, who had assumed she was his girlfriend because they spent most nights cooking, and
often shared a bed.
Not exact matches
As a result, we can
often feel clueless about how to act or compelled to do things we really don't want to do (like
share a
bed with a co-worker on a business trip!).
«[Parents] who
share the family
bed philosophy
often cite parenting practices in cultures such as Bali, where infants are not allowed to touch the ground until they're three months old.»
And cases of SIDS or other accidental deaths have
often involved factors other than
bed -
sharing - like an intoxicated parent.
«For example, in terms of the ways this can be misused,
bed -
sharing is
often used as kind of a proxy for any and all co-sleeping.»
Co-sleeping (
often spelled cosleeping, and also known as
bed sharing or having a family
bed) is the practice of having your infant in your
bed with you during sleep.
Data shows that verified deaths due to
bed sharing are
often due to accidental smothering by an adult, suffocation on soft mattresses, and getting trapped between mattress and headboard.
Babies who
bed -
share and
share time with their moms at night can
often get a third or more of their caloric intake during the night.
Given the other factors, the issue that I want to discuss more is the
bed -
sharing method that is
often a source of arguments between some medical experts and even parents who
often unknowingly judging each other.
In 1 national survey, 45 % of parents responded that they had
shared a
bed with their infant (8 months of age or younger) at some point in the preceding 2 weeks.19 In some racial / ethnic groups, the rate of routine
bed -
sharing might be higher.18, — , 20 There are
often cultural and personal reasons why parents choose to
bed -
share, including convenience for feeding (breastfeeding or with formula) and bonding.
Supporters
often discuss
bed -
sharing as a natural activity or the historical norm, but the debate over
bed -
sharing — and the discourse of what is natural — goes back a long way.
Pediatricians
often caution against
bed -
sharing at all costs without any context, but
bed -
sharing itself is not innately unsafe.
Often this was labeled as «unintentional suffocation while
sharing parents»
bed».
McKenna and Gettler's piece mentions that
bed -
sharing can double or even triple the number of times an infant is breastfed through the night as well as the idea that being breastfed
often may ward off sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).»
More
often than not,
bed -
sharing refers to a parent (or parents) sleeping in the same
bed as just one child or a baby younger than 1 year old.
It is impossible to get some sleep if you
share bed with children You could actually
often get better sleep...
Often times breastfeeding mums find that co-sleeping and / or
bed sharing with their babies and toddlers allows for easy popping out of the boob without actually having to wake up fully!
It is
often used for
bed -
sharing or may be used in the broader sense of rooming - in.
Co-sleeping and
bed sharing are two very different things that are
often misinterpreted.
Co-sleeping and
bed -
sharing need to be factored in as well, as
often the parents provide the comfort and physical reassurance needed without swaddling.
Parents tend to feel very passionately about their parenting choices and
often either don't understand or flat out disagree with people who make different choices; and the choice to
bed -
share is no different.
But people
often disagree on
bed -
sharing.
In general, the
bed -
sharing practiced in cultures with low SIDS rates is
often different from that in the United States and other Western countries (eg, with firm mats on the floor, separate mat for the infant, and / or absence of soft
bedding).
«We recognize the fact that not only do mothers
often inadvertently fall asleep with the infant in their
bed, but many mothers choose to
bed share,» says Lori Feldman - Winter, a co-author of the new guidelines and a professor of pediatrics at Cooper University Health Care in Camden, N.J. «We thought it was prudent to provide guidance on making the
bed -
sharing arrangement as safe as possible and provide guidance on what populations are most at risk when
bed sharing»
Save for maybe Thor's hammer and Tony Stark's
bed, no other item has been
shared more
often in the Marvel Universe than the Infinity Gauntlet.
Sammy has been brought up with dogs, and
often shares her house and even
bed with sleep - over guests from her mum's pet sitting business.
You can choose to bathe your Griffon, regardless of coat type, as
often as once a week, especially if he will be
sharing your
bed or lounging on furniture.
Among humans, scabies is
often transmitted via the same route, although it is possible to get scabies from the
sharing of personal items like
beddings, towels, and clothing.
How
often do you
share a
bed with your...
When someone brings home a cat for the first time, they
often imagine all the special moments they will
share — snuggling in
bed, watching kitty bat around a ball or chase a stuffed mouse, spooning out cat food and having kitty come running.
Often the cheapest lodging in London, Hostel 639 has
shared dormitories with four to eight
beds, along with double rooms and family rooms.
Often the toddler will be moved into a
bed of her own, but in some families the child will
share a
bed with other children in the family (this can be a very comforting thing for young children).
After school, the kids
often flop on the
bed and do homework while I work, so it's nice to
share the space together.