Not exact matches
Fed chairwoman Janet Yellen's recent cautious statements about interest rates indicate she's well aware that raising rates any
time soon could also rouse a
sleeping bear market.
The Adrenaline Junkie and You
Sleep, the Final Frontier Hoop Dreams Tom Ritchey's Garage Making the Travelers» Century Club,
Times Two Frank Tucker's Downtime Club
Fed This is Not Your Father's Hummer The Suitable Throne
There are three shifts to my daily life: 8 hours work, 8 hours
sleep, 8 hours of «free
time» — the free
time isn't free and includes strip grazing grass
fed milking 200 short horn cattle in the Adirondack Park.
At other
times he longed to live in a cave,
sleeping on fallen leaves, and
feeding on forest fruits.
I found my second pregnancy harder, but delivery, breast
feeding,
sleep deprivation, etc. much easier this
time!
Since my brain is always focused on butter and sugar, I wanted to give the new, soon to be very
sleep deprived, second -
time parents a special treat while they spent some
time in the hospital with their new bundle of joy (and something to
feed the visiting guests who have come to Ooo and Ahh over the cute baby toes).
(b) I think that parents that want to get rid of nighttime
feeds (with a toddler, not a baby) or that want to discourage nighttime play
time can do it by being firm about it being
time to
sleep, without that necessarily meaning leaving their baby alone to cry to
sleep.
Both of my children have been exclusively breast -
fed (and will continue to be), spend a lot of
time in a sling / carrier, takes naps with me and (oh the horror of it)
sleep in a crib.
With breastfeeding, once one month arrives, mom has the option of pumping so you can
feed your baby and let her get 4 + hours of
sleep at one
time, which is way better than two two - hour stretches.
# 6 — Throw your nighttime
feeding schedule out the window: By the first
time we went camping with our son, he was happily
sleeping through the night at home.
They also suggest the possibility that baby could become used to waking for a dream
feeds at the same
time each night and we may then miss the window when our baby may otherwise have
slept through the night!
Your mate can express milk during the day so you can help out with
feeding, particularly at night or when she needs some
time for herself (otherwise her outings or
sleep are limited to the
times between nursing).
When I
fed her at the earlier
time, she
slept better.
I also used my moby wrap to do stealth
feedings up until he was about 5 - 6 months — I could nurse him and put him to
sleep without anyone knowing what was happening, and be eating at a fancy restaurant the whole
time.
I am SO happy that I have a
Sleep «N
Feed to use with Owen, it has seriously made
feeding time and bed
time much easier!
I would say I was relatively flexible with her, because I was desperate to find what was best for her but still kept it pretty scheduled (for example: experimenting with changing wake
times or bedtimes, tweaking the bedtime routine, adding / removing dream
feeds and cluster
feeds, etc.) She started
sleeping longer stretches pretty early and at 3 months I could count on getting a 6 - 7 hour stretch, but every once in a while she'd go 8 - 10 hours without a
feeding.
Have you ever ran across other Babywise moms who expressed frustration at being unable to get their babies to
sleep in until
feeding time?
You could spend hours searching online for baby / toddler / preschooler
sleep,
feeding kids, screen
time, and «my kid is hitting me.»
She can
sleep for LONG periods of
time if we let her but I don't want to because she needs 8
feedings a day.
Should I reduce his
feeding time at the expense of a full, good quality
feeding for
sleep?
For yourself, napping at the same
time as your very young baby can help with
sleep deprivation and give you energy to be up during the night for
feedings.
He goes to bed at about 7:15 and
sleeps for about an hour and a half so that puts him needing to wake up and not be
fed for a while but his awake
time is so short he starts bumping into getting ready for his next nap.
He has been waking up when I
feed him (between
feeding and diaper change), and then has a hard
time going back to
sleep.
You can do the math on that and figure out there's not much
time for eating,
sleeping, showering, or really anything else other than pumping and
feeding.
Always, always, always
sleep them and
feed them at the same
time from the minute they are born.
As baby gets older, their stomach gets bigger, they'll be able to
sleep for longer stretches of
time, and the
time between
feedings will lengthen.
Can we
feed her during the whole of her wake up
time but that defeats the eat, play,
sleep cycle.
Or is it ok if his
sleep times are shorter as long as he is getting a good quality
feed?
I am trying to aid her in
sleeping longer at night, but she is only getting 6
feedings before the 7:30 cluster, so I assume she will still need to get up 2
times at night?
instead of being up 5 min like before I was up 2 hours with her at night only for her to
sleep for an hour or so at a
time... It wasent for me... I thought back to when she was a newborn... I spent 3 weeks up with her most of the nights bc she had her days and nights mixed up, id watch movies while holding her,
feeding her and putting her down for short intervals of
sleep.
I would say to continue to follow the Babywise schedule, make sure they are getting enough
feedings during the day and with
time, they'll start to
sleep longer.
If he won't
sleep until your desired eating
time, try playing with him for 30 minutes and then
feeding him as outlined in this post.
I wanted to move him to a 3 1/2 hr schedule cause every
time it was
time to
feed him i would wake him from a deep
sleep.
At this age do you wake to cluster
feed to keep consistent every day or do you follow their lead and if they wake cluster
feed and if not let them
sleep until three hour regular
feed time then follow up with dreamfeed in the 10 pm hour?
I just know that BW suggests that you don't eliminate the dream
feed until after the baby is successfully
sleeping through the night until the desired wake
time.
After her 8p
feeding she is starting to not fall asleep till 9:30, so she
sleeps 30 minutes then it is
time for her df.
It seems like this excessive
time for
feeding takes
time away from
sleep however.
My five week old has a relatively predictable 2 1/2 to 3 hour
feeding cycle, but tends to eat, have very little waketime,
sleep for about 45 minutes, then wake and stay fussy until
time to eat again.
If you
feed a baby before
sleeping, she will ask for help to fall asleep every
time she wakes up during the night.
When she used to
sleep from the
time she went down until around 1 or 2, she now wakes up for a
feeding on her own between 9 and 10 which is why I say it's not technically a DF.
Feed the baby, change her diaper, and put her down to
sleep right before you plan to spend
time with your partner.
We recently dropped the dream
feed and he is
sleeping from 8:30 to 8:00, but I have been pumping at 10 pm (formally dreamfeed
time).
In the last week she has started waking twice for a
feed, last night she woke at 10:48 and drank a whole bottle and then at 00.45 and had 3 ounces, both
times she went straight back to
sleep.
Travel
time eats up valuable
sleep and
feeding time.
So, consider moving both the
feeding and
sleeping schedule (as if it were daylight savings
time one more
time) to help your baby wake up later.
Keeping track of
feeding times and amounts, as well as documenting when baby
sleeps, can help you recognize predictable patterns.
On other posts you mention not dropping the dream
feed until baby
sleeps from dream
feed until morning wake up
time.
He still woke up few
times a night, but got back to
sleep easily with a diaper change /
feeding (we co-
sleep).
I've tried putting him down right after I
feed him, or keeping him up for various lengths of
time, but he just won't
sleep between the hours of 7 and 10 pm.
My question is some nights he wants to cluster
feed and other nights he doesn't (he will
sleep the whole nap
time 5 - 7 pm.