L.L. asks from Flower Mound, TX on October 31, 2009
Swaddle Vs. No Swaddle
I have a 3 1/2 month old that we are still swaddling during naps and nighttime. She sleeps great if she stays in the swaddle but if she breaks free, which happens a lot especially during the night, she wakes right up. My husband and I keep going back and forth trying to decide whether or not we just need to stop the swaddling since she is obviously strong enough and persisitent enough to work to get out of it. The problem is that if she isn't swaddled her naps are terrible and she has a really hard time settling down to fall asleep. We have tried a few nights of letting her sleep arms free in one of the Halo sleep sacks but I don't know how much good sleep she really got because she was up "talking" and sucking on her fingers for much of the night. Sucking on her fingers doesn't seem to soother her like the pacifier does, it seems to give her reason to be more awake. We have tried every swaddling solution I could find (Halo, Kiddopatamus Swaddle Me, Miracle Blanket). I guess I would like to know from other moms how long you kept your little ones swaddled and how long it took them to get used to being unswaddled when you finally made the change, and any advice you have to share. Thanks!
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H. answers from Dallas on November 02, 2009
I swaddled my first until she was rolling over, around 4.5 months--I think that is what her doctor recommended for safety. We moved to the sleep sack also. I have a 3.5 month now and the transition away from the swaddle is right around the corner.
A.L. answers from Dallas on November 02, 2009
We also used a sleep sack as a transition from the swaddle to just a regular blanket. It worked fine for us.
H.R. answers from Abilene on November 01, 2009
I swaddled until about 4 months, when DD started getting her arms out on her own. Once I let her just sleep unswaddled, she was fine. I still use sleep sacks, though (at 16.5 mo), because she just moves too much to keep a blanket on her.
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A.L. answers from Dallas on November 02, 2009
We also used a sleep sack as a transition from the swaddle to just a regular blanket. It worked fine for us.
M.K. answers from Dallas on November 01, 2009
My husband and I went through the same thing with our now 7 month old. At around 4 months, we weaned her from the swaddle because she was breaking out of it almost everytime, but couldn't sleep without it. We used a little sleep sack called a Peke Moe (http://www.pekemoe.co.nz/), it's like the Halo sleep sacks, but it keeps the hands covered. With the Peke Moe, our baby could touch and rub her face, but not to distraction! The Peke Moe worked great, about three night with it, we were able to put her down with just a Halo sleep sack. It's almost a shame we didn't get more use out of it, but it got us from swaddle to no-swaddle without crying, so that's what counted with us.
H.B. answers from Dallas on November 01, 2009
I sewed the arms on the sleep sacks shut and this worked well for us for another month or so. By 5 months, I undid the arms, and by 9 months, I got rid of the sleep sacks completely.
J.J. answers from Dallas on October 31, 2009
There was another thread about swaddling a while ago - it seems a LOT of people swaddle their "older" infants. I had always stopped with mine as soon as they could wiggle out of it. I can't imagine my kids being swaddled at 6+ months, but if it works for you - great!
I am a newborn nurse - and there are some babies right at birth that wiggle out of swaddle wraps and don't like being swaddled.
My thought is do what works for you...
H.R. answers from Abilene on November 01, 2009
I swaddled until about 4 months, when DD started getting her arms out on her own. Once I let her just sleep unswaddled, she was fine. I still use sleep sacks, though (at 16.5 mo), because she just moves too much to keep a blanket on her.
S.H. answers from Dallas on November 01, 2009
We stopped swaddling at about 3 1/2 months. Our daughter was breaking free too. She also used a paci at the time, but she would wake up when she lost the paci and/or got out of the swaddle. She also was turning over onto her stomach at that point too. So, we took away the paci and the swaddle one weekend. It took her some time to adjust, but then she slept MUCH better! In fact, that was when she started sleeping through the night!
Good luck!
H.H. answers from Dallas on November 01, 2009
I swaddled until they couldn't be swaddled. There is NO REASON not to do this! They like it and it helps them sleep better. Most mine got to the point where they were only "swaddled" across the arms after a few minutes because they would kick the leg area free. It soothes them and lets YOU sleep. If I could still get them tucked in nicely, I would be swaddling my 3, 6 and 8 year old boys...
D.C. answers from Austin on November 02, 2009
Hi L.,
We swaddled our first baby until he was 5 months old, which is how long it took him to start breaking out of our best swaddles consistently. When I say best swaddles, I mean the Miracle Blanket. He was breaking out of the Kiddopotamus SwaddleMe wraps WAY before he could break out of the MBs, which is why it surprises me that it is one of the wraps you speak of.
Are you doing it super-tight? Also, are you following the instructions that came with the Miracle Blanket? I ask that because, now that we have our second (now 4 mos old), we bought more of the MBs and when I looked at the instructions, it turns out that we weren't wrapping our first in it correctly (and it still lasted 5 months!!). You're supposed to use the first two smaller "wings" to wrap their arms and pass it back behind their body. This makes it much harder to break out of. Again, not something we ever did with our first.
If you already doing both of these things correctly, then you may have no choice but to start transitioning her out of swaddles altogether.
For our son's transition, we first wrapped him (still very tightly) with only one arm out for a week, then with both arms out for a week, then finally he was completely free of the tight binding. Fair warning, though: Once he was unswaddled, we had to do away with the sleep positioner (which had helped to keep him on his back, but became a SIDS risk---like any pillow---once he could move around and get UNDER it), and we found that Connor would flip himself over regularly, from his back to stomach, to sleep. This helped him to return to being a good sleeper, but I was still nervous about him sleeping on his stomach due to SIDS (now I'm wiser though...go to this site to learn about "mattress-wrapping": http://www.thecauseofsids.org/Cause_of_SIDS_found_by_Jane.... BTW, he became free of the paci too, at that time (not as comfie to suck a paci when he would flip himself to his stomach)!!
Just some things to consider.
I hope this helps!
D.
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