31 answers

Two Week Old Sleeps All Day and Is up Most of the Night

I was wondering what other mom's thoughts are on Parent directed feeding: ie: waking baby up every three hours in the day to breastfeed vs just letting her come up with her own schedule. I went to my two week doctor's apt today and she is gaining weight and so the doctor told me not to wake her in the day and let her figure out her own schedule. Up to this point, I have been making sure she breastfeeds every three hours in the day, in hopes that it will help her sleep better at night. Right now, she has trouble settling in the night and she is much more "awake and alert". A lot of people say this is normal? Any thoughts or suggestions as to how I should handle this situation.
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I read a book that saved my sanity!!! On Becoming Baby Wise, people love it or hate it. I loved it. It teaches parent directed sheduling. By 3 month my Son was sleeping through the night! And this is normal, she is just getting used to being here! Gently persuading her into a schedule might just bring you a full nights sleep! :)

Good luck, and Congrats! Sounds like you have a perfectly healthy baby girl.

More Answers

You need to wake your baby during the day, so that she feeds every two to three hours, since you are breastfeeding. The time you want to her to let you know she is hungry, is during the night. By waking her during the day, you are adjusting her to me awake and eat during the day and then to sleep at night.

hi, i have a 2month old boy who is sleeping for atleast5 hours a night for 2 weeks now, what did with both my kids ,
-i bring thier beds with me in my room,
-keep them in family room in the day, so they can feel the difference between day n night.
-i also put him in the bouncy seat in night so when he moves it rocks him back to sleep and also help avoid the rolling of the baby.it also vibrates thats reaally calming.

studies has shown newborns sleep well if they can sleep most of the day hours,so dont try to push her to remain awake in day she ll have a routine in few days .normally they start sleeping when they are 12-13 lbs .hope it helps

Trust your instincts. And try to nap when she does. I tried to be super mom after my first (Who turned 14 today!)and just about ran myself into the ground. When my second came along, I knew to nap when both kids did. I know it's hard trying to adjust. Maybe try to keep her up for as long as you can during the day and you might be able to slowly adjust her days and nights. My daughter was such a sleepy head, I could barely get her to nurse. She, too, was rather fussy and crabby at night. As she got older, the nightly bath really changed her attitude. We used to say we were washing off the crabby.

Good luck!

E. N.

There are lots of theories on this. I tend to read a lot of books and pick and choose what I like best. What I did with our babies is to let them sleep up to about 3 hours (or so), then I would wake them. The thought with this being that it helps them to distinguish daytime sleep (naps) from nighttime sleep. At night, at first, we would change, feed, and then put back to sleep...each time taking about an hour or more. After about 1 month or so, I would not change unless poopy. Try not to turn on any lights, and try to limit interactions. Our first baby consistently slept through the night after about 6 weeks with this approach. Our newest addition, sleeps through about 50% of the time. The other 50% she wakes once.
Good luck!

I read a book that saved my sanity!!! On Becoming Baby Wise, people love it or hate it. I loved it. It teaches parent directed sheduling. By 3 month my Son was sleeping through the night! And this is normal, she is just getting used to being here! Gently persuading her into a schedule might just bring you a full nights sleep! :)

Good luck, and Congrats! Sounds like you have a perfectly healthy baby girl.

I didn't ever try parent directed feeding so I can't help you there. Having a newborn is very exhausting for parents. Be sure to take care of yourself and take naps during the day. I ignored that advice with my first baby and I shouldn't have. I would have felt much better and could have handled the night wakenings much easier. There's so much excitement with a newborn it can be hard for the entire family to settle in and get sleep. Can you put yourself on the baby's schedule for a week and get some much needed rest? Sometimes the days (and nights) will seem very long, but when you look back the years will seem short. Hang in there!

I have a 2 and 1/2 year old, but I think everyone goes through that some in the beginning. You are worrying about it at a good time though! At least you aren't waiting until you go completely insane at 3 months when your baby still doesn't have a routine. I had a friend recommend "The baby whisperer". This lady is awesome! She came up with the EASY routine. It stands for eat, activity, sleep, yourself. This definately helped me keep a routine and it was pretty close to the 3 hour schedule without having to have the clock out and alarm on. :-) So, it basically goes...have your baby eat, keep them awake with an activity for a bit, then they will be tired enough to sleep and then you get some time to yourself. And, if you are tired that can mean sleep! I hope this works for you, it really helped my sister and I both.

Babies this age often times have days and nights all mixed up. I brought my son to bed with me, and it worked wonders! He started sleeping at night really well! Babies are most active when we are resting when they are in the womb. When we are up walking around, it rocks them to sleep. Unfortunately, this means many babies end up backwards with their sleep when they come out... luck us!!

As far as BabyWise, I tried it, devoted 4 months to it, and it worked terribly for me. My poor son was miserable, and I will never try it again. I have friends it has worked for, though. I, personally, have found that demand feeding just leads to a much happier baby and mommy. So many people get so caught up in the schedule and how things should be, that all they do is stress, and they forget to enjoy their baby and bond with it. Just relax, let things come naturally, and all will be good!!

Also, babies tummies are only as big as their fists. They can't stretch, though, like ours can. With that in mind, I wouldn't force them to not eat when they are hungry. Their tiny tummies only hold so much! I love the resources on www.askdrsears.com, and would HIGHLY recommend The Baby Book by Dr. Sears. It's great!

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