Read The No Cry Nap Solution Online
Authors: Elizabeth Pantley
and know the facts so that you can minimize their effects on you.
As an example, some people will try to tell you that letting
your baby cry it out will solve all your sleep problems. Not only
is this dangerous advice when applied to a newborn, it is rarely
a simple one-time solution. Even with older babies, crying it out
must be done over and over again, often at the expense of baby’s
and parents’ emotions.
58 Newborn Babies
Nap When Your Baby Naps
You’ve likely heard this advice already, and for very good reasons.
New parents can fi nd that taking care of a baby in addition to
other responsibilities takes a toll on their mood, their health, and
even their marriage. New mothers are more likely to suffer from
the baby blues and postpartum depression if they don’t take care
of their own sleep needs. Taking your own daily nap can help you
combat fatigue, and it can help you to be a better parent. Even
a twenty-minute nap can rejuvenate you and help to offset your
disturbed nighttime sleep, so defi nitely give it a try.
Create a Prenap Routine
Newborn babies don’t require much of a bedtime routine, as they
sleep and wake all through the day and night. However, after
the fi rst few months, your baby will fi nd it easier to fall asleep if
you help him “wind down” for twenty or thirty minutes before
naptime. If you go from a bright, noisy room—playing with your
baby with television noise in the background, for example—and
Professional-Speak
“New parents sometimes try to put their baby on what they
view as a reasonable schedule. From the baby’s point of view,
that’s not reasonable at all. The best solution is a compromise,
letting the baby call the shots while providing a stable, pre-
dictable home environment. A baby given this freedom likely
will eat and sleep better, and cry less than if you try to make
the baby conform to your schedule from the start.”
—Michael Smolensky, Ph.D., and Lynne Lamberg,
The Body Clock Guide to Better Health
Nap Tips for Newborns
59
then expect him to go directly to sleep, it’s likely that he’ll be too
revved up to relax.
In the time before a nap, avoid noisy situations, bright lights,
and active stimulation. Create a short but peaceful prenap rou-
tine, including a quiet diaper change and soft sounds (such as lul-
labies), and perhaps a bit of baby massage. This will help your baby
transition easily from awake to asleep and begin to build the cues
that will be invaluable as your baby gets a bit older.
Relax and Be Flexible
It is a fact that your newborn
will
be waking you up at night and
will
be napping on an unpredictable, ever-changing schedule, so
you may as well be fl exible about sleep issues right now. Being
frustrated about your newborn’s sleep patterns won’t change a
thing. It won’t help your baby’s biology mature any faster, and it
will distract you from your most important and wonderful job
right now—getting to know your new baby and letting your new
baby get to know you. Gradually, your newborn will consolidate
her sleeping and begin to sleep longer spells during the night and
combine short daytime sleeps into actual naps.
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Pa r t 3
Solving Napping Problems:
Customized Solutions for Your Family
We have already talked a great deal about how important
naps are to your child’s health, mood, and happiness, and conse-
quently, to
your
health, mood, and happiness. So, it’s likely that
you are now a true believer in the magic of naps. But what if your
child isn’t a believer? What if your child won’t nap when you want
her to? Or what if naps are much too short or if your little one
requires an elaborate ritual of parent acrobatics in order to sleep?
That’s when you get to be investigator, researcher, teacher, and
the ultimate purveyor of all things nap!
The following section outlines the most common nap problems
and provides a variety of solutions for each one. Scan through the
topics for your child’s nap issues and select those solutions that
make the best sense for you and your child. Put together a plan
using the guidelines in Part 1 of this book, or simply begin using
the tips as soon as you read about them.
Nap problems can be complicated, and it may take a few adjust-
ments to your plan along the way, but the end results are defi nitely
worth every minute of effort.
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Catnaps
Making Short Naps Longer
See also: Newborn Babies (Part 2); Shifting Schedules:
Changing from Two Naps to One Nap; The Nap Resister:
When Your Child Needs a Nap but Won’t Take One
I have a four-month-old mini-napper! I can
usually get her to go to sleep, but she always
wakes up exactly forty minutes after I put her
in bed. How can I get her to take longer naps?
This is an amazingly common occurrence. I have discovered
that most mini-nappers are between two months and eight
months old. Most of these babies fall asleep being fed or while in
a car seat, sling, rocker, or someone’s arms. They are then trans-
ferred to bed, where they sleep between thirty and fi fty minutes.
These factors clearly point to some possible causes and will lead us
to the potential solutions.
Could It Be One-Cycle Sleep Syndrome
(OCSS)?
In the fi rst six to eight months of life, a baby’s full sleep cycle
ranges from forty to sixty minutes. When you add your baby’s
brief in-arms falling-asleep time together with the nap time, the
total is
one sleep cycle
. If you’ll recall from the fi rst part of this
book, human beings sleep in cycles, and there is a brief awakening
63
64 Solving Napping Problems
between them. An independent sleeper will get comfortable and
fall right back to sleep, likely not even realizing that he’s awake.
What this tells us is that a short napper cannot put himself back
to sleep, so his nap appears to be over at the end of one sleep cycle.
So, you see, it’s likely that your mini-napper is suffering from what
I call
one-cycle sleep syndrome
(OCSS).
Here’s how to understand what’s going on with your baby.
Imagine this: It’s your bedtime. You get into your nice, comfy bed
with your favorite pillow and a soft blanket, and you fall asleep.
If a while later you wake between sleep cycles and everything is
exactly the same, you might change position, pull the covers up,
and then fall right back to sleep, possibly without even remember-
ing this happening.
What if you woke up to fi nd yourself sleeping on the cold
kitchen fl oor without blankets or pillow?
Would you simply turn over and go right back to sleep? I know I
wouldn’t! It’s likely you would wake up shocked. You’d worry about
how you got on the kitchen fl oor. You certainly wouldn’t fi nd it
comfortable! In order to fall back to sleep you would have to go
back to bed. Even though you would still be tired, you’d be wide
awake by then. It may take time to get back to sleep. But you prob-
ably wouldn’t sleep deeply because you would be concerned about
ending up on the fl oor again.
This is how it is for a baby who is held, nursed, rocked, bottle-
fed, or otherwise aided to sleep. She falls asleep under certain con-
ditions, but at the end of her fi rst sleep cycle, she wakes up briefl y
and fi nds herself in entirely different conditions. She startles,
wondering, “What happened? Where am I? I can’t sleep like
this
!”
At this point she’s awake, and you think naptime is over. But in
reality, this is just the halfway point.
The key for many short nappers will be to identify the dif-
ferences in conditions between
falling asleep
and
waking between
cycles
. Then, you can either make these two conditions more simi-
lar or plan for the midcycle awakening and help your baby fall
Catnaps
65
Alyssa, one week old, and Aliyah, three years old
back to sleep when it happens. Lots of solutions and ideas will
follow.
Nap Sleep Versus Night Sleep
Many babies who have OCSS for naps also have the same issue at
night. While their sleep cycles may be longer or they might slide
back into sleep between some of their cycles, they still require your
assistance for many of their night wakings. Therefore, by identify-
ing this problem and taking steps to solve it at naptime, you might
also reduce or eliminate night waking.
Some babies, on the other hand, take short, one-cycle naps but
sleep through the night just fi ne. How can that be? Actually, it
is easy to understand. There are
many
conditions that occur for
66 Solving Napping Problems
night sleep that are different from day naps. The house is darker
and quieter at night. There are subtle routine changes, such as a
bath and pajamas for bedtime but not at naptime. You act differ-
ently when putting your baby down for a nap versus when you put
him down for nighttime sleep at the end of the day when you are
tired and heading toward sleep yourself. In addition, all the bio-
logical forces at work on your baby’s system function more compel-
lingly at bedtime than they do during the day, such as homeostatic