Yeah, that's drool on my chin. What about it?
Plastic rings. Oh, it just doesn't get better than this.
I'm hiding behind the cow, see?
And now, a word from Kris: Across America, babies are taking naps... long, restorative, two and even three hours naps. But not at Hacienda Willcox. No, my daughter and I seem to be cut from the same cloth on this one; I never liked taking naps as a small child, and apparently neither does Audrey. This week I went back to the sleep books-- I have such a complicated, fraught relationship with these books-- and the internet boards to figure out how I could gently, or maybe not-so-gently, get her to nap in her crib. She's developed several of the dreaded habits we were warned about: only wants to sleep in our arms, or in a swing, likes to be nursed to sleep and doesn't "self soothe" back to sleep when she wakes. A classic "Nipper Napper." So I'm trying some tough love, Ferber style. It's really hard to put her in her crib and let her cry for a while, but I don't believe she's getting all the sleep she really needs, and I very much want some regularity in our days, for my own sake. I'm still deeply divided about which sleep philosophy I subscribe to. Wish it did not seem to be a choice between two extremes. So I'll report back on our progress. Today, Audrey won-- there was almost zero napping. Wish us luck.
2 comments:
Good luck...At only 8 weeks old, Kai has decided naps are for suckers. It just took me two hours to get him to sleep from the time I spotted his first yawn. We just ordered the No Cry Sleep Solution, and are hoping that can help! For what it's worth, I've read/heard that babies Audrey's age usually go through a period of regression when it comes to sleep - something about upcoming developmental milestones...
Yeah, I think Audrey and Kai are in the same baby chat room, talking about their plans to train their moms out of this whole "nap" notion.
I read a lot of the Amazon reviews of the No Cry book-- but everyone's do deeply divided on this topic, it's hard to figure out. Some loved it, others said it didn't help, and the Ferber-camp frothed at the mouth...
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