I admit that I have done it.
I’m almost scared to admit that.
So many excuses as to why.
So many justifications when I, as a journalist had read the data and knew the information.
But still I did it.
And now I confess to you.
Why did I do it? I was tired.
Simple.
It made my life easier.
Simpler.
It let me get through the day.
And with a newborn baby ANYTHING that gets you through the day – you take.
So I did it – I co-slept.
I clearly remember the first time. I was in hospital with my first-born son and I nodded off in the chair breastfeeding, I woke with a start several hours later terrified I had smothered my two-day-old son.
The midwives castigated me. I felt terrible… and yet weeks later it happened again. I didn’t mean it to. My son was feeding two hourly. He was underweight and jaundice.
So many excuses.
It wasn’t a conscious decision – it wasn’t even a deliberate ‘parenting’ style. It just happened.
Top Comments
Hi, Pediatric Nurse, I was wishing to ask you if I can use your quote of the babies coming into the emergency dept, who have died from little or no oxygen, in a book I am doing? I am dead against co-sleeping. Thanks Nicci
If the vast majority of parents will bed share, babies deserve for their parents to have been able to access information about how to do it safely. Misinformation and scary distortion of statistics do not help. There is lots of good-quality research into co-sleeping and there are good safety guidelines available for parents who want to do it. But we almost never hear them. Please, for safety's sake, publish this, from James McKenna at the University of Notre Dame Mother-Baby Behavioural Sleep Laboratory ( http://cosleeping.nd.edu)
Safe Co-sleeping guidelines: (http://cosleeping.nd.edu/sa...
Bed-sharing: It is important to be aware that adult beds were not designed to assure infants safety!
Bottle-feeding babies should always sleep alongside the mother on a separate surface rather than in the bed.
If bed-sharing, ideally, both parents should agree and feel comfortable with the decision. Each bed-sharer should agree that he or she is equally responsible for the infant and acknowledge that the infant is present. My feeling is that both parents should think of themselves as primary caregivers.
Infants a year or less should not sleep with other children siblings -- but always with a person who can take responsibility for the infant being there;
Persons on sedatives, medications or drugs, or is intoxicated - -or excessively unable to arouse should not cosleep on the same surface with the infant.
Excessively long hair on the mother should be tied up to prevent infant entanglement around the infant's neck -- (yes, it has really happened!)
Extremely obese persons, who may not feel where exactly or how close their infant is, may wish to have the infant sleep alongside but on a different surface.
It is important to realize that the physical and social conditions under which infant-parent cosleeping occur, in all it's diverse forms, can and will determine the risks or benefits of this behavior. What goes on in bed is what matters.
It may be important to consider or reflect on whether you would think that you suffocated your baby if, under the most unlikely scenario, your baby died from SIDS while in your bed. Just as babies can die from SIDS in a risk free solitary sleep environment, it remains possible for a baby to die in a risk-free cosleeping/bed sharing environment. Just make sure, as much as this is possible, that you would not assume that , if the baby died, that either you or your spouse would think that bed-sharing contributed to the death, or that one of your really suffocated (by accident) the infant. It is worth thinking about.
Aside from never letting an infant sleep outside the presence of a committed adult, i.e. separate-surface cosleeping which is safe for all infants, I do not recommend to any parents any particular type of sleeping arrangement since I do not know the circumstances within which particular parents live. What I do recommend is to consider all of the possible choices and to become as informed as is possible matching what you learn with what you think can work the best for you and your family.