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Lovemyfam
25-11-2011, 15:01
Cosleeping Can Further Both Trust and IndependenceOne common argument against cosleeping is that it will create children who are more dependent on parents than children who sleep alone, or that cosleeping children will never learn to sleep alone. “But this is like saying that by putting a baby in diapers, she’ll be in diapers throughout her life, or that by using a stroller or carrying her, she’ll never learn to walk.As a matter of fact, the opposite is actually true: children who shared sleep with their parents are actuallymore independent than their solo sleeping peers. Recent research has shown:


*Solitary sleepers have actually been found to be more dependent on their parents than co-sleepers.
*Co-sleeping boys ages three and older were shown to have no greater difficulty separating from one or both parents than solitary sleeping boys. (In this study, girls were not observed for this trait.)
*The majority of family bed graduates consider themselves more independent than their peers.

And why shouldn’t cosleepers be more independent?! They learned from infancy that they could trust their caregivers to quickly respond to their needs, no matter what time of day or night it was. “You are not encouraging dependency when you sleep with your baby. You are responding to a need and teaching your child about trust.” “Children, given time to learn to trust those around them, and thus learn that their own feelings and needs are legitimate, will develop a true, enduring sense of independence.
Parents Are the Ultimate Security BlanketsThe image of a child sucking his thumb or carrying around a treasured blanket or teddy is a very familiar one in our culture. Search the internet and you’ll find all kinds of advice columns and articles on how to transition children away from these practices. But research has revealed something very interesting: children who cosleep do not needreplacement security figures. Children feel more secure as a result of being close to their caregivers.


“When a child routinely goes to sleep in the presence of an adult, or with an adult holding her, it’s extremely rare to find thumb sucking or attachment to security objects.” In a study of children ages one to seven years old who all sucked their thumbs, 96% of them “had been left alone to fall asleep as infants. In stark contrast, there were no thumb suckers among a large group of children who had physical contact with an adult while falling asleep.” In a different study of children between three and five years old, researchers found “that solitary sleepers were far more likely to use a security object than co-sleepers. The researchers concluded that children use security objects as substitutes for nighttime human touch.”


Our culture emphasizes the desirability of teaching children to self-soothe, and parents are encouraged to introduce security objects to help in this process. But in the dark of the night, why not allow a child to experience the love and comfort of a parent? If we teach our children to rely on things for comfort, what effect will this have on them later in life during times of stress? Shouldn’t we be encouraging them to reach out topeople?
Cosleeping Can Have Positive Effects on Self-Esteem and Family ClosenessAs Dr. Sears says, welcoming children into the family bed sends incredible “I care” messages. It says “you are special to us, day and night.” A little one welcomed into the family bed receives “countless hours more tender snuggles, and more affection than if she were left alone to sleep. If she wakes up at night, all she has to do is see you or reach out and touch you to feel the world is safe and right.”
And parents who fall asleep and/or wake up next to their children know how sweet it can be in those sleepy twilight hours. With everyone relaxed and cuddled up, children feel peaceful and ready to share their thoughts and stories, things that you might never hear during the hustle and bustle of daily life. “[Y]ou can get to know a family bed child on a level you might not otherwise. In the words of Thomas Anders, M.D., a professor of psychiatry at the University of California, Davis, School of Medicine, and director of the school’s infant and family sleep laboratory: ‘Co-sleeping encourages family closeness.’” These sentiments have been reinforced by research: the “vast majority” of both family bed graduates and their parents report that they are incredibly close to their families.
Children Who Cosleep May Be Easier to Get Along With and Better Adjusted Than Their Solo Sleeping PeersPsychologists in years past theorized that children in family beds were maladjusted, insecure, needy, and that their parents were languishing in bad marriages. Recent research blows the old theories out of the water. Here is a sample of what we’ve learned:
*Children who never slept in their parents’ beds were harder to control, less happy, had more tantrums, handled stress less well, and were more fearful than routinely co-sleeping children.


*Co-sleepers showed a feeling of general satisfaction with life.


*Children who didn’t co-sleep end up getting more professional help with emotional and behavioral problems than co-sleepers.


*Boys who slept in the family bed had increased self-esteem and less guilt and anxiety. Girls had more comfort with physical contact and affection.


*Children who had co-slept felt they weren’t as prone to peer pressure as others their age.

Psychologists have long agreed “that children who have responsive, sensitive, accessible parents are much more likely to be happier later in life. It should come as no surprise, then, that children whose parents are there for them day and night turn out so well.”
Everyone Sleeps BetterAs long as cosleeping works for you and your child, why change it? If you can get past learning to nurse while sleeping (http://naturalparentsnetwork.com/side-lying-nursing-a-breastfeeding-tutorial/) and wild toddler sleeping arrangements (http://codenamemama.com/2010/03/21/papa-cosleeping/),13 (http://naturalparentsnetwork.com/five-benefits-cosleeping/#fn-3517-13) continuing to share sleep with your little one may help your whole family sleep better into your child’s preschool years and beyond.
And when I say that everyone sleeps better, I really mean it. Scientific studies have shown that a family who sleeps together actually enters the different stages of sleep together almost simultaneously. Dr. Jay Gordon shared a beautiful illustration about the science behind this concept in his book, Good Nights: The Happy Parent’s Guide to the Family Bed (and a Peaceful Night’s Sleep!) (http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2FGood-Nights-Parents-Family-Peaceful%2Fdp%2F0312275188%3Fie%3DUTF8%26qid%3D129 3572158%26sr%3D8-1&tag=natparnetw-20&linkCode=ur2&camp=1789&creative=9325)14 (http://naturalparentsnetwork.com/five-benefits-cosleeping/#fn-3517-14):
Science is finally beginning to discover what babies have known all along: Babies are designed to sleep with their parents. And parents are designed to sleep with their babies.
At the Mother-Baby Behavioral Sleep Laboratory at the University of Notre Dame, anthropologist James McKenna, Ph.D., watches an intimate dance unfold. It’s a dance in which there’s no leader, no follower, and yet almost seamless choreography.
A mother and father sleep with their baby between them in a large bed in the laboratory’s comfortable bedroom. It’s similar to the way they sleep at home, only with infrared video cameras monitoring their sleep stages, zooming in on every roll of an eyeball, every twitch of muscle, all night long.
All is quiet and still, except for the rapidly moving, closed eyes of the baby, mother, and father. They’re all dreaming at the same time. Moments later they enter a stage of light sleep together: The mother stirs, awakens for just a moment, and drifts back to sleep, moving her head a little to the left, her arm to the right. The baby stirs, moves her head to the left, her arm to the right. Then the father follows with the same pattern. McKenna, director of the lab, smiles broadly and nods his head.
“It’s incredible watching these sequences unfold,” says McKenna, acclaimed as the father of this type of sleep research and the world’s foremost authority on the biological basis of cosleeping. “The synchronization that happens when parents sleep beside their baby is remarkable.”
Similar experiments in England find the same dance with family bedders. But place the baby in another room, and it’s like putting a wall between a pair of ballroom dancers. Everyone reverts to their own rhythms, their sleep cycles coinciding only by chance.
http://naturalparentsnetwork.com/five-benefits-cosleeping/

LoCo
25-11-2011, 15:09
Lovemyfam - Thank you so much for this thread:goodvibes:

tlc
26-11-2011, 21:56
Thanks so much for posting this. My DS is 9 months old now and we have been considering trying to move him from our bed and back into his own cot - partly because I was worried he wasnt sleeping well enough with us and partly because I was getting worn down from listening to other people tell us he should be sleeping through the night by now etc etc. This article has reassured me that we are doing the right thing for us and to stick with it. DH would like to have him out of the bed by the time he is 18 months (though I would love it if we could just wait till he is ready to move out on his own!) but we will at least stick with it for a few more months!

simitude
26-11-2011, 22:01
Snuggled up with my DS reading this :goodvibes: thanks for posting :)

Hannahly
26-11-2011, 22:10
What a lovely read. I actually don't co-sleep cause well we just never did (other than babies in their cribs in our room until they were one).

But kids all have there own rooms, my DD has been begging us to move in with her little bro, which we allowed but it was a bit hard as she was waking him at night for fun, and then he is an early riser so he would wake her in the morning and they were both cranky rotten tired.

We went camping for nearly a month a few months ago and all co-slept. It was nice. Since then my dd (4.5) wants me to fall asleep with her in her bed and often sneaks into our bed during the night - she sleeps longer when she does and I love having her cuddle up.

Anyway, as a non co-sleeper 'in theory' I just wanted to butt my head in and say it is nice to read such a lovely and caring study.

waterlily
27-11-2011, 06:18
I'm reading this in bed with my DD :D

Lovemyfam
27-11-2011, 07:17
I am glad you guys enjoyed it :highfive:

Gypsybum
05-01-2012, 00:18
Yes I wish my dd was not such a mover and shaker she wouldn't stop moving and waking and crying in the end. I would've gone until she was ready to move out otherwise! 12 months of cuddles and smiley face wake ups though:)

Oh and a note about the attachment to inanimate objects, I tried her with a Teddy when I'm rocking her to sleep and she just throws it and gets angry with it!! Haha she knows what's best;)

Dwyane Wade
10-02-2012, 00:39
You don't know what a revolution in my preconception and idealogy that this post has created. THank You!

heeeeerekittykitty
10-02-2012, 01:30
I never seen this thread when it was first started ! I could list more than five reasons ! Great article , and DS is cuddled up found asleep in between me and dh right now . best feeling in.the.world. :-) * bliss *


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Little-Pink-Hen
10-02-2012, 06:01
Love it. I miss dd when she is in her cot. Many nights she comes in during the night so love waking up with her.
However she loves the teddies and sleeping with us lol two nights ago we woke up with dd in the middle and a huge Elmo the same size as her. Sometimes she brings in her three favourites lol

I recommended co sleeping to parents at work and when they worry about trying to get them in their bed I say why worry. If co sleeping is working why change

becnbubs
10-02-2012, 07:43
My kiddies always coslept and even now at 8 and 5 I will often find them snuggled in bed with us :) lucky I have a king bed I don't even notice them come in!!

singa06
06-07-2012, 09:45
Thanks for that. DS is almost 3 yrs old and is JUST starting to want to sleep with me anywhere from 11pm/3am. At first I could easily settle him back into his own bed, but lately he refuses so I let him stay (and now love it).

bigZ
06-07-2012, 10:08
Thanks for this, I've been thinking about getting DS into his cot but I like him next to me at night so feeling good about not having moved him.

btmac
14-11-2012, 19:10
I can definitely attest to the fact that co sleeping leads to shared confidences. My DS1 now 17 cons keep with me well past infancy. Unlike most 17 yro boys he tells me about his day, we laugh and talk about everything. He still to this day will come in to bed with DH, baby brother and Ibin lazy weekend mornings.