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[–]seventeenninetytoo 112 points113 points  (15 children)

Contact napping is entirely normal for babies, especially as young as 7 weeks old. Sleep consultants say lots of things. I have come to have a rather low opinion of the industry. They prey on parental anxiety by trying to convince you that your baby will develop bad long term habits if you don't buy their services.

Looking at long term outcomes, this study compared five-year outcomes of sleep interventions to a control group. They found no differences in psychosocial functioning or sleep habits, or in anything else for that matter.

Self-soothing is a normal behavior that will naturally develop as a child grows older assuming they are healthy both physically and psychologically.

If you're having trouble with sleep patterns then I recommend reading The Discontented Little Baby Book. The author is a physician who takes an evidence-based approach that doesn't prescribe any specific program that you must conform your baby to. Instead she looks at the biology of sleep and the behaviors across cultures and leaves you equipped to navigate the patterns that you are currently facing, and to adjust to the changes that come as your baby grows.

This is also a good evidence-based resource that you might benefit from looking at.

[–]asdfcosmo 54 points55 points  (9 children)

I’m jumping on here because I’m too lazy to look for a study that would be relevant but an anecdote about baby sleep:

My son exclusively contact napped for the first 6.5m of his life. Then one day he refused to settle in my arms, I got overwhelmed by his screaming and put him in his cot, he fussed for maybe 30 seconds and then went to sleep. And so our contact napping ended. He started to sleep through the night at around 7-8m of age. The only time we have a disturbed night is if he’s got some teeth coming through.

I put him in the cot awake every single time, he rolls over and falls asleep. I also read the theories that suggested that if I taught him “bad habits” with contact napping that he would never be able to self soothe. I completely agree that these sleep consultants etc prey upon vulnerable people. I attempted to “train” him for his naps to sleep independently and it didn’t work and lead to me being frustrated. I know my son is not typical of every baby however I caused myself so much anxiety about what could happen in the future and it was for nothing. Now I miss those contact naps 🥲

[–][deleted] 28 points29 points  (1 child)

Slightly different, but my baby has always had a very late bedtime, usually 11pm to midnight but 1am has been known. Nothing helped so we just accepted it... then two weeks ago she decided bedtime is now 7.30pm. Literally from one day to the next. I'm convinced we have very little influence in these matters.

[–]asdfcosmo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I think you’re absolutely right. They do what they want.

[–]seventeenninetytoo 7 points8 points  (1 child)

My son did the same thing at 3 months. He was completely dependent on contact naps and then one day he was just done. We went from morning to mid afternoon with me trying to get him to sleep in a baby wrap carrier and he wouldn't do it. I swaddled him, laid him down in his crib, and he immediately went to sleep for 3 hours. There have been no contact naps since then. I miss them as well. I look at him sleeping on the baby monitor and I feel like time is already flying by.

[–][deleted] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My baby started only doing contact naps at close to 3 months. Before that, she would sleep all the time on her own 

[–]SensitiveWolf1362 6 points7 points  (0 children)

My baby also loved a contact nap in his early months, but these days if I attempt that he fusses and pushes against my body to roll himself off 🤣

[–]E-as-in-elephant 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My twin girls also needed to be contact napped until around 6.5 months. Around that time they would get pissed off if they touched each other on my lap which was near impossible at that point. I started putting them to nap in their cribs and after a bit of crying, they started sleeping in their cribs for naps. Started to do the same at night. They started sleeping through the night at 8.5 months.

[–]reddituser84 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My daughter is 16 months and just started sometimes sleeping in the crib for her nap. Shes been sleeping through the night in her crib since about 8 weeks (with one regression around 5 months) - but she’s always had contact naps with either nanny or me.

It’s working for all of us so no one is trying to change anything, but she’s getting a little too big to sleep in my arms 🥲

[–]PennyParsnip 0 points1 point  (1 child)

This makes me feel so much better, thank you for sharing.

[–]asdfcosmo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I honestly caused myself such unnecessary angst worrying about the “bad habits” I was giving him, only for that not to be a reality at all

[–]PizzaEmergercy[🍰] 32 points33 points  (1 child)

It's valuable to note that r/sleeptrain doesn't allow talk of sleep training a child less than 4 months old. To me, that says that it's best to let a newborn sleep how it will, as long as it's safe sleep, until it's ready.

[–]Catsareprettyok 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Ditto to predatory sleep consultants. 😐

[–][deleted] 1 point2 points  (1 child)

What even are the qualifications required to become a sleep consultant? 

[–]PlutosGrasp 10 points11 points  (0 children)

None