Post by kerrigrooves on Jan 14, 2016 11:01:57 GMT -5
our 3 yo woke at 1 am crying and said there were black bugs in her bed, DH brought her into our bed where she didnt fall asleep so he took her back up 20 min later. At that point I was wide awake til 5. DH is going out to dinner with a coworker so Im alone with the kids, going to be a very long day.
Post by dmorgendorffer on Jan 14, 2016 11:53:07 GMT -5
Last night was shaping up to be another bad night of sleep for us, then mostly out of exhaustion I sat on the floor next to the crib so I could shush / pat DD through the rails. She lifted her head to look at me a few times and then was asleep, probably under 5 minutes. Same with her 2nd wake up of the night. We've been dealing with 1-2 hour wake ups and all I needed to do was sit next to the crib for a few minutes?
I hope this keeps up and then we can start working on a sleep lady shuffle.
Nothing much going on here. After S' first wake up last night, he slept for 6 HOURS straight! This may not seem like a big deal to some of you, but my child hardly ever sleeps for more than 3 hours at a time. I can count on one hand the times he's slept 5+ hours at a time. After that he was back on his usually 2 hour stretches.
Post by dmorgendorffer on Jan 14, 2016 12:29:27 GMT -5
hollydfromtn consecutive, uninterrupted hours of sleep are so amazing and do wonders for your mood! Just one of the things I've learned in the past year.
Post by GeekBeagle on Jan 14, 2016 23:00:21 GMT -5
Hi ladies!
It's been a pretty rough week here. I had a stomach bug, then DH did, and DS got another round of pink eye plus his first (double) ear infection. Whew!
But...we leave for Disney World in the morning, so it can only get better, right? I'm having anxiety about the trip and preparations, so FX it goes smoothly and I don't forget anything! I need to get back to packing and such, but I wanted to check in and say hi. I probably won't be around for the next 5 days.
Then Comes Family, LLC is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising
program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.