For many cultures around the world, co-sleeping — the act of parents sharing a bed with their children — is the most natural and obvious way to get some rest while bonding. But co-sleeping with a newborn or toddler in an American family requires a different cultural context. Americans tend to live more geographically disparate lives, with an emphasis on independence and privacy. The environments and furnishings we use to raise our children also prompt unique safety concerns. So is co-sleeping with toddlers and newborns bad? And why does it seem like your baby sleeps better in your bed?
There is a tremendous amount of information — and misinformation — out there, muddying the waters around safe co-sleeping and making it difficult for parents to make comfortable, rational decisions about the best way to raise their kids. To bring some clarity to co-sleeping, here are the five big myths that need to be dispelled so the real risks can be calculated — and everyone can finally get a good night’s sleep.
Myth #1: Safe Co-Sleeping Is Impossible
The older a child gets, the safer co-sleeping becomes. That’s because the older children are, the better their ability to extricate themselves from suffocation or possible entrapment. And frankly, by the time they can toddle, a parent won’t likely be able to forget them as the kid spins like a top in their bed.
Even for babies, co-sleeping can be facilitated by co-sleeping devices that attach to the side of the bed. These allow breastfeeding parents easy access to the child while keeping them away from the bedding and big bodies. Other options include “suspended cribs” that keep a kid out of the parent’s way by being suspended from the ceiling above the bed.
Some parents have even opted to support co-sleeping by having a single parent in the bed on a firm mattress with a tight bottom sheet and minimal covering. This is a relatively safe sleeping arrangement. However, for the youngest babies, there is still a risk of entrapment or suffocation in these situations.
Myth #2: Co-Sleeping Is Perfectly Safe
Hear us out here. Co-sleeping parents are often practicing a form of attachment parenting that finds parents keeping kids close at all times so their needs can be attended to promptly and without stress. They often espouse the opinion that co-sleeping is a perfectly safe and natural way for parents to raise their children. It is — up to a point.
The problem is that having a child in a standard bed with two parents can be incredibly risky, particularly for babies younger than 3 months old. That’s because babies sleeping between parents are at risk for suffocation and entrapment deaths. This can either happen because a parent rolls on top of a child (this often happens when a parent is intoxicated) or when a baby becomes wrapped in heavy or puffy blankets.
There are ways to mitigate these risks. They include minimizing bulky bedding, never placing the baby between parents, and never going to bed with a baby while intoxicated. That said, the risk will never be reduced to zero, and the practice is still not recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP).
Myth #3: Co-Sleeping Kids Have a Harder Time Transitioning to Sleeping Alone
Whether moving a kid from a crib or co-sleeping arrangement to a big kid bed of their own, there is bound to be a period of adjustment. One transition is not necessarily more difficult than another. And like most things in parenting, how the child takes to sleeping alone largely depends on their temperament.
It should be noted that getting a kid to sleep alone — whether they’re a baby, toddler, or preschooler — is going to be a challenge. The transition from co-sleeping is best accomplished by the “fading” method. This method requires a parent to be close and quiet as a child falls asleep in their own bed. Slowly, the parent puts more distance between themselves and the child (essentially fading back into their own room).
Transitional objects, such as a stuffed animal or blanket, are recommended to provide a comforting presence as kids move from a common bed to solo sleeping. These objects will help them soothe themselves back to sleep when they wake up alone.
Myth #4: There Are No Benefits to Safe Co-Sleeping With Toddlers
Research shows that a baby’s health can improve when they sleep close to their parents. In fact, babies who sleep with their parents have more regular heartbeats and breathing. They even sleep more soundly. Being close to parents is even shown to reduce the risk of SIDS. That’s why the AAP recommends that children sleep in the same room with their parents while stopping short of having those children in the same bed as their parents.
Other co-sleeping benefits include better quality of life for breastfeeding parents who can more easily feed their child without becoming fully active. Not to mention a baby that sleeps more soundly will have fewer wake-ups, meaning parents are more likely to get their own shut-eye.
Myth #5: Co-sleeping Parents Can Never Have Sex
Will parents be able to get it on at night in the privacy of their own bed? Unlikely. But conflating a lack of nighttime sex with years of kid-enforced abstinence shows an utter and complete failure of creative thinking.
The fact is that there are 24 hours in the day, and most of them are ideal for sex if parents can manage to find time alone together. Sexy time will be helped if parents embrace the quickie, keep the flame lit through the dry times with flirting and touching, and schedule a time to get it on when the kid is with a relative or at a playdate.
Co-sleeping should not be ruining anyone’s marriage. And if it does, there were probably some deeper problems to begin with.
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This article was originally published on Feb. 20, 2018
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