Read The No Cry Nap Solution Online
Authors: Elizabeth Pantley
194 Solving Napping Problems
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and material of the swaddling blanket and the amount and
type of clothing your baby wears under the swaddling blan-
ket, or adjust the temperature of the room. On warm days,
a diaper and T-shirt under a cotton blanket may be just
perfect.
• Use a baby-sized receiving blanket or a specially designed
swaddling blanket, such as one with Velcro ends or tabs
that hold the blanket together.
• The blanket should fi t snugly but not so tightly that it could
impede circulation or breathing, prevent leg movement, or
cause discomfort.
• Premature babies or those with developmental issues may
need to have their arms up or free of the swaddling. Check
with your health care provider about this.
How to Use Swaddling for Naptime
195
• Protect your baby’s hip and knee development by allowing
ample space for his legs, or use a stretchy fabric that permits
leg movement. Allow your baby to have a natural position
for his legs when you wrap him; don’t force them to be per-
fectly straight. Allow room within the blanket for your baby
to stretch out his legs during sleep. If you aren’t sure if your
baby has enough leg freedom, try loosely double- diapering
your baby before swaddling; this creates some extra space
within the wrap and creates a natural fl ex to the hips.
Some swaddling blankets are created with an opening at
the bottom for complete freedom of leg movement.
• If your baby fi nds comfort in sucking his thumb or fi ngers,
then swaddle him with one hand free, alternating hands
each time you swaddle him. Some babies enjoy being swad-
dled with both hands untucked.
• Make certain that your swaddled baby is always positioned
on his back for sleep.
• Don’t allow the blanket to rise up to cover your baby’s face
or cheeks.
• Do not attach your swaddled baby to a cradle board for car-
rying, as this has been found to impede hip and leg move-
ment necessary for proper development.
• If you swaddle your baby for sleep, be sure you unswaddle
him when he is awake. Include plenty of supervised tummy
time each day.
Father-Speak
“I’m amazed at how well swaddling her works for naps. It’s
ingenious. This has got to be one of the best ideas ever in
the history of humankind. It’s up there with the wheel and
lightbulbs, if you ask me!”
—Khalid, father of two-month-old Aaliyah
196 Solving Napping Problems
When to Stop Swaddling Your Baby
Swaddling works well for babies from newborn until three to four
months of age. However, babies who are used to being swaddled
for naps may enjoy it for several months longer. It’s time to wean
from naptime swaddling when your baby
• is able to wriggle free of the swaddling blanket
• can roll over onto her side or stomach
• fi ghts against you when you swaddle her
• no longer settles easily to sleep when swaddled
How to Wean from Swaddling
Many babies naturally outgrow their need to be swaddled. Every
few weeks, test to see if your baby will accept napping without
being swaddled.
Those babies who are reluctant to give up their sleeping swad-
dle can be weaned gently, a little at a time. The following ideas
can help you set a plan for weaning from swaddling:
• Leave one arm unwrapped, then two arms, then both legs.
You can experiment with this approach; take a few days or
a week or more at each stage. Some babies respond better
if you begin the weaning by leaving their legs undone fi rst
then progress to arms.
• Another weaning approach is to gradually loosen the blan-
ket by increments over a period of days or weeks, allowing
your baby a bit more movement. This way she remains
swaddled but slowly gets used to having more freedom dur-
ing sleep.
• When you fi nally stop swaddling, you might then dress your
baby in a sleeping-bag-style sleeper or a wearable blanket.
These create a feeling that is similar to being swaddled, but
looser. After a while you can switch your baby to sleeper
How to Use Swaddling for Naptime
197
pajamas with feet. Finally, over time, your baby can be
covered with a blanket instead of being swaddled in it, if
he prefers, though many toddlers still enjoy the freedom of
wearing “footie pajamas” to bed.
• It can help to warm the crib sheets before naptime with a
towel from the dryer, a microwaved heat bag, or a heating
pad set on low. (Test the temperature of the surface before
you lay your baby down.)
• Weaning from swaddling can be easier if you maintain all
other parts of your baby’s usual nap routine and when you
keep other parts of the nap environment stable, such as
darkening the room and playing lullabies or white noise.
• A newly unswadddled napper can sometimes be settled into
bed if you place both hands on her (across her chest, stom-
ach, or thighs) when you place her in the crib. When she is
settled in place, then slowly reduce the amount of pressure
of your hands until you remove them completely.
• If your baby has been sleeping well while swaddled but has
outgrown the swaddle but not the need for assistance to
nap, you might consider letting her nap in a cradle-swing,
rocking cradle, or baby hammock. These can provide your
baby with just enough physical stimulation to take over
where swaddling leaves off.
• Your baby might welcome a small, soft lovey stuffed animal
in the crib as a tactile replacement for swaddling. Look for a
toy made especially for infants. Place this beside your baby’s
hips or legs.
• Continue to use white noise or soft music for naptime and
maintain all the other parts of your baby’s presleep routine.
Changing Car Naps to
Bed Naps
See also: The Nap Resister: When Your Child
Needs a Nap but Won’t Take One
My son is a fi nicky sleeper and refuses to
nap in his crib. I have resorted to driving around
every day until he falls asleep, then I park in
the garage and have to run in and out of the
house to check on him until he wakes up.
This is not only ridiculously expensive, but
I’m really embarrassed and beginning to
resent being held hostage like this
every day. Help!
Oh, my! The things parents do to induce children to nap!
I must tell you that you aren’t the only one who has suc-
cumbed to driving a baby around town at naptime; it is surpris-
ingly common. As effective as they are, the problems with driving
naps are many. First, as you say, it’s expensive and a misuse of
resources and time. When you park your car and leave your sleep-
ing baby unattended, it becomes a dangerous game of chance. You
could be distracted and misjudge the amount of time between
check-ins, and the possibilities of something bad happening while
you are gone are endless: the temperature could become too hot
and your baby could overheat; your baby could become twisted in
his seat belt; or at the very least, he could wake up and panic at
being alone.
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Changing Car Naps to Bed Naps
199
When your baby becomes used to these driving naps, you’ll fi nd
that they become a strong sleep cue—he’ll fall asleep in the car
even between naptimes, which can wreak havoc with your nap
and bedtime schedule. The longer this pattern of driving naps
goes on, the more ingrained becomes the habit, and your baby
will come to connect naps and car rides and expect a chauffeured
nap every single day.
The biggest problems with car-seat naps have recently been
uncovered by several studies that show that spending too much
time in this semi-upright position can put a strain on a baby’s
developing spine. In addition, spending awake time
and
naptime
in the car seat, together with time in other baby carriers, increases
a baby’s chance of developing a fl at area on the back of his head.
Other studies show that some babies (especially those who are
newborn, premature, or sick) who take long, unsupervised naps in
car seats appear to be at risk for breathing blockage or SIDS. Mod-
ifying car safety seats so that a baby’s head does not fl op forward
could help avoid the risk, so keeping the seat in the back-tilted
position (rather than sitting straight up) may be helpful. Install-
ing the seat correctly, using the seat’s belting system properly, and
using specially made head-hugger inserts can also offset this risk
by holding your baby in an upright position. (Read your manufac-
turer’s instructions.)
Marjorie Marciano, director of the safety education offi ce at the
New York City Department of Transportation, offers this advice:
“We do know that using a car seat that is installed correctly can
reduce the risk of injury signifi cantly, for example by 70 percent
for children under one year old. ‘Installed correctly’ means that
the seat should be at an angle of 45 degrees. When working with
parents, we always say that it is important that the seat be at the
correct angle to keep the airway open.” This is a new discovery,
and I suspect that car-seat designs will change in the future to off-
set this risk; there is more research needed here. In the meantime,
it is prudent to avoid using your baby’s car seat beyond the main
200 Solving Napping Problems
purpose—car travel—for which the car seat remains the absolute
safest place for your baby to be.
With older babies and toddlers, many parents allow the child
to lie twisted, sideways, and even partially out of the car seat to
recline against the door or a pillow during naps. This is another
car-seat sleeping danger. In the case of an accident or a quick stop,
the child could be ejected from the vehicle or suffer serious inju-
ries because of the inappropriate location of the shoulder straps.
The bottom line is that driving your child to sleep in the car
and letting him take his nap in the car seat is an unsafe and frus-
trating way for you to spend hours every day. The good news is that
with some effort your baby can be taking long, pleasant naps—at
home and even in his bed.
Why Are Car Naps Popular with Babies?
There are four main reasons that babies sleep well in the car:
• W—Whooshing sounds:
The pleasant hum of the motor,
the wind rushing by, the music on the radio, and the click
of the windshield wipers and turn signal blinkers not only
soothe your baby to sleep, they also block outside noises
that interfere with a nap.
• O—Orderly, predictable events:
Diaper changed, coat
on, baby into the seat, buckle clicked, car started, driving
begins, sleep time! It’s exactly the same every single time—
a very predictable and a memorable routine.
• M—Movement:
Gentle sways, jiggles, and bumps create a
pleasant rocking that puts babies to sleep.
• B—Buckled:
Snapped snugly into her seat, your baby’s own
movements don’t startle her awake. In addition, she isn’t