Sunshine Billingual The Blog
    Top Picks
    Infant

    When To Have Set Nap Times for Baby

    Child Care

    What Are The Differences Between Daycare & Preschool?

    Infant

    Celebrity Moms Share Their Breastfeeding Journey

    Important Pages:
    • MainHome
    • Blog
    • Programs/Tuition
    • Our Team
    • Himama app
    • Gallery
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Sunshine Billingual The Blog
    • MainHome
    • Programs/Tuition
    • Our Team
    • Himama app
    • Gallery
    • Contact Us
    • Infant

      Rediscovering Yourself Through What You Wear

      Potty Training Tips for Parents

      Thoughtful Baby Gifts on a Budget That Still Feel Special

      Brinley PreTeen Summary: 13 Years Old

      Creating the Family You Want – Ep 183

    • Child Care

      Giving Children The Best Start In Early Education at Creative Childcare Hunter Street.

      Choosing The Right Hunter Street Preschool – Creative Childcare

      The ROI of Streamlining Your Preschool Enrollment Process

      Why a Seamless Parent Experience is Key to Preschool Enrollment Success

      How to Reduce Time Spent on Lead Follow-Up in Childcare Organizations

    • Toddler Care

      The Division of Responsibility: Your Picky Eating Super Power

      Blueberry Smoothie with Milk – Yummy Toddler Food

      Favorite Make-Ahead Lunches – Yummy Toddler Food

      Peach Ice Cream (SO Easy)

      Kids Lunch Q&A: Only Eat Cookies, New Foods, Kinder Advice

    • Preschool

      Ohio DCY Leadership Pay a Visit to Horizon

      4 Ways To Make Preschool Dropoff Easier

      How Do Preschoolers Learn Best?

      Why Are Science Experiments Important for Preschoolers?

      What’s the Difference Between Childcare and Preschool?

    • Learning

      Week of the Young Child in 2024: Activities, Themes + Ideas

      Keys to Building a Strong Workforce in Your Childcare Business

      How Childcare Software Makes a Difference: According to Real Educators

      LineLeader’s Passion for Education Meets Tech Innovation in their Leading Childcare Software

      5 Signs It’s Time for a User-Friendly CRM System

    • Skill

      When Should I Start To Give My Child an Allowance?

      New Study Finds Not All Preschool Programs Are Equal

      The Amazing Ways Preschool Expands Children’s Brains

      Happy Classrooms Lead to Healthy Communities

      Why Preschool Is Vital to Academic Success

    • Activities

      Fostering a Love of the Outdoors in kids

      Immunity Booster Foods for Kids this monsoon

      Indoor games & activities for kids in monsoons

      Tummy Time Must know tips for Infants

      Top 5 Indoor Games for Your Toddler

    • Parenting

      Parent Engagement Software That Boosts Enrollment & Retention

      Why a Childcare Booking System Is Key to Enrollment Success

      The Best Childcare CRM for Enrollment in 2025

      Build a System That Converts

      6 Ways to Organize Your Childcare Enrollment Process

    • Leadership

      How 100+ Years of Education Experience Shapes LineLeader’s Service Commitment

      5 Insights Every Multi-Site Owner Can Apply

      Developmentally Appropriate Practice (DAP) Examples

      5 Data-Backed Ways to Win Parent Trust

      5 Ways Childcare Leaders Are Transforming the Brand Experience

    • Features

      From Bucket Dipper to Bucket Filler: Helping Kids Change Course

      When Someone Dips from Your Bucket: How to Stay Kind and Strong

      Filling My Own Bucket: Helping Kids Care for Their Hearts

      Bucket Filler Kindness for Kids: How to Take It Everywhere This Summer

      Horizon Education Centers Fall Enrollment Is Open!

    Sunshine Billingual The Blog
    Home » How I got my newborn to sleep 5+ hours a night
    Infant

    How I got my newborn to sleep 5+ hours a night

    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp

    BabyCenter selects products based on the research of our editors and the wisdom of parents in the BabyCenter Community. All prices and details are accurate at the time of publication. We may earn a commission from shopping links.

    The story of my journey to parenthood is a long one. I became a first-time mom in late October to the world’s squishiest, most anticipated baby who was born via gestational carrier. That means that 1) I was not pregnant before this non-sleeping baby plopped into my life and 2) I was very anxious to over-compensate for that fact. I told myself that the best way to do it was to be as prepared as possible for all her physical, emotional, and social needs. That manifested in months of frantic searching for The Answers to Baby Sleep, which, as you might imagine, was extremely overwhelming. Also, like all new parents, I found myself extremely sleep-deprived.

    So when BabyCenter reached out to me a few weeks after our girl came home and offered me the opportunity to review their baby sleep courseOpens a new window, I jumped at it. While I was given complimentary access to this course as part of the review process, the opinions reflected in this piece are entirely my own.

    Spoiler alert: I started using the tips from the course right away, and I noticed that my newborn began sleeping for longer stretches at night shortly afterward. Her naps improved, too. To this day, some of the advice I’ve learned continues to be a game-changer.

     

     

    I turned to this course for help with everything.

    From those earliest moments of chaos to the 3-month-old aftermath, I was desperate to learn definitively what my baby was capable of developmentally and if the home I’d spent so much time prepping for her was the best and safest place for her to sleep. I also truthfully just wanted a calm presence to deliver all of this information to me. Calmness felt critical!

    This courseOpens a new window is hosted by Olufunke Afolabi-Brown, M.D., a pediatric sleep doctor. She is calm, reassuring, and full of useful information. BabyCenter parent contributor Anna Jimenez Lyle co-hosts the course, asking many of the same questions that I would have asked Dr. Brown myself if given the opportunity. It was helpful to have the two paired up to talk through all of the information.

    The lessons are broken up into different sections, focused mainly on your baby’s age:

    • Advice you’ll use throughout baby’s first year
    • Stage one: 0-12 weeks
    • Stage two: 3-5 months
    • Stage three: 6+ months
    • Finding support

    I zeroed in on the first two sections because my daughter’s still in the newborn stage.

    I began implementing tips from the course right away.

    This may sound silly, but I really latched on to the nursery prep and organization tips because I hadn’t seen them elsewhere before. As Dr. Brown points out in the courseOpens a new window, people become so fixated on the aesthetics of a home that it becomes difficult to glean how conducive for sleep a nursery actually is. That particular lesson taught me about how much light is recommended in baby’s room (see: none!) and white noise machine positioning (3 feet from crib! No louder than 50 decibels!).

    Advertisement | page continues below

    Turns out, the noise machine in my daughter’s nursery had been about 10 feet from the crib, and the curtains weren’t providing complete coverage. I made changes almost immediately after finishing that lesson. We began having her nap at least once a day in a different room in her bassinet, where it was easier to position the noise machine closer. We arelady had blackout curtains on every window in that room, too…and wouldn’t you know it? That same week, the kid started giving us a 1 1/2- to 2-hour nap each day and five- to six-hour stretches at night.

    You can bet that I moved that noise machine in her nursery 7 feet closer to her crib and that I priced out new blackout shade solutions ASAP! Several weeks later, the blackout tip continues to be a lifesaver. If there’s any semblance of light in our room when our baby goes down, I notice a difference in how easy it is to put her to sleep and how likely she is to stay asleep for a longer period of time.

    Recently, when my baby started regressing hard, I began using another tip from Dr. Brown: counting to 60 before intervening when she woke up throughout the night. Dr. Brown recommends doing this to ensure that your baby is really, truly awake, and not just making noises in her sleep – which, as it turns out, is very common! Dr. Brown also reassures parents and caregivers that it doesn’t hurt babies in any way to wait this small amount of time before picking them up. For my own sanity (as well as a few instances of, “Oh, OK. Yeah, she’s good!!!”), this advice has been really, really helpful. 

    Since I had my baby via a gestational carrier, I was worried that I’d feel excluded by the material. The opposite was true.

    At the beginning of the lesson called “Understanding your newborn’s sleep schedule,” Dr. Brown explains that, “If you carried your baby,” you rocked her to sleep in utero during the day with constant motion. The power of that phrasing — ’”If you carried your baby” — made me tear up. It’s so rare that I come across literature or videos that explicitly address the parenthood of women who were never pregnant.

    That casual lack of assumption alone makes me want to sing from the rooftops to all of my adoption and surrogacy friends: This courseOpens a new window will validate, uplift, and empower anyone who didn’t carry their baby. That said, it feels important to note that I feel confident anyone reaching this course, including those who had a baby in a more “conventional” way, will feel supported by the information provided. The hosts acknowledge frequently that none of this baby stuff is easy, whether it be physically, emotionally, and/or every other -ally you could possibly be experiencing at this stage. And they also make a point to mention single parents, parents who use daycare, and a variety of other circumstances throughout the course.

    Another thing I’d be remiss if I didn’t note, though: Dr. Brown mentions that this course should be shared with grandparents and any caregivers who might frequently be involved in the baby’s sleep processes. I think that my parents might struggle with the amount of safe sleep information presented to them here because it is so drastically different from what they were told to do when they raised me and my brother. Instead of sitting them down with the course, I think I’ll show them the accompanying “Key takeaways” and ask if they have questions.

    There’s a lot of information packed into each lesson. And I do mean a lot.

    I’m a writer and editor by trade, so it is in my blood to take notes as I ingest information. I spent a lot of my first pass through the first lesson taking down Dr. Brown’s words pretttttty much verbatim, only to be pleasantly surprised by the concluding “Key takeways” slide and the corresponding downloadable PDF. As it turns out, every single lessonOpens a new window summarizes the main points at the end of the video, and also comes with a handy PDF that is basically a CliffsNotes version of what the lesson went through.

    I’m going to chalk my continued note-taking through the next lessons up to how desperately I wanted to internalize all the gems presented, but I ultimately ended up with pages of notes that I really didn’t have to take. TL;DR? Save your precious energy. Take screenshots of those “Key takeaways” at the end of each lesson! And download the dang PDFs.

    I’d ultimately recommend this course to almost any parent looking for sleep help.

    This courseOpens a new window is extremely low-risk, high-reward – a way of living I’ve generally leaned into much more over these past few months since I became a parent. It spoon-feeds you verifiable, evidence-based strategies in a way that isn’t overwhelming, condescending, or vague. It’s easy to navigate and quick to get through. Put all of those things together, and you’ve got a baby-sleeping course of any parents’ dreams! (Like, right!? I’m still so new to this that I don’t want to speak for all of us, but…right!?!)

    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
    Previous ArticleFresh Strawberry Sauce
    Next Article Choosing a Babysitter – All My Children Daycare & Nursery School

    Related Posts

    Infant

    Rediscovering Yourself Through What You Wear

    Infant

    Potty Training Tips for Parents

    Infant

    Thoughtful Baby Gifts on a Budget That Still Feel Special

    Infant

    Brinley PreTeen Summary: 13 Years Old

    Infant

    Creating the Family You Want – Ep 183

    Infant

    Sample Sleep Schedules for School-Aged Kids

    Infant

    The Perfect Baby Gifts for Your Coworker (That Won’t Make It Awkward)

    Infant

    Free New Parent Coupon Printables: The Perfect DIY Baby Gift

    Add A Comment

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    New Posts
    Toddler Care

    October Meal Plan Week 5

    Welcome to YTF Community, a place to safely share in the challenges and joys of…

    First Birthday Smash Cake (with Yogurt Frosting)

    How Many Ounces Should a Newborn Drink Chart for Milk Per Day

    Best Freezer Meals for New Moms & Dads

    Oatmeal Protein Pancakes – Yummy Toddler Food

    Sunshine Childcare Center provides a safe, nurturing environment to give children a great start in life as well as a promising future

    CONTACT:

    214 Harrison Ave,
    Boston, MA, 02111

    Boston@sunshinebilingual.com

    617-426-3083

    Categories
    • Activities (17)
    • Child Care (150)
    • Features (317)
    • Infant (1,236)
    • Leadership (43)
    • Learning (67)
    • Parenting (38)
    • Preschool (20)
    • Skill (46)
    • Toddler Care (978)
    Most Popular
    Infant

    Distraction as a Discipline Tool: Tips for Parents

    Toddler Care

    25 Super Easy & Pretty Flower Crafts for Kids

    Leadership

    How to Use Talking Points for Quality Childcare Center Tours

    Toddler Care

    Easy Easter Recipes for Kids

    © 2025 Sunshine Billingual.
    • Blog
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.