As a new mother, you probably
will wonder whether your baby is sleeping enough, or sleeping too much. There
are guidelines of what to expect, but of course these can vary from baby to
baby. Even if you’ve had children before, each baby will be different.
Newborn babies usually sleep
about 16-17 hours in a 24-hour period. Most babies will not sleep through the
night until they’re at least 3 months old. There are several reasons why. First
of all, their stomachs are very small and they’ll get hungry faster, especially
if you’re breastfeeding your baby. Breast milk is much more easily digested
than formula, and your baby will need to feed more often, especially in the
beginning.
Babies also have shorter sleep
cycles than adults do and have shorter dream cycles. In general, though, a
newborn baby should sleep about 8 or nine hours during the day and 8 hours or
so at night. These won’t be in 8-hour cycles, of course. In the beginning,
those sleep times will be very short.
As the baby gets older, up to
about 2 years of age, she’ll still be sleeping 13-14 hours, but the amount of
daytime sleep will diminish month-by-month. By age 2, your baby should be
sleeping through the night with a 2-hour nap during the day. Again, this will
vary by child. Your baby might need a slightly longer nap or two short naps. At
this age though, try to discourage naps too late in the afternoon, as this can
make it harder to get them to sleep a few hours later at bed time.
Once a baby begins to regularly
sleep through the night, parents are often dismayed when he/she begins to
awaken in the night again. This typically happens at about 6 months of age and
is often a normal part of development called separation anxiety, when a baby
does not understand that separations are temporary.
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