Thursday, February 19, 2009

The funny (and not-so-funny) thing about sleep

The first few weeks are easy. Well, perhaps not easy, but the first few weeks are at least bathed in the shock and awe and bliss of having a new little person in your life. Waking up every two hours might not even seem that bad at first. Sometimes you may even stay awake just to watch your child sleep.

Then reality sets in.

Your husband goes back to work. The stockpile of meals in the freezer runs out. Your family returns to their lives (or to the other side of the country, in my case). Your house becomes a mess. You become a mess. Weeks or even months after the birth, your little one still won’t sleep for more than two or three hours at a time. And you slowly start to lose your mind.

People joke about it, especially if they’ve never had kids, or when it’s far enough in the past that they forget how bad it really was. But when you are in the thick of it, sleep deprivation is anything but funny. Well, maybe it is, but only in that delirious, wild-eyed way that makes you switch from laughing to crying and back again before anyone can even hand you a tissue. There is a reason why sleep deprivation is used as a form of torture. It makes you weepy, irrational and can even cause temporary insanity. Trust me on this one.

When you are talking to your childless friends about how tired you are, and they say “Oh, I know how you feel, I was out last night until 3am”, you may just want to kill them. A random stranger in the supermarket asks how you are, and you dissolve into a puddle of tears. Or you find yourself shooting daggers at your blissfully sleeping husband as you get up for the fifth time that night. When he innocently asks in the morning if the baby “slept through the night”, you barely suppress the urge to throw your coffee cup at him.

But perhaps the most bitter pill to swallow is when your friends, who also have new babies, tell you that their little ones are already sleeping seven or eight hour stretches. While you might be happy for them, you are also unbearably jealous. I thought I must be doing something wrong -- if other babies could sleep, why couldn’t mine? I cut out dairy for a month, then soy, hoping that would help. It didn’t. I tried using only cotton sleepers. I tried different diapers, different soothers, different blankets, different swaddlers, different mobiles, different nightlights. Nothing worked. I even spent an inflated $35 on a “miracle blanket” that looks like a baby strait jacket, hoping that would help. It didn’t. I quit drinking coffee to see if that was the issue. It wasn’t. (But that horrible experiment introduced a whole new set of problems. Caffeine, apparently, makes me a better person.)

But it gets better. Honestly, it does. My baby is nearly eight months old now, and he is finally sleeping straight through the night. Most of the time. He wakes up at 5:30am ready to play, but at least he’s not waking up every two hours like he used to. I’ll take what I can get.

Now that I am getting six to seven hours of uninterrupted sleep on most nights, I am a new person. I can think again. I’ve started reading the newspaper and political magazines. I’m trying to brush up on my Spanish. I’ve even started to creep out of my state of denial to think about working once again. Now, when I get six hours of sleep instead of seven, I catch myself complaining that I’m tired. Not long ago, I would have paid some serious cash to get even five hours of sleep. How quickly we forget.

Sleep makes us all better mothers. Now if only our babies knew that.

9 comments:

  1. Well said!!

    keep it up...I will be subscribing!!

    Christie Thoreson (julie's sister)

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  2. Wow, this is exactly how I feel right now. My baby slept 8 hours the other night and I felt like climbing a mountain! I couldn't believe it! It hasn't happened since, and may never happen again, but at least now when I'm getting up for the fourth time in the night I can think back to that memory of 8 hours sleep... sigh.

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  3. Hi Rachel: Boy do I ever remember those days! It(the lack of sleep) went on forever(about 9 years in our case)- you really don't want to know...but in spite of all that it is still worth having a wonderful family and now the joy of seeing Robbie and not having to get up at night. I would love to get your blogs. Thanks so much for sharing. Love Lorraine

    ps what do I comment as?

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  4. PERFECTLY WRITTEN!!!!
    I so know what you are describing!
    We just hit the 8 hrs of sleep/night mark last month!!! What a blessing!

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  5. It sure is nice to be reminded that I am not alone. I can't wait for the day our little one sleeps for more then 2 or 3 hours in a row.
    They say it starts to happen around 3 months, but I'm trying not to get my hopes up :P

    Thanks so much for sharing, I really enjoy your blog.

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  6. oh yeah, we had this conversation the other night, didn't we? ;) I think it's easier the second time round, though. With the first baby you are used to having sleep and time to yourself. By the time number two comes along, a life of your own is long out the window. It's less of a shock to the system.

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  7. I like Lisa's comment, regarding subsequent children: "It's less of a shock to the system."
    Right on, Lisa!

    Enjoy the 7- to 8-hour sleeps while you can, Rachel! If he's anything like his daddy, he may revert back to more frequent wakings whenever he is teething.

    My kids wouldn't sleep more than an hour and half at a time, day or night, when they were teething. And they were such early teethers--one of them started as early as three weeks! Three of them had 8 teeth by 7 months!

    The "up" side was that they had all of their teeth in by the time they were two years old. So when other toddlers were going through the Terrible Twos, my kids were quite the pleasant little darlings, as they were no longer teething. Those molars and eye teeth that come in between 2 and 3 can make them really miserable, and they can't yet tell you why they are so irritable.

    So, during each one's first two years, I struggled to get enough sleep. I felt like a new woman if I got THREE hours of sleep at one time in those days!

    Consider yourself fortunate if you get 5 or 6. And take naps whenever you can!!! :)

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  8. I had 3 under 3 and I think I went without an uninterrupted night's sleep for at least 4 years. There's so much I can't remember from that time because I was so sleep deprived.

    I too tried everything - absolutely nothing worked :( and I too felt angry and SO jealous of people who could sleep in until 10 am.

    Looking back on that time, I wonder if, besides being sleep deprived, I was also dehydrated. And since I nursed all my babies, I wonder if being more well hydrated would have helped. My 3 year old grandson will sometimes wake up at 2 am asking for a glass of water.

    Could babies be waking up because they're thirsty? Although I ate well and did drink liquids, I probably wasn't drinking enough water to compensate for my activity level at the time. Being well hydrated also makes you feel calmer... a good thing especially if you can't get enough sleep.

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  9. Hello, Rachel,

    It's good to know that you're not alone! -- despite all those other angels who bless their parents with full-night sleeps from an early age.

    You're doing such an incredible job, being so strong -- even though you might feel so weak!

    Not that you need advice from me! but look for help when you can, even if it's to take an afternoon nap while a friend watches over your little treasure. You need it and deserve it.

    It was good to meet you again last weekend, and pure pleasure to see such a charming and bright-eyed little Jessi. He's a lucky boy.

    Best wishes with getting back full mental health. Be easy on yourself meantime. :)

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