I'm back after being nomail for months. Just to add yet another comment on
this discussion. My understanding as a nurse is that the risk of
hypoglycemia is primarily in the newborn period. Anyone know anything
different?
Now, as a mother. My daughter slept 7-8 hours at a month. By two months she
was sleeping 11 hours. No, I'm not remembering wrong. In fact, in my
mothers' group there were a couple of other totally breastfed babies who did
the same. Having said that, I realize that the majority of babies do not do
this, and our cultural presentation of it as the norm does a great disservice
to the majority of moms and babies. My daughter, however, was perfectly
normal, as were her friends. And, at around 5 months, she started waking up
again and continued to wake about twice a night until around age 2 1/2. This
is also a normal occurrence. All kinds of theories about why previously
long-sleeping babies often start waking up again around this age. (This
could start a whole other discussion!) My son, on the other hand, never slept
anything like through the night until 2 1/2 or 3. In my years as a La Leche
League Leader, I saw a wide range of normal variations in sleep patterns
among normal babies. Now it may be true, as Kathy Dettwyler says, that this
may be a reason to look at the baby a little more carefully, but it is in
fact a variant of normal and if the baby looks good in every other way, "if
it ain't broke, don't fix it." Miriam Levitt RN, IBCLC
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