Please forgive me for asking, but *physiologically* how does scheduling
feedings for any baby (triplets, twins, or singletons) lead to sleeping
longer at night? Or does one thing (scheduling feeds) just naturally flow
into the other (sleeping at night)? Ezzo talks about hunger metabolism, that
the baby's system has some kind of "memory" which primes him to be hungry at
regular intervals when the parent-directed feeding plan is followed. How
does sleep tie into this?
And how does one "hold off" a baby who is hungry before the scheduled feeding
time?
Inquiring minds want to know.
Respectfully,
Lisa Jones in Wellington FL
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