- John T. Trowbridge
Most of us have read or heard, at one time or another, an
"authority's" advice on children sleeping with their parents
or with other siblings. Although opinions on this subject are quite
controversial, the practice is usually frowned upon. This is because
such persons, by nature of their professions, usually follow what they
have been taught in school. Also, they are frequently associated only
in contact with troubled cases that were brought to them because of a
need for professional attention. When co-family sleeping is
"permitted," it is usually not without the child care
practitioner's own personal opinion as to what extent and with what
limitations it should be followed. Of course, personal opinions differ
tremendously and, being personal, often have nothing to do with fact
or even reality. They may change as the practitioner's exposure to
co-family sleeping expands. The professionals who are most likely to
advocate a relaxed, loving family sleeping situation are those who
have themselves experienced such a sleeping setup, discovering that it
does not lead to dire consequences. Slowly but surely we are beginning
to hear from these doctors, while others are venturing to open their
minds.
In the June 1979 issue of Redbook, Dr. T Berry Brazelton
made a revealing statement for which I have high respect. He felt he
had to re-evaluate his rather rigid ideas on handling sleep problems
in our culture. Dr. Brazelton had received an overwhelming number of
letters from parents across the country who disagreed with his advice
that children should not sleep in the same bed as their parents. What
he did not realize was how many parents "did not believe in
helping a child learn to sleep alone at night."
On the other hand, one can pick up many a book on child rearing and
read that bad sleeping habits in a child are formed when Mother hears
Baby whimper and "rushes" in to see if everything is all
right. According to these books, the child will wake up more
frequently just to receive his mother's attention. "They will
wrap you around their little finger," so "take heed".
Yet, this seems such a distrustful approach to take toward an innocent
baby, who simply needs care and love. Mother is reprimanded for
wanting to pick up her crying baby. Yet responding to her baby's call
shows concern for her child, and is an action that comes from the very
heart of motherhood.
The child, meanwhile, is scolded for reaching out to his parents
during a time of need. He is to be told "lovingly but
firmly" that night is not a time for parental love and attention.
"Now go to sleep," his mother says. Can anyone "go to
sleep" upon command, especially during a time of loneliness or
fright? Such books strongly advise parents not to take their children
to bed with them, whether in time of stress or as a matter of course.
The parent is neither allowed nor encouraged to place trust in his own
parental emotions. Instead, he becomes the innocent victim of social
taboos that seem to change with every generation. Every few years, a
new book on child rearing floods the market and confuses the issue,
but all claim to have "the answer" to ideal child rearing,
as seen from the perch of an armchair. My great-grandmother was told
to nurse her baby every three hours throughout the day. "Start
solids at nine months". "Baby should sleep a predetermined
number of hours during the day, as well as at night".
My mother was encouraged to bottle-feed her children, and only
every four hours. "Start solids at six months". A crying
baby was not to be picked up until it was "time". Baby slept
in his own crib or bassinet. When my babies were born, breastfeeding
was actually discouraged as not being very scientific. Solid food was
introduced at three to six weeks. Babies must sleep in their own
rooms. The big problem was that my children did not read those books,
did not understand clocks and schedules, and challenged all those
man-made introductions. This book is a result of the search for
child-rearing methods that would work for me and my children. And
after seventeen years I can honestly say that they have worked
beautifully: nursing on demand, weaning when ready, sleeping when
tired and wherever the baby happened to be, and co-family sleeping
until each child wanted a room of her own. Approach: Listen to the
child.
Society tells us that co-family sleeping is taboo. But it doesn't
give us any satisfactory answers to bed and nighttime problems with
children, either.
The parental instinct should not be underestimated, although this
seemed to be the trend for many years. But times began to change in
the '70's. In a 1974 newspaper article, Dr. Spock said that parents of
this country are convinced that only trained persons know how children
should be reared. This, he continued, has resulted in a lack of
self-assurance on the part of parents. He goes so far as to call it a
"cruet deprivation" that has been imposed on mothers and
fathers.
In 1974, another article appeared1,
entitled "Why Some Babies Don't Sleep." The authors of this
article found that the most common problem of parental concern was the
child's waking at night. In their comments on the result of their
research, they wrote that some of the advice that frequently comes
from health visitors, welfare clinics, and general practitioners is
not always very helpful and may actually have little real experience
behind it. The minimum research that is done on this problem, compared
with matters concerning hospital care of sick babies is, as a matter
of fact, striking. "What has emerged from the research,"
they continue, "has not filtered through very effectively to
those who need it."
What do parents have to say on this subject? One young mother
wrote, "I deeply feel that our baby should be with us during the
night. However, she has a bedroom of her own. Why? I do not know. I
wish it could be different. We frequently have such difficulty in
getting her to sleep without crying. I wish I knew what to do."
I was this mother, writing about our first child when she was nine
months old. As a new parent, it never occurred to me then to take her
into bed with my husband and me.
By the time our second child was born, we had talked about this
subject with many people. To our great surprise, we found many who
"confessed" to taking their children into bed with them.
They did so usually because of a child's sleeping problem or because
it seemed to result in a happier family.
| The
ingredients for love and a close-knit family life ... have only
to be rediscovered. They have been there all along. |
It is amazing that something as natural, loving, and comforting as
co-family sleeping should even be a subject for discussion. But, alas,
it is not the first, natural thing that has been disrupted by
scientific intervention. Cribs, clocks, and multiple-room dwellings
where several rooms are specifically set aside for an individual's
sleeping - all come under the heading of inventions. And an invention
is on precarious ground because it is often not in harmony with
nature. It is "new and improved." The ingredients for love
and a close-knit family life, however, have only to be rediscovered.
They have been there all along.
A great majority of successful breastfeeding mothers take their
babies to bed with them. Since comparatively few mothers
breastfeed for any length of time in our culture, it is no wonder that
family bed sharing is not the norm. Many parents have never even heard
of it, let alone considered it. In cultures where breastfeeding is the
norm, bed sharing is frequently as familiar as the family dinner table
in our own culture. According to a study by Dr. Niles Newton, which
compared the behavior of nursing and non-nursing mothers, there is a
significant difference in willingness to share a bed with their
babies. Women who breastfeed their children appear to be less
concerned with current cultural disapproval of bed sharing.2
This, then, also explains why so many parents said that La Leche
League, an organization that helps mothers with the art of
breastfeeding, specifically helped them to realize the benefits of
having their young children steep with them.
I would like to emphasize that this book does not quote statistics.
It does not intend to "prove" anything. It provides insight,
encouragement, and a reason for co-family sleeping. Primarily, it
supports the opinion that an open door policy to the family bed is an
integral part of open communication and listening to the child's need.
This does not mean that everyone must hop into one bed nor that one is
a less than good parent if children sleep in their own bed. The
Family Bed is a concept, part of a total picture, one step toward
rearing happy children. This concept releases families from the social
taboo and gives them a freedom of choice.
It should be mentioned that no specific age of the child has been
given. He may be referred to as a baby, young child, or child. This
has been done to alleviate the strong influence a prescribed age has
on a child's expected accomplishments. Most children, for instance,
are no longer afraid of the dark by the time they are twelve years
old. But suppose you have a child who is thirteen and still expresses
fear? There really isn't much you can do about it, except love him,
accept him, work with him, and wait until he is no longer afraid.
Among children who are accustomed to sleeping with someone from
birth on, there seems to be a natural graduation from needing to sleep
in the parental bed to sleeping with other siblings. This book's
emphasis is on the young child. It is to be recognized, therefore,
that when I speak of sleeping together, i.e. co-family sleeping, the
implication is sleeping with whomever he chooses, according to his
emotional development. Thus, some children are ready to leave the
family bed at age two, while others may not be ready until a much
later age.
Twenty-five years ago, when prepared or natural childbirth was a
"new" idea, little information was available on the subject.
Many people, doctors and laymen alike, scoffed at the concept. Today,
because the medical profession and mothers have found it acceptable
for the mother to be awake and aware during her labor and birth,
prepared childbirth is no longer a novelty. It is becoming quite
common, and proving to be highly beneficial and effective.
Likewise, breastfeeding has made a comeback. There is now
scientific proof that nursing at the breast is superior to any other
infant feeding method. During the last twenty years, an increasing
number of publications on the great advantages of breastfeeding have
been appearing on the market.
So, also, co-family sleeping is a relatively new idea - new, that
is, since we got away from it a mere century ago. Before this natural
behavior will again become accepted, its importance and benefits too
will have to be proven scientifically. Thirty years ago, it might have
been difficult to obtain sufficient convincing evidence. Thirty years
ago this book might have had little support. Today, a growing amount
of research on the negative results of separation of a mother and her
child is becoming available and accepted. Bowlby's book