princessmom29
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- Joined
- Mar 3, 2008
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Well, to be honest, I have to opposite experience. I co-slept with all of my children. I never even thought about doing it until I had my first and it was just easier since I was nursing. All of them go to bed with no problems in their own beds. Do they like to sleep in my bed? Sure, it is a treat on some weekends but to be honest I think they like it because I have a tv in my room and they don't.
As for the children being clingy, well that has nothing to do with co-sleeping. That has to do with parenting and a child's personality. I know plenty of people who never co-slept and their kids are clingy messes. The reality is though that they never tell their kids no and they let the kids rule the home. They don't insist that a child have manners like saying hello to an adult and instead make a million excuses about how the child is shy. Sleeping with someone doesn't make you clingy. It is what you do all day with your kids that help shape who they are and what they can get away with.
I know someone who never ever let the child sleep in their bed. This child could not even play with another child on a playdate unless her mother actively played with the kids. The reality was, the parents made a ton of excuses for her and the bottom line was they did not parent. They never showed her and insisted that she do/try things. I have seen many parents just like that.
As for co-sleeping, cio etc. there are a million arguments each way. You need to find what works for you. I personally am not a cio person. I also have not had any children with sleep issues either.
that is exactly why I said that different people have different experiences. I have seen many parents just like you are describing that did and did not co-sleep. I do however think that allowing a child to co-sleep so that they can feed, snuggle, ect on demand and on their own terms can start a pattern of making excuses and letting them control the situation. "oh she's just a difficult/ high need baby" ect. Can often be the beginnig of the type of parenting you are describing. We all know that it is much easier to give in to what a child wants than to deal with the fallout form saying no, and I think that for a lot of parents that pattern can start with co-sleeping and allowing the child to dictate the schedule because it is just easier than putting them in their bed and enforcing a schedule. They can just never find a way to stop donig that once the pattern is established. This is what i have seen personally happen with so many poeple I know, and for a lot of them it really took work for them to regain control of the situation.
Here is a perfect example of the kind of thing I am talking about: I have a friend who is dealing with this with her 14 month old who still does not sleep through the night. She wakes both mom and dad up multiple times a night. My friend just cannot bring herself to put her in her own bed, or to let her cry but both parents are so tired they can't see straight. They tried shortening naps and a bedtime routine, but she still gets up multiple times, and has to be patted or rocked back to sleep. My friend won't put her down awake because she crys to be rocked. She is truly at the end of her rope and I am at a loss as to how to help her if she won't put her in her bed and stop going to her every time she wimpers because the only thing that worked for me was to put DD down awake rather than rocking her. Any advice for me to give her form someone who doesn't do cio and was able to cosleep without issues because I just honestly don't know what els to suggest she try??

I get that some people might think that sleeping in the same bed is sacred but for us we don't care as long as everyone sleeps. 
That was the end of a crib for her. We converted it into a toddler bed. We would put her to bed in her bed and she would crawl into ours in the night. Interestingly, we eventually found out that it wasn't us she was after; it was companionship. She slept just as well in her brothers' room as she did in ours. So, until she was about 4, she slept in either their room or ours and eventually moved completely into her own room. FWIW, she is now a very outgoing, independent first grader who bears no ill effects from her co-sleeping days. In fact, she has always been the most independent of my children. Where she slept at night, really had no bearing on our day to day happenings. 


