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Why your baby is waking at night and why it’s ok?

Every parent has experienced the absolute joy of waking up through the night with a new baby. Some parents are very lucky, and they have a child who sleeps relatively well through the night from the moment they are born. Other parents deal with the wakers, the colic babies, the cuddlers who want to be held all day and all night. And do you know what? There is nothing wrong with any of these babies in this scenario. There’s nothing nice about waking up regularly at night as an adult. 

You want a solid sleep so that you can feel rested for the day. But babies just don’t work that way! Sleep in babies is developmental. They go through cycles in their first year of life so that their brain can grow and develop. The problem is that most parents try to get children into some kind of routine as early as possible. While it’s nice to have routines, and you think you may have it down with a relatively regular bedtime, the 4-month sleep regression will smack you in the face harder than anything else and make you feel like you’ll never sleep again. This particular regression is tough for most parents, because it’s a shift in the way their babies think, move, and understand how sleep works. 

Because of the development in the brain, babies tend to regress back to what feels like a newborn waking pattern. Some parents even turn to solid food at this time to encourage the children to sleep through the night – but all that’s going to have to do is potentially damage their stomachs as there’s no need for solid food before 6 months unless medically necessary. Below, we’ve got some of the reasons that your baby is working through the night – and why it’s absolutely normal that they do.

Image Source: Pexels

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