杏吧原创

Is this book the ultimate guide for getting babies to sleep? Sort of

Helen Ball's How Babies Sleep draws on anthropology and biology to help babies (and their parents) get a better night's sleep. It has some fascinating insights, but is somewhat impractical
2WM0P5Y Cute baby girl stretching arms lying in bed at home
Does napping more during the day lead to a better night鈥檚 sleep for babies?
Westend61 GmbH/Alamy

How Babies Sleep
Helen Ball (UK); (US))

Like many mothers of young children, I have spent a lot of nighttime hours reading about baby sleep on the internet. I鈥檓 fluent in the lexicon 鈥 from wake windows to split nights 鈥 and the frustratingly impossible exhortation to 鈥減ut your baby down drowsy but awake鈥.

I approach all these concepts as I would in my day job 鈥 looking for evidence, or at least some semblance of scientific plausibility. Both can be hard to come by.

So it was with excitement that I picked up How Babies Sleep: A factful guide to the first 365 days and nights by anthropologist Helen Ball, hoping to finally get the level of scientific detail I had been looking for. I came in with three questions: Is it true that babies鈥 sleep cycles are around 40 minutes? Why are overtired babies so difficult to get to sleep? And what causes the sudden, disruptive 鈥渟leep regression鈥 parents often see at around 4 months?

The book partially delivered. Throughout, Ball details many changes in sleep that occur around the 3-to-4-month mark, yet she is keen to dismiss the notion of sleep regressions. A chapter on sleep biology, however, did confirm that 3-to-6-month-old babies have sleep cycles of 45 to 60 minutes in length, vindicating advice I had read suggesting that if a baby wakes around 40 minutes into a nap, they may just be slipping into their next cycle and won鈥檛 necessarily be ready to get up.

As for overtiredness, Ball explains how a baby who won鈥檛 go to sleep can be one of two things 鈥 either not tired enough (in which case you would be better off giving up and taking them on a walk), or tired enough but not sufficiently relaxed to give in to sleep. That certainly explains why 鈥渙vertired鈥 babies need more comforting before they nod off 鈥 but while Ball dispatches with the common idea that 鈥渟leep breeds sleep鈥, I was still left wondering whether babies who have had enough naps in the day might be better able to wind down in the evening. It seems logical, but throughout the book, Ball suggests quite a relaxed approach when it comes to daytime sleep 鈥 鈥渁llowing babies to nap on the go as and when they need to鈥.

Ball suggests abandoning crib-based naps, but I found they were essential to keep up with chores

In fact, Ball suggests that abandoning crib-based naps can be 鈥渋ncredibly liberating鈥, whereas I found they were essential for keeping up with all the cooking, cleaning and laundry. Her solution to this conundrum is to draft in friends and family 鈥 alloparents, as they鈥檙e known in anthropology 鈥 to help. This has a long evolutionary history, but I鈥檓 not sure how it can work if your friends and family aren鈥檛 nearby, or have other things to do.

For a book intending to guide parents through the first year of sleep, I was surprised at how many pages were given over to the benefits of co-sleeping. Ball has done much research into how families bed share in countries like the UK, where the practice isn鈥檛 as prevalent as it is in most of the world.

The conclusions of her and others鈥 research are, from an evolutionary perspective, fascinating. For example, mothers and babies who share a bed sleep in very different ways from those who sleep apart, particularly those who breastfeed. There鈥檚 a syncing of arousals and a lightness of sleep that may, possibly, be beneficial for babies鈥 brain development, and that gives mothers a 鈥渉eightened awareness of their presence鈥.

That doesn鈥檛 sound particularly restful for mum, though. And the book鈥檚 heavy emphasis on co-sleeping is unfortunate for other reasons, too. While it is becoming clearer how to safely bed share, there are many factors, detailed in the book, that can make the practice less safe and rule out this option for your family.

I have no problem accepting Ball鈥檚 assertions that co-sleeping is globally and historically the more normal thing to do, but I had hoped for much more guidance on alternative ways of sleeping. Instead, much of the useful information is squeezed into 17 pages of frequently asked questions at the end of the book, with not enough space for the scientific detail I was hoping for.

Frustratingly, Ball concludes: 鈥渉ow your baby sleeps over the course of their first year can happen in whatever ways work for you and your baby鈥. I just wish there was more evidence to help us find these ways.

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Topics: children / Sleep