There were four in the bed and the little one said...
My prediction was correct- Botany learning how to roll over was the start of some dreadful sleepless nights. To be clear, it's not the risk of SIDS that I was/am concerned about. Rather, the problem is that Botany, having rolled herself over, can't figure out how to get back again. That would fine if she were quite happy to sleep on her tummy, but evidently, that is not so. The night after I wrote that last post, Botany repeatedly rolled in her sleep, in her cot, in her sleeping bag. Every time she woke up to find herself on her tummy, she would freak out and start shrieking. And then I'd have to nurse back down for a half hour before she would go back to sleep. Rinse, lather, repeat.
I don't know if it's because she has hit a key developmental milestone or what, but in general, sleep has gone to hell in a handcart around here. I rather blithely assumed we'd gotten over the hump of the four month sleep regression relatively intact and were in the clear for a while. Oh ha ha ha. No. All of a sudden, she's fighting to go down at her normal 7pm bedtime, she's waking up before the dreamfeed at 10.30/11pm, she's refusing to go back to sleep after the dreamfeed, she's awake at 1am and 3am and 4am.
As always, I resort to bringing her upstairs to bed with us for a couple of hours in the morning but it's a little crowded, and I have to shove the dog down to the foot of the bed where he promptly nestles himself on top of my legs, while my right arm is pinioned above my head, curled around Botany as she clamps on to my boob for dear life. It is decidedly uncomfy.
I think I could live with all that, but the early evening sleep battles are particularly wearing. Having come to really rely and depend on the 7-11pm slot for some much needed recharging of the batteries (not to mention eating/showering/blogging/cleaning the house/etc.) I am feeling exhausted and frustrated by turns. Things would be more bearable if I had a rested, refreshed happy baby in the morning, but au contraire. It's fussyville around here much of the time- I think she is bored and frustrated that she is not able to do things yet. Even though I am pretty hard core about getting out no matter what the weather, conditions have been so horrendous that even I must concede defeat, and we've been stuck in the house a lot. A recipe for a fairly miserable time to be had by all.
So, yeah, I know it will pass, but while it's happening, it basically sucks ass.
It's hard, in the face of all the above, not to feel a little burnt out some days. I think it's part of the ongoing legacy of infertility that, having gotten to the other side, you feel like you're never allowed to complain for a single second about any aspect of parenting. Indeed, I am conscious that I am so lucky to have this time with Botany-so lucky to have her at all. But I'm only human, too, and I came to the conclusion the other night that I've got to start to give myself a bit of a break in terms of blowing off steam once in awhile. That it's OK to alternately savour her delicious babyness and to long for things to get a little easier. Of course, I realise that "easier" is all relative- that the current challenges are likely to be replaced with other dilemmas and problems- but hopefully ones involving something other than the torture of broken sleep.
