Fri 30 Oct 2009
Three in the Family
Posted by Erin under Daily Life
[6] Comments
The other night was lonely for me. We moved the baby from the cradle in our room to her crib in her own room. Gary was up late working and monitoring the baby and I was by myself sleeping for the first time in months. It was an emergency move, precipitated by an unseasonable cold snap– our bedroom is the coldest spot in the house, and its temperature drops 10 degrees during the night even with the heat on, even with new insulation in the attic and a new double-paned window and thermal curtains. I missed propping myself up on my elbow to peek at her, and hearing her little sleep grunts and groans.
Other than my emotions, there’s not really any good reason to keep Abigail in our room. Dr. G’s alarm goes off five or six times when he needs to wake up. The poorly designed plumbing runs through the bedroom walls, making showers and toilet flushes abominably loud. She is a big baby and restless as she falls asleep or wakes, though she now sleeps most of the night. The cradle is the kind that rocks, and even though it is stabilized with pegs (and paper jammed around them), she rattles it with her wiggles and wakes herself up. She scoots up and bangs her head on the headboard, pulls down the bumper, and once got her leg stuck between the cradle’s slats, despite said bumper.
But moving her to another room means the end of one of my cherished rituals. After nursing Abigail in the wee hours of the morning, I stay up awhile longer to pump and catch up on an internet TV show. It is nice to be up alone in the house, with no one to watch or be watched by, no imminent happenings or chores to be done. Then it is even nicer to go back into the quiet room where my husband and baby are sleeping, listen to the long, peaceful breaths of one and the tiny, peaceful breaths of the other, and think, “This is my family.”

So sweet! I loved when AC slept in our room–I loved being woken up by her small sounds and peeking eagerly into her bassinet to watch her wake up every morning. Now I wish I could bring her into our bed occasionally–but I know that after the first time, occasionally would become a battle for every night.
I love this post Erin!It warms my heart every time I think about you being 3, and to hear how much you relish it. Kat
It’s been a week, and I still cannot get this post out of my head. You are a great writer, Erin, and an even better mother. I’m so utterly happy for you that I can’t even say.
So touching.
Thanks for your comments, all. Moving her to her crib + becoming completely puritanical about avoiding dairy = sleeping the whole night! Like 10 hrs! That makes it worth giving up my happy family ritual I think.
Wow! Ten hours. All my other kids were sleeping through the night long before now, but not Fiala. I think it has a great deal to do with the fact that her crib is right next to our bed. I love/do not love having her so close by. It’s so sweet to have her pop up in her tired-but-cheery voice and say, “Nuh! Nuh!” And with her digestive issues, it’s tough to sort out what is her physical need for nourishment vs. what is her emotional desire for one-on-one time with Mommy. But, more than ever, we’re considering moving the crib in to Audrey’s room, even though the girls’ schedules are not currently compatible, and despite the fact Audrey is so… loud and …intrusive (which has heretofore kept the crib in the master bedroom); it would not be a peaceful transition for either of them, I’m afraid. But, I’m starting to feel like I really need a good, solid, night’s sleep that I haven’t had now in a year.