I Have a High Needs Baby

Willow is a fantastic baby and no, I am not just saying that because I am her mother — she really is a fantastic baby with an over the top personality.  BUT, and there is a but, the girl definitely knows how to shake things up and drain the energy from her two loving parents at times.

After trying to put Willow to sleep at 7:30pm and failing, I took her for a walk in the carrier to see if the fresh air would calm her down.  We walked for about thirty to forty-five minutes before heading back home to try operation fall asleep again.  This time, she fell asleep rather quickly and I was thinking, “WOOHOO! Bachelor Pad time!” (Yes, an insanely guilty pleasure of mine…)

Thirty-five minutes later, she fussed herself awake so Steve went in to calm her down… no luck, so I went in.  Nursed her to what I thought was “back to sleep” but when I unlatched her, she came awake and was angry.  Super angry.  Fast forward to an hour and a bit later (and some gripe water for the gas she had and a clean diaper in case that was bothering her), we were back in bed again and nursing her back to sleep.  I get her to sleep by ten forty-five, leave the room, sit at my desk and BAM, awake again.  As I’m nursing her back to sleep for the fourth time, I’m thinking to myself, “Is this normal?  Do I need to submit to cry-it-out?  Where have I gone wrong in getting my child to sleep at night?!”

So, I do what any responsible and intelligent parent does — I Google, “wide awake baby at night.”  I sift through a few of the articles and see the phrase, “high needs baby” … I am intrigued so I Google that term.  The first article that pops up is an article from Dr. Sears called, “12 Features of a High Needs Baby.”  As I read the article, my eyes are wide and I wish I could wake Steve up to tell him that I just figured out why our daughter was so… well… her.

For anyone who is around Willow, for anyone who cares for Willow and for other parents with high needs babies who want to hear our experience, read on…  This is going to shed SO much light on why she is the way she is.

The following explains the 12 characteristics of a high needs baby and I’ve grabbed the very basic summary of each point.  I also share with you how Willow “fits the bill” so to speak.  If you don’t know Willow, this part may be boring so just read the summaries of each characteristic instead.

“INTENSE”

“The cry of a high need baby is not a mere request, it’s an urgent demand. These babies put more energy into everything they do.”

“Intense babies become the intense toddlers, characterized by one word — “driven.” They seem in high gear all the time. Their drive to explore and experiment with everything in reach leaves no household item safe.”

Willow is a lot like her momma in this regard.  I tend to jump into whatever I am focusing on full force and I don’t let much get in my way.  Willow is a lot like me (in fact, we’re both Sagittarians, which is even more trouble! haha) If you walk out of the room while Willow is in her exersaucer or playing on the floor, she’ll yell at you to come back (for my nine month old, it is usually a grunty yell) and if she wants a toy or something you have and you don’t give it to her, she can go from peaceful baby to nightmare child in a second.

“HYPERACTIVE”

“This feature of high need babies, and its cousin hypertonic, are directly related to the quality of intensity. Hypertonic refers to muscles that are frequently tensed and ready to go, tight and waiting to explode into action. The muscles and mind of high need children are seldom relaxed or still.”

O.M.G.  If you’ve met Willow, you know that her hands and feet NEVER stop moving.  She twists her ankles, opens and closes her fists and she is constantly moving.  In fact, one night, after a particularly rough day, I even Googled “ADHD in infants” because she is THAT busy.  Willow loves to move and jump and stand and pretend walk and… well… stay active 99.9% of the time that she is awake.  It also makes breastfeeding right now nearly impossible during the day because she is SO distracted.

“DRAINING”

“High need babies extract every bit of energy from tired parents — and then want more.  Perhaps “siphoning” is a more accurate term because what you are really doing is transferring much of your energy into your baby’s tank to help her thrive. You will need to muster up as much of a positive attitude as you can; try to think of these “draining” days as “giving” days.”

I’m not even going to tell you the number of times I’ve texted Steve to tell him how drained I was.  Willow needs a constant stream of energy poured into her from anyone who is around and she really dislikes being alone.

“FEEDS FREQUENTLY”

“”Schedule” is not in the high need baby’s vocabulary. Early on these smart infants learn that the breast or bottle is not only a source of nutrition, but also a source of comfort. Not only do high need babies breastfeed more frequently, the need for breastfeeding lasts longer. These babies are notoriously slow to wean.”

If any of you remember back to the early days, and I know Steve will remember this clearly, all I did was nurse Willow.  In fact, I spent the first two-three months on the couch, top off, wearing only a nursing bra, and I fed her. And fed her. And fed her.  I called a lactation consultant to see if maybe there was a reason for it and I doubted myself a lot with regards to my milk making abilities.

Now, Willow nurses pretty much all night, every night.  If I am near her and she isn’t being stimulated by her surroundings, she wants to nurse.  I am being literally drained all day and all night.

“DEMANDING”

“These babies convey a sense of urgency in their signals; they do not like waiting, and they do not readily accept alternatives. Woe to the parent who offers baby the rattle when he is expecting a breast. He will let you know quickly and loudly that you’ve misread his cues. The concept of “delayed gratification” is totally foreign to infants, it must be sensitively and gradually taught when the child is developmentally ready to learn it.”

As I mentioned earlier, my wee girl is not a patient girl.  If she’s hungry, she wants it now.  If she is tired, she will go from slightly tired to cranky and overtired in a few minutes.  If she wants a toy and can’t reach it, she freaks out.  She knows what she wants, when she wants and how she wants it.

“AWAKENS FREQUENTLY”

“Infants with a maturer stimulus barrier may sleep through a slight discomfort, such as being too cold, too hot, slightly hungry, or even lonely. These nighttime discomforts awaken highly sensitive babies.

While you can put some infants down in their crib and they fall asleep, high-need babies have to be deeply asleep before you can put them down.

High-need babies seem to take longer to develop sleep maturity. They are more prone to awaken during the vulnerable periods of transition from one sleep stage to another. Yet high-need infants often seem to be totally “zonked” when they are in the stage of deep sleep. Eventually, these infants are able to spend more time in deep sleep, yet they do not “sleep through the night” as early as less sensitive babies.

High-need babies demand whatever day and night parenting style gives them a sense of well-being, and that usually means sleeping in physical contact with someone, preferably mother.

Infants with a maturer stimulus barrier may sleep through a slight discomfort, such as being too cold, too hot, slightly hungry, or even lonely. These nighttime discomforts awaken highly sensitive babies.

While you can put some infants down in their crib and they fall asleep, high-need babies have to be deeply asleep before you can put them down.
High-need babies seem to take longer to develop sleep maturity. They are more prone to awaken during the vulnerable periods of transition from one sleep stage to another. Yet high-need infants often seem to be totally “zonked” when they are in the stage of deep sleep. Eventually, these infants are able to spend more time in deep sleep, yet they do not “sleep through the night” as early as less sensitive babies.

High-need babies demand whatever day and night parenting style gives them a sense of well-being, and that usually means sleeping in physical contact with someone, preferably mother.”

Umm… yeah.  All of that.

“SUPER-SENSITIVE”

“High need babies are keenly aware of the goings-on in their environment. While you can carry on normal family life without waking most sleeping infants, these babies often awaken at the slightest noise. Super-sensitive infants are unlikely to accept substitute caregivers willingly.”

I remember my dad, not long after we moved in to their house, had commented one night about Willow being a light sleeper as she would wake easily with the slightest noise and he’s right – she is an insanely light sleeper.  We have been using a white noise machine from the time she was little as any noise would wake her up.  We have to tip toe past her door and make sure that nothing loud wakes her up.

“NOT A SELF-SOOTHER”

“High need babies need help to fall asleep. They must learn to trust their parents to help them. This will help them learn to relax on their own, a skill that has value for a lifetime. Crying oneself off to sleep is not a good way to learn to relax. The best way for a baby to learn to relax and fall asleep is to have his behavior shaped for him by a parent. Once a child learns to relax on his own, he’ll have no trouble falling asleep, when he’s tired, on his own.”

Willow has never, ever, ever been able to fall asleep on her own – except for when she was a wee newborn and all she did was sleep anyway.  I have never been able to set her down in her crib and have her doze off to sleep on her own.  That just does not happen.  She needs to be nursed to sleep, every time and without that… she won’t sleep.  Although, she will also fall asleep in the car or while in the carrier but those are external soothers – she doesn’t know how to self-soothe whatsoever.

“SEPARATION SENSITIVE”

“High need babies know which situations and which persons they can trust to meet their needs, and they protest if these expectations are not met. Loud separation protests also reveal that these babies have a capacity for forming deep attachments — if they didn’t care deeply, they wouldn’t fuss so loudly when separated. This capacity is the forerunner of intimacy in adult relationships.”

Willow makes strange sometimes and while I am always making excuses for her, like she’s tired or she’s cranky, she just really doesn’t want to be with many other people than the people she is with on a day-to-day basis.  This part of Willow is getting more and more apparent as when she wants her momma, no one else will do.  She also doesn’t want to sleep alone, at night, whatsoever and she sleeps fine if Steve or I are in bed with her.  It’s super awesome but at the same time, we all need our alone / down time.

Your Baby’s Dreams

As I put Willow to bed tonight, I watched her little chest rise and fall.  Rise and fall.

Her wee little fist shot open wide and then curled up and then her little fingers twitched… almost as though she was playing an invisible piano.

Her mouth made little ‘o’ shapes and her tongue made clacking noises inside of her mouth.

And in that moment I wondered about what baby’s dreams are made of.

For us adult variety, we dream of things left over in our subconscious as well as a bit of imagination thrown in for good measure.  For babies, I can’t imagine it is much different.

Which got me thinking… if your baby is dreaming little bits of what happened during her day, what would she see?

For Willow, she might be thinking of the colorful blocks and triangles we played with earlier.  Or maybe she’s dreaming about daddy blowing raspberries into her armpit until she belly laughed.

Or perhaps she’s remembering grandma and grandpa giving her her bedtime bath – splashing them as she joyously flails her arms and legs around in the tub.

I am also quite certain that blowing bubbles in her carrots, sending them straight up her nose, is also in her dream.

When I recollected on all of the things that could be in her little dream, it hit me.  And it hit me hard.

We all have the opportunity to make each day extraordinary.  We all have the opportunity to make our children’s days extraordinary.  Sure we might deal with poop explosions, lack of sleep, inability to do the things that you’d like to do, fussing babies and a list of other things but when your wee baby lays her head down to sleep at night and starts to dream, does any of that matter?

If I can create an amazing day for Willow, one that she’ll lay her head down and dream and remember about, I will do just that.

It’s also an excellent reminder to me that each day is short but you can always make it extraordinary.

xo

I Love You… Even if You Wake in the Night

In our society, so much emphasis is placed on how babies sleep.

One of the first questions you are asked of your baby is generally, “How is he/she sleeping?” or, “Is he/she sleeping through the night yet?

There are countless books on sleep training and getting your baby to sleep through the night and parents frantically search Google for answers on the subject (in fact, Googling “getting my baby to sleep through the night” wielded 6,890,000 search results).

For my husband and I, we don’t place emphasis on how long Willow does or does not sleep.  It’s not to say that we didn’t… when she was first born, a lot of our updates on Willow were based on how much (or how little) she slept the night before.  It was like we were equating her sleeping patterns to her worth and presenting her with little awards for every hour she tacked on through the night.

Until we realized how wrong we were.

Babies aren’t designed to sleep through the night.  In many other cultures babies and their parents bed-share or co-sleep so that the baby can do what babies do: get up through the night, have access to food when they want it and feel the comfort of knowing their parents are right beside them.  Babies, when they are physically and emotionally ready to sleep independently, will adopt their independent sleep patterns and will sleep for longer periods but until then, babies will do what babies will do.  And we encourage that.

Willow is not placed on a rigid sleep schedule.  Generally speaking, she is up somewhere around 8-8:30am, naps somewhere around 10-11am, naps again around 1-2pm, naps again around 5-6pm and is in bed between 8-10pm.  We don’t push her into a schedule, she just adopts whatever naturally feels right.  We watch her cues (thumb sucking, rubbing her eyes, getting a bit whiny, etc.) and we help her to sleep — generally by nursing her.

Allowing Willow to cue us as to how she feels means that we are listening to her and setting a foundation for good communication early on.  If she decides to wake in the night to nurse and be close to us, we let her.  She’s telling us, in that moment, that she needs us and as her primary caregivers, we respect that need and honour it.  If we did not honour her needs and instead let her cry-it-out, we’d be sending her the message that we want our life to remain unchanged from pre-baby state and we expect her to conform to that old life.

Willow was an amazing sleeper.  We did the same routine night after night… changed her diaper, swaddled her, turned the lights out, turned on her noise machine and I nursed her until she was fast asleep.  We would transfer her to her bassinet and she’d sleep 8-10 hours at a time.  She started doing that at 8 weeks.  Then we moved in with my parents and she got a cold.  Between the new atmosphere and feeling sick, she needed us.  A lot.  So, she started getting up between 2-4am to nurse (I just pull her in bed with me and side-lie nurse her) and then she’d remain in our bed until morning.

The truth is… I love feeling needed by her.  I love the fact that I can make her feel a sense of security in an ever-changing world.  I love that while someday she will have to learn that the world can be a harsh place, right now it is sweet and tender and loving.  I love that she is so content when she is lying beside us and when I wake up, it is her face and tiny hands I wake up to.  I love that I have been blessed with the honour of raising her.

In short, I don’t mind that she doesn’t sleep through the night and I won’t hold her to that expectation.  I love that she is learning that she can communicate a need and it is responded to — respectfully and lovingly.  She is only this tiny once in her entire life and soon I won’t be able to nurse her back to sleep in the middle of the night.  This too shall pass and when it does, I’ll mourn this moment a little bit.

I love her.  Night wakings and all.