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Sleep & Soothing

Nobody in your house is sleeping? That's truly normal. Here's how newborn sleep works, how to soothe your baby, and how it gently gets better.

Safe sleep rules The 5 S's How baby sleep works Wake windows Sleep associations Sleep training
At a glance

First, the non-negotiables (AAP 2022, still current)

Everything else on this page is optional technique. This box isn't. AAP

Every sleep, every time
  • Back to sleep for every nap and every night, until age 1.
  • Firm, flat, bare surface. A crib, bassinet, play yard, or bedside sleeper meeting federal standards. No incline over 10°, no pillows, blankets, bumpers, toys, or mattress toppers. Nothing but a fitted sheet.
  • Room-share, don't bed-share. Baby's own surface in your room for at least 6 months cuts SIDS risk by up to 50%. The AAP doesn't recommend bed-sharing in any circumstance, and a sofa or armchair doze with a baby is the most dangerous surface of all (up to 67× risk).
  • No weighted anything. The AAP says weighted sleepers, swaddles, and blankets are unsafe, and a CPSC commissioner's warning agrees. CPSC
  • Pacifier at sleep = protective. Offering one at naps and bedtime reduces SIDS risk (wait ~3–4 weeks if establishing breastfeeding).
  • Swaddling ends at the first sign of trying to roll, which can be as early as 2 months. Swaddled babies always on the back, hips loose. AAP

Soothing: the 5 S's

Idea credit: Dr. Harvey Karp, The Happiest Baby on the Block. Newborns have a built-in "calming reflex" that womb-like sensations can trip, and his 5 S's are the most famous soothing recipe in modern parenting. Used within the AAP's safety rules, they're a fine toolkit.
SHowSafety line
SwaddleSnug through the arms, like a little burritoHips loose and free to bend; back-sleep only; stop at any rolling attempt AAP
Side/stomach holdHold baby on their side or tummy in your arms to calmFor calming only, never for sleep. Sleep is on the back, full stop.
ShushThe womb was loud; steady white noise recreates itKeep the machine well away from the crib (~7 feet) and the volume low; a Pediatrics study found many machines can exceed safe nursery loudness at crib distance Pediatrics
SwingTiny, jiggly, head-supported motions (an inch of movement)Small wiggles, never big shakes. A baby must never be shaken — ever.
SuckPacifier or (washed) finger; sucking lowers heart rate and stressIf breastfeeding, wait until nursing is established (~3–4 weeks)

Stack them (swaddled + held on side + shushing + gentle jiggle + pacifier) and you're speaking fluent womb. And when nothing works and you're fraying: baby on their back in the crib, walk away, breathe, check in every 5–10 minutes. CDC

How baby sleep works

Wake windows: the overtired trap

Idea credit: Alexis Dubief, Precious Little Sleep (preciouslittlesleep.com). Keeping a baby up too long is her "#1 most common baby sleep mistake," because overtired babies fight sleep and wake more instead of crashing harder. Her starting-point chart: birth–6 weeks ≈ 45 min–1 hr awake between sleeps; 6 weeks–3 months ≈ 1–1¾ hr; 3–6 months ≈ 2 hr; 6–9 months ≈ 2–3 hr; 9–12 months ≈ 3 hr. Use it as a guess, then read your baby: if they fall asleep easily, you've found the window.

Her other keeper for the newborn months: newborn sleep is chaos, and chaos is normal. No schedule survives contact with a 3-week-old. Structure emerges from about 2–6 months; until then the wins are simple: watch wake windows, catch the drowsy state, and take shifts with your partner so someone is always semi-human.

Sleep associations: the 2 a.m. plot twist

Everyone rouses briefly between sleep cycles; the question is whether going back down requires assistance. Whatever conditions a baby falls asleep with at bedtime (nursing, rocking, being held) are the conditions they'll look for at every natural night waking. Dubief's analogy: fall asleep in your bed, wake up on the front lawn. You'd yell too. Same bedtime conditions, same 2 a.m. conditions = faster resettling. PLS

The AAP's version of the same advice: from around 4 months, put babies down drowsy but awake, because practicing the fall-asleep skill at bedtime is what makes self-resettling possible at 2 a.m. And don't sprint in at every squeak: babies need a few minutes to try resettling themselves, and a 6-month-old waking then drifting back off is normal, healthy sleep. AAP

Bedtime routine beats everything A short, identical sequence every night (feed, bath or wipe-down, jammies, book, song, down) is the single highest-yield sleep habit, and it's never too early to start. (It's also where a bedtime story enters the picture; we're partial to that part.) AAP

Sleep training: the honest version

Not for newborns. Under ~3–4 months, babies are still learning day from night and feed around the clock, so "training" solves nothing at that age. Soothing, shifts, and survival do (Dubief says the same: for newborns the answer is "time, soothing, and taking turns"). PLS

From roughly 4–6 months, if night wakings are grinding your family down, you have a menu of options: gradual approaches (slowly swapping how baby falls asleep: rocking → patting → presence → independence), timed-check methods (Ferber-style graduated waiting), and full extinction. Dubief's book frames these as a spectrum; pick by your baby's temperament and your tolerance, and know that consistency matters more than which method you choose.

What the evidence says: a randomized trial published in the AAP's journal Pediatrics found graduated extinction and bedtime-fading improved infant sleep with lower infant stress markers and no difference in attachment security at follow-up. And the AAP is equally clear on the other side: responding to and holding your baby "will not spoil him." Both are true, so this comes down to parenting style rather than safety. Do what keeps your household functional. Pediatrics AAP

One quiet fact that helps: by 2–4 months (or ~12 lbs), most formula-fed babies no longer need a middle-of-the-night feed; night wakings after that are increasingly about habit and associations rather than hunger. Breastfed babies typically feed at night longer. Your pediatrician can tell you which camp yours is in. AAP