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Hardcover Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child: A Step-By-Step Program for a Good Night's Sleep, 3rd Edition Book

ISBN: 0345486455

ISBN13: 9780345486455

Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child: A Step-By-Step Program for a Good Night's Sleep, 3rd Edition

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

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Book Overview

The perennial favorite for parents who want to get their kids to sleep with ease--now in its fifth edition, fully revised and updated, with a new step-by-step guide for a good night's sleep. With more... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Love this book!

I found this book after subjecting my first child to "Babywise" by Ezzo. I cannot tell you what a breath of fresh air this book was. It fulfilled my desire to make sure my children (and all of us) had enough sleep, but without the cruelty and abusive (only "right" way) nature of BW. It has so much good info on sleep and averages of how much sleep each age-range needs. My oldest is 11, and starting to need more sleep, and the info in this book made me fully prepared for her sleep needs changing. I fully expect my children to need 12-15 hours in their teen years. Since we home-educate, it will be fairly easy to make sure they do get enough sleep. For the past 9 years I have recommended this book to any parent of children from infancy to teens with sleep concerns. Best comprehensive book on sleep and routine I had read!

THE BEST BABY SLEEP BOOK ON THE MARKET

This was an excellent book - I cannot tell you how much this book helped our sleepless, colicky infant. But, several friends with non-colicky babies actually recommended this for any infant. This book is a wonderful middle ground for those parents who do not want a severe schedule (BABYWISE) or the opposite end of the spectrum, attachment parenting (Dr. Sears). It was the only book that I found that spoke knowledgeably about colic, and gave the only helpful advice available on the subject (believe me, we tried it all). It is not a cry-it-out book, although some may look at it in that light. What it teaches you is this: 1. watch your child. 2. put him/her down to sleep when you first see the signs of tiredness 3. most children under 6 months do not stay awake for longer than 2-3 hours at a time without needing a nap. 4. DO NOT just put your child down to nap when you feel like it - that's just letting him/her cry, not TEACHING them to sleep. 5. Most children need to go to sleep at night earlier than you'd think. 6. Going to bed earlier promotes later sleeping (weird, but true. As the author says, it's not logical. It's biological - sleep promotes sleep) There's a lot more too. I really like that the author's data is based on studies that he has done involving the patterns of children who naturally sleep and nap well. No, it didn't give us a perfect baby. We happen to have a very sensitive high strung girlie, who also power-naps. But we went from a cranky post-colicky baby who took no naps or 15-20min naps and got up many times per night to a sweet smiling girl who now takes 3 45min-1 hour naps per day and sleeps from 6pm-7am (waking 2 times to nurse). Oh yes. The nursing. She used to think that nursing was the only way to get to sleep. After diligently following the advice in this book, she now can get to sleep on her own, no nursing. Not that it's perfect - she still cries 5-15 minutes at times before naps. But she is sooooooo much happier now. Gotta think something's working.

This is the best book on sleep I have found...

Hurry for Dr. Weissbluth! My one year old is now going to bed at 8 and sleeping through the night (4 nights and counting) for the first time in his life. He is also beginning to nap in his crib. A cloud has lifted from our house. This book combines discussions on sleep research with practical how-to information. Weissbluth emphasizes keeping the child from becoming over tired and training the child to achieve sleep continuity. He does recommend allowing a child to cry if neccasary, but that is not the ideal or primary thrust of the approach (like Ferber). I found this approach to be more logical and research based than many popular sleep books. It is better than Sears' "Nighttime Parenting" if you have a child with real sleep issues. It is more scientific and practical than "Babywise" (which my pediatrician says is based on poor research). It is a gentler approach than Ferber, who I feel puts too much emphasis on the act of crying. Also, this approach allows greater flexibility than Ferber's method.

My Husband and I Call It "The Sleep Bible"

Our 11 month old son was waking us up 3-4 times a night and would refuse to take a nap until late afternoon - and he was a CRAB! After one terrible night, at 5 am I got online to order a book and it turned out to be "Healthy Sleep Habbits, Happy Child." I decided to strictly follow Weissbluth's advice. After 3 tough days, our son was sleeping from about 8:30-6:00am! It was so hard to put him down and "let him cry it out" - it was against my nuturing-motherly instinct. But I am now convinced that it was in my son's best interest - because healthy sleep is sooooo important for their development. So don't let anyone make you feel bad about being diligent and letting your child learn to fall asleep on their own - including yourself. Sometimes the picking your child up when s/he cries may feel like the right thing to do but is not really the healthiest thing to do. It pays to have a baby who gets healthy sleep - and you will too! Think of it this way: if your child refuses to eat fruits & vegetables and will cry unless you feed him/her junk food, would you feel bad about enforcing healthy eating habbits - even if there's crying? No. It's like enforcing healthy sleep habbits. I never realized that by picking up my baby and nursing him when he cried in the middle of the night, I was enabling him to develop unhealthy sleep patterns. I was exhausted. I tried keeping him up really late to make him sleep longer - it never worked. But now that we're putting him down at 7:30/8:00pm, he sleeps until about 6:00/7:00am -- Go figure! If you're having problems with you're child at night... GET THIS BOOK, IT'S GREAT!

Thoughtful, effective, humane approach

Our daughter slept with us in the family bed for 8 months. We loved it but I was tired of being a 24 hour a day mom since I lay beside her during naps. I looked for an approach to help her nap in her crib. Sears and other co-sleep advocates weren't very specific or helpful in this area. Ferber was relatively against the family bed and his techniques sounded too harsh to me. Weissbluth was almost the perfect solution. He was okay with co-sleeping and nursing the baby to sleep. He explained sleep and sleep training with the goal of helping readers find their child's natural rhythms and preventing sleep problems, instead of treating sleep as a problem (see Ferber). Weissbluth's methods resulted in some crying, but not "crying it out" by any means. Putting the baby to sleep at the right time was key. It took some patience, but after 2 weeks of daytime nap training she really caught on. Then we started putting her to sleep in her crib at 7:30 pm, intending to bring her into our bed when she woke. To our surprise, after 3 nights she slept in her crib until 7 am. I sometimes miss the family bed but we're all better rested now, and we can always cuddle in the morning.

Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child Mentions in Our Blog

Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child in Top Tips for Back to School
Top Tips for Back to School
Published by Billy Doux • August 07, 2015

No one sums up the bitter/sweet, back-to-school feeling better than Joe Fox in that beloved movie "You've Got Mail":

"I would send you a bouquet of neatly sharpened pencils."

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