and it's funny
that before I had miss Emily I thought attachment parenting was BS.
Now that she's here some of it I just do because it seems like the way to do things...and the way SHE wants things done. We have a bedside co sleeper and she slept in the bed for the first month or so. I hold her all the time --leaving her to cry seems wrong. I can't be as extreme as some, but some of it makes sense.
Now that she's here some of it I just do because it seems like the way to do things...and the way SHE wants things done. We have a bedside co sleeper and she slept in the bed for the first month or so. I hold her all the time --leaving her to cry seems wrong. I can't be as extreme as some, but some of it makes sense.
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I practice ap, and am just curious as to what you consider extreme?(not out to argue, just being nosy)
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I guess you'd call me extreme then. My kid is 12 months old and sleeps in my bed with me and she is still nursing. She's never been in a playpen, except at someone's house to take a nap, and she never took to a pacifier.
But then that is what I feel is right for her as a child. And if she feels like she needs to snuggle up with me, even when she is 4, on a regular basis at night, well then that is what she needs.
Just my opinion...
Why do you feel like those are bad things?
I am not trying to convert you or judge you. Just wondering....
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For the record Emily doesn't much like the pacifier either nor do I try and give it to her often. But then she also didn't want to breastfeed and I wanted to do that. I may not have to worry too much about having an opinionated independant child.
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When he's in my bed, he thinks it's party time, time to jump up and down, roll around and giggle. . . anything but sleep. Having his own bed has been a blessing for me, and he sleeps better than he ever could in my room as I snore horribly.
I really liked what you said about kids being part of a family, and that every family member has needs that are important.