@bloodboughtchad You are not creating a dependent monster. You really cannot spoil a 2 month old. Like not even a little.
My 10 month old is now in his own room and I am in a single mattress on his floor right now. He was a contact napper until 5 months old when I was finally able to transfer him to the crib for the very first time. I would hold him for 20 minutes until deep sleep and then put him down. At first it was only a 10 minute nap in the crib and then slow and steady it got longer and longer! At 8 months he linked a sleep cycle on his own for the first time in my absolute amazement!! At night, we went from cosleeping to a side-car crib which was a life saver for my back. One day we were just able to put the rails back on, then one day he was able to nap in the pack and play with a cozy mattress topper.
My advice is to ignore everyone when it comes to what your baby should be doing to sleep because you will know! There was absolutely no way I could put my baby shown "drowsy but awake" and the suggestion to do it was confusing to me. It didn't feel right for my baby. It didn't even feel relevant for him. But then one day, I had a gut feeling that he felt safe enough in his crib to try it out. We never changed things up unless he was showing signs that he was ready and you'll know when your baby is ready.
These days, we cosleep in the early morning to get a few more hours in from 4 am - 6 am. But just this morning he slept all night in the pack n play without the morning cosleep (which makes me a little sad). And this is a baby who was up every 40 minutes for like 3 months straight! It's amazing how much they can change just with time and responsiveness to their needs.
Our babies are going to grow up whether we like it or not. They will not be 17 years old and contact napping. They will actually hate waking up in the morning one day!
Maybe your baby will need lots of support all year, or for 2 years, or less, or more, but that's because they are a baby! We are human and love sleeping with our partners, pets, fluffy pillows, etc. Why wouldn't a baby need similar comforts? Especially so young. The only guarantee is that they will change and keep changing before our eyes.
My 10 month old is now in his own room and I am in a single mattress on his floor right now. He was a contact napper until 5 months old when I was finally able to transfer him to the crib for the very first time. I would hold him for 20 minutes until deep sleep and then put him down. At first it was only a 10 minute nap in the crib and then slow and steady it got longer and longer! At 8 months he linked a sleep cycle on his own for the first time in my absolute amazement!! At night, we went from cosleeping to a side-car crib which was a life saver for my back. One day we were just able to put the rails back on, then one day he was able to nap in the pack and play with a cozy mattress topper.
My advice is to ignore everyone when it comes to what your baby should be doing to sleep because you will know! There was absolutely no way I could put my baby shown "drowsy but awake" and the suggestion to do it was confusing to me. It didn't feel right for my baby. It didn't even feel relevant for him. But then one day, I had a gut feeling that he felt safe enough in his crib to try it out. We never changed things up unless he was showing signs that he was ready and you'll know when your baby is ready.
These days, we cosleep in the early morning to get a few more hours in from 4 am - 6 am. But just this morning he slept all night in the pack n play without the morning cosleep (which makes me a little sad). And this is a baby who was up every 40 minutes for like 3 months straight! It's amazing how much they can change just with time and responsiveness to their needs.
Our babies are going to grow up whether we like it or not. They will not be 17 years old and contact napping. They will actually hate waking up in the morning one day!
Maybe your baby will need lots of support all year, or for 2 years, or less, or more, but that's because they are a baby! We are human and love sleeping with our partners, pets, fluffy pillows, etc. Why wouldn't a baby need similar comforts? Especially so young. The only guarantee is that they will change and keep changing before our eyes.