@ebveloz Depends on what you mean by “poor sleeper.” I have always found my baby to be very normal — he woke a few times a night, needed some support to get back to sleep, longest stretch gradually lengthened, wakes gradually lessened, contact napped while young, gradually stopped needed contact. But when I peek in the sleep training sub, I see people describe my exact baby as having an “awful sleeper.”
I never expected my baby to be independent from birth, or as an infant at all. I mean… he’s a baby… that’s kind of the whole thing about babies: they are dependent.
We did a lot “wrong” — co-slept (co sleeper, occasional bedsharing but usually separate sleep surfaces) from birth intentionally, breastfed to sleep, contact napped intentionally, didn’t use black out curtains. We did layer sleep associations like music to fall asleep (we switch it off after he’s asleep), bonded him to a lovey around 11 months, white noise machine.
Now he’s 16 months old and we do a quick bedtime routine (pjs, teeth, books), and he always falls asleep with either my husband cuddling him usually or me nursing him occasionally if husband can’t, his sleep music playing quietly (beautiful album by Christina Perri), white noise, his lovey, and he sleeps on a twin bed next to our bed. It takes him 10-15 min to fall asleep, he sleeps 5+ hours, wakes 0-1x a night and needs 10 min cuddle with husband or nurse with me, sleeps another 5+ hours. His overnight sleep is usually between 10-11 hours. He wakes with the sun. He takes a 1.25-2 hour nap midday that my husband always lays with him for 5-10 min (he’s usually quicker to go down for a nap than bed.)
We’ve never let him CIO or done anything sleep training related, other than incorporating music/lovey/white noise. He had trouble with my husband putting him down for bed (not naps) when he first started to do it around 4-5 months, but he adjusted after a couple weeks, and we shared bedtimes about 50/50 from 5-13 months (then my husband took over 90/10, because I was newly pregnant and my nipples were so sensitive it was hard to nurse even 10-15 min! Now I’m half way through my pregnancy and my nipples aren’t as sensitive so we do more like 75/25 and my husband does his naps.)
All children will eventually sleep through the night (unless they have some medical issue, which does happen, and would impact them regardless of age.) Some well meaning family/friends have said he will “never sleep by himself” etc. but… I think it’s been pretty worth it given he sleeps 5-10 hours alone in his own bed, needs comfort for 10ish minutes a few days a week, and he actually
enjoys laying down for naps/bed. He will giggle and get excited to lay down, pull a blanket with him, pick a lovey (he has 2), he loves doing his bedtime routine, and he doesn’t fight bedtime or naps at all. Sometimes he even asks to take a nap, when he’s tired early. So for us, doing a child-led approach to sleep has paid off.