The title of this post  may seem like a no brainer, but it’s good to state the obvious once in a while. Many people that know us are under the impression that we have a super awesome baby. While that may be true 95% of the time, they generally aren’t around for that 5% where she is a hellion child. We try to plan it that way. It is by no mean feat that we are able to pull this off. There is a ton of timing involved because all it takes is one missed nap to turn our awesome baby into a demonchilde. So when we are sitting around the table late at night planning out the nitty gritty details of the Great Baby Con, we have to factor in every nuance of her schedule.

One example of this is my Fridays. Since I work from home I come in once a week on Friday to participate in our weekly artist meeting. It gives me a chance to get some office time in as well as pawn Amelia off on Dustin for a few hours. Not to mention hang out with my coworkers whom I do miss on occasion. Now with this in mind I make sure that Amelia takes her morning nap and gets at least 3-4 hours sleep. She’s generally up by 11:30am -12pm. We go through the same routine of a diaper change, putting on her clothes for the day while chasing her around her crib to the sound of many delightful giggles and squeals, and finally sitting in the kitchen and eating lunch together. All of these things serve as an important routine building block for her. It’s familiar and she knows what to expect. So while she’s eating her lunch I’m making sure to make extra bottles of milk for the day and am picking out the toys she’s been playing with the most lately. I’ve also got a stash of Ritz crackers and Animal Crackers in the diaper bag now that she has teeth. We complete the bag with a blanket or her snuggie for taking her naps with and she’s pretty much set to go anywhere.

This is the easy part when a schedule has already been put into place and followed. It helps with making her an easy going child. Either that or we are one hell of a set of awesome parents. But that’s not to say that the road to figuring out Amelia’s routine or even setting it up has been easy. For example, trying to get her to sleep in her crib for her daytime naps was a nightmare. For many months we had her take her morning nap out in the living room in her swing chair. She loved it and I dare say it was easy for me to put her in it and set the swing in motion and let her fall asleep. But we had begun to notice a pattern. While this would work perfectly during the week as I would be in the computer room working and there would be no noise in the living room to wake her up, it wasn’t the same on the weekends. Dustin and I like to get our gaming on, so playing video games in the living room while Amelia took her nap seemed like a good idea at the time.  But because the living room was neither quiet nor unoccupied she’d only take an hour nap and would be up the rest of the day. It was frustrating because I knew she needed more than what she was getting, but try as we might we couldn’t get her to go back to sleep. She was just so enamored that her father was home that she didn’t want to miss a thing. We had tried a couple of times to put her in her crib to sleep, but she was so used to the swing chair that she just cried for ever. So being the tougher one, I told Dustin that was I going to try and do it during the week too so that she would get used to sleeping in her crib whenever it was nap time. It took me about a week and a half, but she now sleeps in her crib for her morning naps. Sometimes even for her afternoon naps as well. Was it easy? Heck no! She cried as soon as I would put her down instantly waking up no matter how passed out she was. So I would have to sooth her and try to get her to go back to sleep then sneakily put her back in the crib. Some days I just let her cry. It made me feel bad, but I also had a work load to balance out. Luckily for us she’s a quick learner and gave in to the new nap atmosphere. The benefits we get out of having a few hours to ourselves in the morning, priceless.

It’s the small victories like that, that enable other people to enjoy a happy interactive kid that doesn’t scream all the time.  She hasn’t been perfect all the time, however, and being a parent you can only do so much. Case in point we had gone to a surprise birthday party and yelled out surprise right as our friend came into the room. It was all fun and games until we realized we’d startled the crap out of our daughter as she broke out into tears. But we were prepared! We had her favorite snuggie with us and a bottle and lots of comforting words. Within 5 minutes she was back on track and climbing the couch like the spider monkey she is. It makes me wonder though. You see those children in the grocery store throwing crazy tantrums while their parents just ignore them or try to soothe them by giving in to whatever whim has possessed them. How do you get to that stage? I know Amelia’s still young, but we have already experienced her mini tantrums at home. Whether it’s a sudden melt down because we aren’t picking her up or because she’s fighting sleep, it still doesn’t change the fact that we are the parents. We are responsible for what our daughter interprets as right and wrong, what’s acceptable and what’s not. When she’s screaming about not being picked up, we tell her she’s being silly and then start playing with her toys to get her interested in them. Most of the time it’ll work and she’ll stop crying. Fighting sleep is the easy one, the snuggie is our secret weapon and even though she’s just about outgrown the need to be swaddled we do find that sometimes we have to hold her still to make her go to sleep. In both cases we don’t give in to the tantrums.

I know this is all well and good for now and that as she grows her attitude will change as well. But isn’t that our job as parents to adapt and continually figure out what methods work without compromising your own sanity? 9 month olds aren’t very complex in their needs and I’m sure that when the teenage years roll around it’ll be terrifyingly hard to figure out if she’s tired from school work, stressed out over friends, or a plethora of other factors. But I’d like to think that we’re on the right track as parents. Firm yet still there for her. If we build on that now, shouldn’t that help mold how she’ll develop over the course of her lifetime? I hope so.

I had never really thought too much about schedules before Amelia was born. I was generally spontaneous and did what ever idea popped into my head. From running off to clothing optional spas in the middle of the night to staying up playing video games til 4am. To an extent I still do that. Parenting hasn’t changed me too much. BUT! My daughter’s schedule is a different story.

I’ve recently become rather protective of her sleeping and eating patterns. From my Florida Mum’s visit and others I’ve found that new people excite my daughter. So much so that it distracts her from her normal sleeping schedules. It’s difficult for her to go to sleep because she wants to participate and interact with what’s going on. Plus with her being so incredibly adorable it ads to the excitement of the people around her. She’s constantly being passed around.

Now on the one hand this is a good thing. I want her to be acclimatised to a variety of people so that when we go out she won’t be upset. So far I think we’ve done a good job on that. But on the other hand if it interferes with her schedule then that’s where things start to get complicated. She’s a bear when she misses her nap times and it becomes a fight just to get her to close her eyes.

So in order to try and starve off these crazy times, we’ve been sticking to a constant schedule. It goes as follows:

7:30am – 8:30am – She wakes up and gets her breakfast. She’s generally only up for about 45 minutes to an hour. From there on she takes a nap anywhere between 3-5 hours.

11am – 12pm – She’s up from her morning nap and ready for some lunch. We play around on her play mat and try to get some tummy time in. She’s normally awake for about 2-3 hours at this point until she tires herself out.

She takes a small afternoon nap for about an hour or two. By that time it’s 5pm and she’s usually awake to greet her Daddy when he gets home. For the evenings she’s up the longest period of time. She gets some dinner and then sleeps for a few minutes around 8pm.

10pm – 11pm – This is her normal bedtime schedule. We give her a bottle and swaddle her and she’s pretty good about falling asleep. Sometimes she sleeps through the night and other times she’ll be up at 4am for some food and then back to sleep she’ll go.

Overall this is what we try to stick to. I’m not going to lie, however, there have been times when I’m working that I let her take longer than usual naps. I figure her body is obviously needing the extra rest and I need the extra time. Most times this doesn’t backfire on me, but it has in a couple of situations when we’ve had plans later on in the day. It can sometimes throw her schedule off and cause her to fall asleep much later than normal. I’ve since learned to try and work around that.

Bedtime Crasher will mess you up if you screw with the baby's schedule!

Bedtime Crasher will mess you up if you screw with the baby's schedule!

As parents we’ve learned that Spock is wrong. The needs of the many do not outweigh the needs of the little one. While we have developed the necessary skills to handle her cries, we’d rather do what we can to avoid that situation in the first place. So if you’re ever over at my place and you get the Momma’s Look of Death: Sit Down, Shut Up and wait til she falls asleep. After that you can be as obnoxious as you want, she sleeps like a rock.

© 2011 The DieDie Blog Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha