Swaddling: a love-hate relationship

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Swaddling: A Love-hate Relationship

Swaddling: A Love-hate Relationship

 

Swaddling and the three of us have a love-hate relationship.

Rewind to Alexis birth:

I was so happy that our girl seemed completely content in a swaddle at first. I loved being able to make a perfect burrito baby and enjoyed using the organic muslin swaddles from Bambino Land.

A few weeks later, she got strong and wouldΒ startΒ breaking out of her swaddles. Even Bambino Land that has less give than A&A swaddles would eventually give in under the determination of a baby who suddenly decided she hates being swaddled. It was the perfect time to try the Miracle BlanketΒ we had laying around, waiting to be used. Β Β I know when I was pregnant I read about this swaddle on a million blogs I was reading so it was obvious to me that I should try it.Β It’s not called Miracle Blanket for nothing. It swaddles tightly and is super hard to break out of. I actually don’t remember a single occassion where she was able to even pull her arm out of it.

Swaddling: A Love-hate Relationship

It’s really one of those things that you buy and use until you’re done swaddling. There are no sizes, no confusion- just one swaddle.

It came even more handy when nights got chilly, because it’s made out of warm thicker cotton. It’s not organic, unfortunately, and they don’t offer one, so we always made sure that she had clothes on under it.

The concept of this swaddle is pretty easy. It has two little wings that get wrapped around your baby’s arms to keep them down. Then the shorterΒ outerΒ wing gets wrapped around one side, and then the longer wings goes around and under the baby. This was the easiest most unintrusive way to swaddle for us at that point. Alexis would hate being swaddle when she is awake, so we had to be super stealth about it and only swaddle her once she was deeply asleep and hope and pray that we wouldn’t wake her up. You can read about the blanket Β in detail here.

She slept like that for a while until one day she just wouldn’t have it. Swaddling was for babies and Alexis CLEARLY was old enough to sleep with her arms splayed across the bed. So we went with it. And it lasted a few weeks with her sleeping better than while swaddled.

Then all of a sudden, amidst the 4 months wakeful period sleep struggles that showed their ugly head a month too early, her Moro reflex ( or something else that makes her twitch and wake herself up) came back and she started waking herself up by throwing her arms in the air. So came back the trusty Miracle Blanket and we were back to loving being swaddled.

Swaddling: A Love-hate Relationship

I am telling you: sometimes I feel that babies change their preferences just to send us, their parents, for a loop.

Now at 5 months, we moved onto something else when it comes to our precious baby girl’s sleep, but that’s another story for another day. And for now, the Miracle Blanket sits neatly in the drawer marked “For Future Baby”, because I know we’ll need it if that time comes.

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Swaddling: A Love-hate Relationship

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22 COMMENTS

    • Your posts are very timely for me bc I’m often going through the same things. A couple of days ago, my daughter started rolling over from back to belly. I know this means I should not be using the Miracle Blanket any longer but she will not sleep without it. All she does is scream. She can be completely asleep for 20 minutes and wake up to realize she is not in it and it’s back to screaming. Any advice? She is 3 months old.

      • Ok, this is totally my opinion, simply what I would do. I have no idea how safe it is. Try switching to Modswads (i’ll be writing a review on them next week), keeping her in the crib and constantly watching her during sleep (monitor)- that’s during naps. A modswad would give her MUCH more flexibility with her hands than a traditional swaddle, so if she does roll over, she won’t be completely immobile, the crib will provide a hard surface that is hard to suffocate on and the monitor is for obvious reasons. That being said, if your problem is nights, I’m not sure what to do. You can do the above trick until you go to bed too ( unzip the swaddle before you go to sleep) and by then hopefully she’ll be too deeply asleep to wake up from not being swaddled.

      • I used something called the zipadee-zip blanket to transition out if the miracle blanket- worked like a charm!! But Elena i love how u say you marked the miracle blanket as “for future baby”- i did the sam ething….i LOVED that blanket!! And they look so cute in the burrito wrap look!! I recommend it to every friend who is excpecting.

      • Also, in case you haven’t tried this- put her in a blanket bag (like the one from swaddle designs or halo), she might need just a bit of confinement to feel secure, even if it’s not her arms. Though from experience with Alexis, “just a little bit” never cuts it. πŸ˜€ lol

  1. My (now) 6 year old HATED the swaddle. He would fight it (at 3 days old) and get himself free and instantly fall asleep with his arms out. I decided to not fight that battle and just went with the sleep sack. My daughter (20mos) was never swaddled because the hospital told me not to (something about breathing restriction) so I never did with her either….

    And yes, Elena…You hit the nail on the head with the “they change their preferences to throw us for a loop” because its absolutely true. It (unfortunatly) gets worse as they get older….one day they will eat something and the very next day they will hate it….2 weeks later, they love it, the next day? hate it. Socks? sure…love the socks….the next day, meltdown because we hate socks. Ponytails? yup…Auntie can put in ponytails but YOU cant…..(sticky point in my life now….she wont let ME put in ponytails but she will sit there contently and let my sister put them in)

  2. I loved the Miracle Blanket. It was totally amazing. Then, at around five months, my son started breaking out of it. So we fashioned a make-do miracle blanket out of two gauze A+A blankets- you fold one like a traditional swaddle blanket, with one corner down, then the other you fold into a long strip. You place the long strip blanket at the top and wrap it under the baby’s arms, like the wings on the miracle blanket. Then you swaddle the baby up tightly in the other blanket. I am not sure if this is making sense, but I’m sure that if you look at a miracle blanket, you can figure it out. You might like this option, b/c then you could use your organic gauze blankets since the Miracle Blanket does not have an organic option.

    We swaddled our son until he was nearly 7 months and we used to joke that we would do it till he turned 18- then he flipped himself over onto his belly totally swaddled one morning. He had been rolling back-to-belly for awhile, but we thought that since he couldn’t use his arms while swaddled, we were safe. Not so! So then we had to teach him to sleep unswaddled. This went surprisingly well- we were totally unwilling to do CIO, so we expected this to take many months, but it was actually less than a week. I can’t really take credit for this- I swear that some babies are born good sleepers, others just aren’t. Parents who have good sleeping babies write sleep advice books, parents who don’t desperately buy them. He’s now taking 2 2 hour naps in the day and sleeping 12 hours straight through the night just in his crib wearing footie jammies, nothing else.

    • “Parents who have good sleeping babies write sleep advice books, parents who don’t desperately buy them. ”
      OMFG, too funny!

      I find sleeping books in our case to be mostly bull. I see how the suggestions can work for some babies, but the books just don’t know Lexi πŸ™‚
      That being said, I did take a few tips from Pantley and it made a bit of difference. Not as much as she promises but enough, since nothing else worked.

    • Hi,
      How did you “teach” your son to sleep unswaddled and not using CIO? My daughter is 6 months old and she’s outgrowing the swing. She also won’t sleep unswaddled and she can roll back to tummy. My husband wants to train her to sleep in her crib with CIO and I just don’t have the heart for it, but I have no other options :-(.

  3. This makes me smile because I remember the swaddle on/swaddle off time all too well (my daughter is now 2). She had a very strong moro reflex, and mild reflux when she was born, combine that with nursing every 2 hrs ’round the clock, we were all zombies. So I tried swaddling. First with a receiving blanket – which she broke out of by the second night. Then with the Miracle blanket – which she hated because her arms were pinned in. We found our sweet spot with the Woombie – a stretchy swaddle with a double zipper (!) for easy diaper changes. It was organic, and and came in different strengths. She was in one for naps and bedtime until she rolled over at 4 months. Then we went to a sleep sack, but continued to swaddle in the early AM to by a few more hrs of sleep:). Good luck with your girl – she is an absolute doll!

  4. So cute! But are you aware that it is recommended that you don’t cover your baby’s head when they are sleeping indoors? They are not able to cool themselves down with a hat on. Overheating has been implicated in SIDS cases and hats also present a suffocation risk for a baby if it slips off. Maybe you have just put it on for the photos but it might be worth noting this in case people don’t realise the risks.

  5. Your blog is great with so much useful infos for new moms. Congrats on your new baby and being a mom! Alexis looks beautiful in her miracle blanket and that pink pillow! Check out our page as we may have many more baby products you may like!

    • Just checked out Modswad – one of the babies is a friend of a friends kiddo!! So funny! At any rate – the Woombie design was the best for us – swaddled without totally constricting her arms AND it was so easy to get her in and out of of. She loved it! Will most definitely buy some newborn sizes when we think about #2!!!!

  6. Love your blog…recent discovery and going through old posts. Out of curiosity, what is the pink pillow, Lexi is laying on in this post’s pics. Is it a Boppy pillow?

  7. My little one was fighting the swaddle and waking up a lot, so I had to stop swaddling him. I switched to a swaddle transition blanket called Zipadee-Zip and that worked great. I recommend it.

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