Evening play (often noisy and excited!) and other sensory motor adventures help with baby's sleep
Enjoy sensory adventures with your baby in the evening until his sleep pressure is very high
To keep the settings of your baby’s body clock healthy, it’s best if evenings are like daytime, filled with light, noise and sensory motor nourishment.
It’s not necessary to dim the lights in the evening. When your baby’s sleep pressure is high enough, she'll fall off to sleep easily with a quick feed or cuddle, whether the lights are on or not, as long as she is dialled down. We want to make your baby’s sleep as easy and as no-fuss as possible!
If your baby doesn’t seem to want to go sleep in the evening, that’s alright, try again later. His sleep pressure isn’t high enough yet.
But you're already so tired in the evenings!
When you read this, it's quite possible your heart falls and you feel despair. You're already exhausted beyond belief by the time evening comes around! You just want a moment alone, or some time alone with your partner, or some time to get some things done. Maybe you have other children to care for in the evenings, too. The suggestion that you fill your baby's evenings with rich sensory nourishment, keeping her dialled down while her sleep pressure climbs high, can seem extremely unattractive.
Here's the problem. If you have a high sleep need baby, you might be able to put your baby down early in the evening, with only a few wakes in the night, until she starts the day at a civilised hour in the morning. But most of us have medium to low sleep need babies. Attempting to put babies down early in the evenings can make everything worse, resulting over time in
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Constant waking before you go to bed yourself
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Baby starting the day unmanageably early.
It's swings and roundabouts. Making sleep as workable as possible means trade-offs for most families. Parents get through this time of life, when the evenings seem especially long and tiring, by
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Reminding yourself that this is just a specific life stage, which will pass soon enough (though I know it seems to go on and on right now!)
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Reminding yourself of your values, such as wanting to be there for your little one rather than leaving him alone to fuss or cry in the cot, for instance
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Seeking out people who share similar parenting values - and maybe even socialise with them in the evenings!
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Practicing self-compassion
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Planning ahead to create the most interesting and enjoyable evenings you possibly can as a family.
Ideas for making evenings with your baby as enjoyable as possible
If you are often or always alone with your baby in the evenings, it's true that you're in a particularly challenging situation, which requires a great deal of self-compassion, and some forward planning. You can find out more here.
Here are ideas for providing your baby with rich sensory motor nourishment in the evening. You might
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Put your baby in a carrier or backpack so that your hands are free to do tasks. Evenings can be transformed when babies are transported in carriers. You can find out more here.
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Stay out at the park through the sunset, just as late as possible or sensible
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Plan ahead to be around other people in the evenings – invite them in, or go out to visit them
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Invite friends or family over for regular evening time together
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Schedule a spread of evening activities during week
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Visit the markets or the shops
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Dine out
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At your friends' or family's homes
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At a café
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In an outdoor setting such as an evening picnic in the park, if climate and location permit
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If she has started solids, prolong your baby's meal time, allowing lots of sensory play with food
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Play together in the bath for long periods. This can be a great, splashy way of bonding with a parent who isn't around much during the day, for instance. You can find out more here.
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Take your baby outside, if this is safe
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Go for night walks or even jogs
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Watch the stars and clouds and night trees together
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Spot night birds and creatures
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Turn on music you love and dance with little one in a carrier or your arms, which is exercise for you and great sensory motor nourishment for your child, since it involves lots of postural changes in relation to gravity.
Does noisy, laughter-filled physical play 'overstimulate' babies in the evenings?
You might have heard that you have to keep things quiet for your baby in the evenings, to bring on sleep and help him sleep better. You might have heard that this keeps his cortisol levels low. None of this is true. You can read about cortisol and baby sleep here.
Loud, laughter-filled physical play with your baby, rolling around together on the floor, or swinging and lifting her in your arms, or using tunnels or swings or hide-and-seek, or any very active physical engagement with your baby which makes her laugh, is wonderful for her developing nervous system! Lots of giggling and happy shouts and excited screams are the kind of sensory motor stimulation which contribute to both short-term and long-term dialling down of your baby's nervous system.
This is because laughter (including those great, screeching, heaving bouts of laughter only a child knows how to do!) bathes her nervous system in hormones which suppress cortisol and increase serotonin and dopamine. Loud, laughter-filled, highly physical play is extremely good for your baby's developing physiology and nervous system!
Physical play and laughter are good for parents too - especially for a parent who isn't the primary carer. Physical play is a highly responsive, embodied form of enjoyment which strengthens emotional bonds and attachment. It dials up the hormones of joy.
Creating flexible, adaptive baby sleep
We want your baby to know how to drop off to sleep in many different places. This has been the case for human babies since the dawn of time, as babies fit into around the adults' social life. This remains the case in a majority of human cultures today.
We don’t want your baby to learn that the only place sleep happens is in the cot, because this locks your family into the home in the evenings, spoiling your social life. Families are usually happiest when they are able to continue showing up flexibly for evening events in the neighbourhood or in friendship networks or pursuing a cultural life, accompanied by the baby.
We want to shift the focus in the evenings away from baby, on to meeting your adult needs for an interesting, socially and culturally engaged life, with the baby fitting in around your activities and falling asleep in response to high sleep pressure and rich sensory motor nourishment, wherever you are. Once your baby has fallen asleep, your evening's socialising can continue on.
Selected references
Akimbekov NS, Razzaque MS. Laughter therapy, a humor-induced hormonal intervention to reduce stress and anxiety. Current Research in Physiology. 2021;4:135-138.