Do your children sleep in the bed with you?

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I am a firm believer that the marital bedroom is for husband and wife only, and that children should not be in there except when ill, injured, bad weather, nightmares, and when they are newborns. My wife disagrees with me and wants to share the bed with our children. I told her if that happens, I’m sleeping on the couch.

Any thoughts?
 
It’s your bed and hers. The most important thing is that you work it out together.

If she insists on sleeping with the kids, I would not be the one to vacate to the couch, however. Your children should not ever get the impression that they could kick a parent out of his own bed in order to have their other parent to themselves in the master bedroom. Heaven forbid.

The truth is, the couch is the better place for a parent and a child to sleep in the same room. Consider having a La-Z-Boy chair in your kids’ room, if it will fit, so one of you can come in and rock a child or sleep in the same room when they need it. That is where we would sleep when our children needed us so near as that. If their room is not that big, then work something else out.

This is something for the two of you to work out, but if you relent, you absolutely have to have a promised “exit strategy”. Honestly, though, it is easier to get yourselves out of the child’s room than to get the child out of yours. If your wife wins you over to a “co-sleep” plan, consider executing it in the child’s room, not yours.

Confining co-sleeping to a child’s room also keeps the parents’ bedroom available for marital relations. Those ought not go away with the arrival of children…but how does that happen if you have campers every night? If you don’t have a lock on your bedroom door, get one. No child will die in the hallway in the time it takes for you to get a robe on, but many a child would have liked to have been spared the memory of the time they walked in on a profoundly intimate moment between their parents.
 
I am a firm believer that the marital bedroom is for husband and wife only, and that children should not be in there except when ill, injured, bad weather, nightmares, and when they are newborns. My wife disagrees with me and wants to share the bed with our children. I told her if that happens, I’m sleeping on the couch.

Any thoughts?
My first thought is that your aggressive word choices and ultimatums are not the type of parental give and take that will be helpful as you navigate the world of parenting.

For the co-sleeping, I leave it to a pediatrician who with his nurse-wife has 8 children.
askdrsears.com/topics/sleep-problems/co-sleeping-yes-no-sometimes
 
It has been many years since my children were that age, but we had them sleep with us when they were quite small. For us it worked very well.

A compromise that some couples like is a “side-by-side” bed. It is like a crib with railings on three sdies that attaches to the parents bed on its side without a railing. Here is an ad for one that has a picture:5election.com/2010/06/25/baby-side-by-side-bed-keeps-baby-conveniently-close-to-you/

The baby has his own space but is very close.
 
Our kids slept with us when they were little and my youngest still does - he’s 17 months and still nursing. I don’t see how drawing a hard line about the “marital bed” (what an odd term) is helpful or compassionate. To be honest, if my husband told me that he’d rather sleep on the sofa than share the bed with our child, I would think him quite the oaf. Luckily, my husband is very flexible, positive and we’re on the same page with this type of thing.

Our sex life is fantastic and is affected very little by cosleeping. Our sleep life has been better… But we have kids! You don’t have to cosleep, it doesn’t fit every family, but please, lighten up and quit the ultimatums and dramatic threats. Your wife is going to see this as a “my husband or my child” thing, and trust me, you will lose - if not in the bed, in her heart.
 
Breastfeeding kids share the family bed here, it’s just easier to get more sleep that way. It’s ok with me if you want to sleep on the couch or in another room, as long as you aren’t doing it for a power play or as punishment. If you are a light sleeper and have to get up early for work and sleep better without the kids, then fine.
 
My children never slept with us or even in the same room.From day one,they slept in their crib.I would go to their bedroom to feed them.It wasn’t as convienient as having them in our room,however,they never had issues with staying in their oun bed as they got older.We also installed a lock on our bedroom door,for the times we wanted privacy.👍
 
I am a firm believer that the marital bedroom is for husband and wife only, and that children should not be in there except when ill, injured, bad weather, nightmares, and when they are newborns. My wife disagrees with me and wants to share the bed with our children. I told her if that happens, I’m sleeping on the couch.

Any thoughts?
Is that a problem?

I never slept with my kids when they were babies, they always slept on their cribs, but sometimes they would jump and sleep with us and tried to abuse and were kicked out and some months more they would come for one or 2 nights.

The other day I slept with my 21 years old youngster. He went on sleeping on my bed seeing TV and I would not move his 6’ 2’’ out of the bed.

My wife refuses to sleep with him for he moves too much and kicks everybody around but I have no problem for I kick the same.

My brother in law when he went to the States shocked everybody for sleeping with his 8 years old daughter. Danger of incest, he was told. He was shocked. These Americans are crazy, how can they imagine such dirty thought in my mind? He still tells this story when talking about America …

So, compromise, compromise, compromise. Must there be rules for that?
 
I am a firm believer that the marital bedroom is for husband and wife only, and that children should not be in there except when ill, injured, bad weather, nightmares, and when they are newborns. My wife disagrees with me and wants to share the bed with our children. I told her if that happens, I’m sleeping on the couch.

Any thoughts?
All of our four children co-slept with us from birth up until around two years of age. And then it was a gradual transition from our bed to their own bed, for each of them. It was never a problem for us, and it had a great advantage that if my wife needs to breastfeed the baby in the middle of the night, the baby is right there, and she doesn’t even have to get out of bed. Co-sleeping never bothered me, though it does take just a bit of getting used to. It also helps to have a king-size bed, though we made it work with a queen-size bed for our first two.

However, it sounds like maybe your wife is wanting older children to sleep with you on a regular basis? That is not something that we have done, and I’m not sure if I would be comfortable with that – or if there would even be room. I think it has worked well for us having them in a separate room when they are older, though my wife and I do often lie down with the little ones while they are going to sleep, before we go on to our own bed. Also, the idea of parents and children sleeping in the same room (with the older kids in separate beds from the parents) seems less strange to me than it once did, after our positive experience with co-sleeping.
 
Different things work for different people.I really think if you dislike it that much your wife should reconsider but also you should try to understand the reasons why she would like it better and find -with her- good alternatives.For example if she finds it exhausting to have to go to their bedroom to breastfeed or to help them go to sleep-I would offer to bring the toddler to her when he wakes up or to go myself help a child go to sleep.If the children have a really hard time going to sleep on their own I would try to get her to talk with the pediatrician about it-but in a delicate manner:remember mothers can become very defensive or depressed when others imply that we don’t do a good job or that we don’t know what we are doing…
Good luck a lot of problems come from a lack of communication or understanding
 
When I was growing up, it wasn’t unusual for children to not even be allowed in their parents’ bedroom. Where 6 or 8 or 10 or 12 children is the norm, however, this may be a necessity. Who can get any sleep in Grand Central Station? 😃
 
I am a firm believer that the marital bedroom is for husband and wife only, and that children should not be in there except when ill, injured, bad weather, nightmares, and when they are newborns. My wife disagrees with me and wants to share the bed with our children. I told her if that happens, I’m sleeping on the couch.

Any thoughts?
My kids sleep with me.🙂 My husband goes to sleep early and I am a night owl.
 
When I was growing up, it wasn’t unusual for children to not even be allowed in their parents’ bedroom. Where 6 or 8 or 10 or 12 children is the norm, however, this may be a necessity. Who can get any sleep in Grand Central Station? 😃
We have 7 children. All have co slept with us when small, then transitioned to their own beds. Not that big of the a deal. The OP and his wife need to both compromise and communicate. To issue ultimatums is not the best way to a smooth family life.
 
Our kids might sleep with us for the usual reasons: illness, bad dreams, maybe something upset them that day, etc. Occasionally they’ll sleep with my spouse on one of nights I come home late from my classes.
 
We have 7 children. All have co slept with us when small, then transitioned to their own beds. Not that big of the a deal. The OP and his wife need to both compromise and communicate. To issue ultimatums is not the best way to a smooth family life.
You’re right. They need to come to a solution they can both live with. Still, I think that sleeping in your parents’ bed requires an invitation extended from both sides of it. It is not a good idea for Dad to kick himself out.
 
I am a firm believer that the marital bedroom is for husband and wife only, and that children should not be in there except when ill, injured, bad weather, nightmares, and when they are newborns. My wife disagrees with me and wants to share the bed with our children. I told her if that happens, I’m sleeping on the couch.

Any thoughts?
I am assuming you don’t have kids yet due to how your post reads. My thoughts are just to ask your wife why she feels this way so strongly; basically approach this as any other martial dispute and listen to each of her concerns and what went into forming her stance on this issue. And then ask she listen to yours and why you feel the way you do.
And when the time comes keep an open mind and be flexible, it is hard to make ultimatums in this situation when speaking hypothetically. One of both of you might change your mind as you learn to live with and get to know know him/her and what works best for your family and your individual child.
 
I am a firm believer that the marital bedroom is for husband and wife only, and that children should not be in there except when ill, injured, bad weather, nightmares, and when they are newborns. My wife disagrees with me and wants to share the bed with our children. I told her if that happens, I’m sleeping on the couch.

Any thoughts?
I will echo others who have said this seems to be a rather uncharitable way to approach the disagreement. You should probably consider being a little more open to the individuals your children are, and to the fact that your life changes a lot with kids. I would NOT recommend trying to make hard and fast rules about such things if you are not yet a parent. What actually works for your family in reality may or may not be what you envisioned when you had the luxury of just theorizing and speculating. And I agree with MaryHelene: ‘Your wife is going to see this as a “my husband or my child” thing, and trust me, you will lose - if not in the bed, in her heart.’

First of all, what does it mean to “share the bed with our children”? For the first few months? You betcha! Best thing I ever did, and the only way I got any sleep at all was being able to nurse the baby on my side while half asleep. For many couples, marital relations are going to take a back seat for a couple months anyway. (I was recovering from a C-section and bled for 9 weeks straight. It happens.) And I think you will find one of the best things for your relationship with your wife is making sure the new mom gets as much sleep as possible! Really. For many, co-sleeping really helps the woman to get enough rest.

Once the baby can sleep for about 5-6 hours straight, I personally think it’s a good thing if you can transition them to their own room. Worked well for us - with our first, at about 4-5 months, no problems. Our second child? Not so much. Ok, not at all. That one was/is very clingy and likes to cuddle. He is capable of wailing pitifully for hours on end when left alone. He is often still in our bed at 2.5 years old. We’ve decided we’ll transition him away from this at age 3, except for the types of exceptions you mention. But you know what? We make it work for now by letting him go to sleep in our bed at his bedtime, then we carry him into his own bed when we want to go to bed. Sure, some nights he wakes up when we try to move him, and we just let him stay in our bed, but it’s not that often. Usually we get 3-6 hours to ourselves before he wanders back in at 2-5am. Even if we didn’t “allow” it, he sneaks in very quietly. I guess we could punish him for that until he stops, but I don’t see the need to do so. Sometimes neither of us know when he climbed in - we never woke up. Frankly, as long as we get “enough” time to ourselves (husband/wife), I really enjoy cuddling in bed with my young children. I love it, actually, and will miss those times when they’re too old for it.
Lastly, I’ll say I have been soooo happy we invested in a king-size bed, despite our room being tiny, and despite the expense.

Can I ask, what are your main concerns, exactly, that has made you a “firm believer” that your room is for husband and wife only? People may arrive at the conclusion from different angles, and some of these would be easier to address than others. Also, when you say your wife wants to have the children share the bed, has she discussed up to what age? Under 1 is different from 2 is very different from a 6 year old.
Here’s some reading for you:
Ten Reasons to Sleep Next to Your Child at Night
Go Ahead—Sleep With Your Kids (written by a man)
 
I’m interested in the origins of the firm belief, too. Historically, and currently around the world, families sleep together.

Our kids are in and out of our bed till they’re about three years old. Sometimes a little older. Despite all this activity we have found ways to be ‘marital’. We have 10 kids.
 
I’m interested in the origins of the firm belief, too. Historically, and currently around the world, families sleep together.

Our kids are in and out of our bed till they’re about three years old. Sometimes a little older. Despite all this activity we have found ways to be ‘marital’. We have 10 kids.
👍

The idea that babies should sleep alone is a very new and largely American concept.
 
👍

The idea that babies should sleep alone is a very new and largely American concept.
I think the OP mentioned that he’s cool with newborns being in the room and even the bed. I don’t know how young “newborn” is, but I imagine an infant qualifies as well.

The two we’ve had thus far have slept in our room in a portable crib until about six months or so. Then they transitioned to the kids’ room but were back and forth a bit until they were very sound sleepers through the night. That’s probably pretty typical.

Above all the OP needs to speak with his wife, come to some common ground and definitely not take a passive-aggressive approach and kick himself out. Women hate passive-aggressive nonsense. I should know. I’m guilty of that myself from time to time and it’s the thing that most annoys my wife!
 
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