This doesn't feel like one of Ellie's sleep diets, but my exhaustion and lack of patience are certainly the same.
Sunday was an overwhelming day and Ellie slept hard that night. Monday afternoon to Tuesday afternoon, she ran a low-grade fever. Monday night she couldn't sleep until we gave her some Tylenol; then she slept like a log. Tuesday night she was not running a fever anymore, so no Tylenol. And no sleep.
Paul and I tried to take turns but were so groggy that we couldn't even do that effectively. I would be surprised if any of us got 2 hours of consecutive sleep all night. I had an all-day meeting at work on Wednesday and by Wednesday night, all three of us were toast.
Ellie went down quickly last night and slept hard until 1:48 am. I remember the time because it took me a long, long time to realize that it was the actual time. I pulled Ellie up into our bed when she came in, babbling happily, and took my basal body temperature. I started to record the temp and the time and realized that something didn't make sense.
I tried to explain what was going on to Paul, who was ambulating about, but he was too asleep to comprehend what I was saying. He took Ellie out to her potty to start the morning routine, and kept staring at the clock on the VCR thinking that it must be on, with the timer set almost 2 hours into a movie. Finally, he realized that it was 1:something am and not morning after all.
(As you can see, we're not used to a happy, chattering toddler waking us up in the middle of the night.)
But Ellie wouldn't go back to sleep. Nor would she stay in her bed. Or even in her bedroom. No amount of cuddling, loving, firm speech, or bribery could convince her to play or sleep quietly. And whenever we brought her into bed with us - often a wonderful way to extend naptime - she had boundless energy and would alternately kick us and bounce on us while chattering in a very high-pitched manner. Shutting her into her bedroom produced screams and very real tears.
And we were just too tired to think clearly enough to come up with anything else. She screamed and then collapsed limply in our arms when either of us would snuggle her up and go into her room. So we took turns sitting in the rocking chair with her most of the night for the last two nights.
What's worst is that this is mostly between 2:00 am and 6:00 am, my critical sleeping time.
And I don't know why it's happening so I don't know how to fix it or when it might stop on its own.
But I am so tired. I hope for an afternoon nap, send grateful thanks to whomever discovered caffeine, and hope that this "phase," like others that have preceded it, will be over soon.
New Release Spotlight: Amber Wardell
-
Happy release day to debut author Amber Wardell! BEYOND SELF CARE POTATO
CHIPS addresses the toxic self-care culture that tells women bubble baths
and ...
2 weeks ago
2 comments:
Ewww not good. Sorry, hon.
Ah, sleep deprivation is part of the game, right? It's hardest while it's happening. And when I'm dealing with subsequent unpleasant things, like all-day meetings (of which the 1-hour portain that pertained to my job was over by 10:00 am) and poopy diapers. Especially when we no longer have a changing table and I know that the fact that there is a poopy diaper at all is at least in part a behavioral issue.
But. Hopefully tonight will be better. And tomorrow night there are reenforcements!
Post a Comment