I'm fairly sure I have sleep PTSD. Now that we are a few days into twin bed transition, I have basically immediately reverted to sleep survival mode. This isn't fully necessary as current sleep is a lot better than newborn sleep, but sleep uncertainty is high now and I do not like it.
It turns out, I now have an exceptionally strong "Sleep Uncertainty" mode, which instantly triggers the following sleep protective behaviours
- Cut out all evening socializing
- Go to bed as close to 8pm as possible
- Use work (childcare) hours for productive work only
- Sleep as long as possible in the mornings
- Lower all standards for house cleanliness
- Lower all standards for family food
- Delay all house/life maintenance hobbies, such as budgeting and photo albums
These things all took me a long time to embed when twins were born, but I now immediately jumped back into them and as a result, I am not sleep deprived.
I am very grumpy in other ways, and the house is yucky, and I don't know how I'm going to survive the 4 day weekend, and I really miss my (only newly rekindled) love of exercise.
The other newborn twin adaptive behavior I am good at is patience. Not in the immediate kind (I'm not good at being patient with the kids) but in the longer term kind. I am telling myself that they will sleep again when they are 3 or 4, and I will only live like a joy-less sleep stressed and hobby-less human for a few months or years. (also, I told you this post was complain-y right? I feel like using the word "joy-less" when talking about kid stuff is really harsh, because perhaps I should find joy through all this precious kid time, but I find joy through kid time when balanced with periods of non kid time)
Are these really good adaptive behaviours? Not too sure. They certainly don't make me fun to be around right now.
Laura Vanderkam is working on a book about the "Golden Hours". I like this premise. In life, the "Golden Years" are the time after retirement and before death (I guess? That sounds morbid). In the same way, everyday we get hours between Work and Sleep that should/could have the same golden quality.
Here are my golden hours from yesterday
5:45 Pick up kids from after school, child A throws massive wobbler about how he wanted the other parent to pick him up.
6:00 Family dinner (pasta)
6:20 Clean up family dinner while kids play downstairs with Andy
7:00 Andy works on twin bedtime, I work on Lily bedtime (Pyjamas etc) and Lily has milk downstairs
7:20 Read stories to Lily, Andy works on twin bedtime
7:45 Lily goes to her bed, Andy works on twin bedtime
8:00 Say goodnight to Twins, Andy says goodnight to Lily
8:05 Say goodnight to Ezra
8:15 Twins awake and happy, I finish tidying downstairs and reply to some emails
8:40 Twins awake and unhappily yelling
8:45 Lily awake due to unhappy twins
8:50 Tell twins goodnight again
9:00 Try to plan week with Andy but fail because we are too tired
9:10 read in bed
9:30 Sleep
Hang in there. This too shall pass. Do what you have to do to get sleep. Clean house is over-rated (and dirt is pretty darn good for everyone's immune system). Grumpiness is an evolutinary mechanism to ensure survival (gah! just think of someone who is perpetually cheerful and good-natured - they'd be bonked on the head by all the normal people in no time!)
ReplyDeleteHaha I love "grumpiness is an evolutionary mechanism"... I guess I'm pretty evolutionarily advanced then lol.
DeleteI, too, loathe the overlong bedtime routine. Maybe I need to rethink it as mostly fun playtime which also involves teeth brushing and some story time and then, eventually, small humans in small beds.
ReplyDeleteInterrupted sleep is so hard and with multiple children it’s a long phase. I also had sleep anxiety for about a year after my kids started sleeping through the night regularly I would wake up and sit up in bed because I heard them turning over in bed in the next room.
ReplyDeleteI hope the sleep issues resolve quickly and you’ll be back to sport soon enough.
That's a lot of bedtime. Would it help if you split up the twins and had one share with Lily or Ezra? Just a thought, don't switch all the bedrooms around but just for beds or even to split them at nap time. But that's enough advice from an internet stranger. I'm with you on the sleep anxiety everything is so much harder when we're tired. I hope you get some rest this weekend!
ReplyDeleteI do appreciate the comment Nina! I think that if it's not going well when the kids finish for summer (in 2 months) we will move rooms and put Aubrey in with Lily. Lily has a bunk bed, so it's not ideal to have Aubrey in with her, but Aubrey is definitely the better sleeper and I think she and Lily would actually like sharing rooms.
DeleteMy sisters are twins, and I always thought it would be a great way to get two kids with one pregnancy. I wasn’t raised with them (different moms) so I didn’t see how much work it is. I feel like the one kid waking the other one up thing would be a constant battle. Hang in there.
ReplyDelete