Brisbane mum Emily O’Neill was supposed to be helping homeless people. Instead she found herself on the verge of a breakdown when she had to return to work full-time when her baby was nine-months-old.
The 26-year-old first-time mum, who works as a case manager for a homelessness service, was adamant she wasn’t going to co-sleep and had been putting her baby, Lily, to sleep in a bassinet beside the bed until she outgrew it.
“I had always heard that it wasn’t safe (bed sharing) and there was a massive risk of suffocating the baby and I believed the baby shouldn’t be in the bed. I didn’t have friends who co-slept; they had all sleep trained,” she said.
“Lily was a great sleeper as a baby, only waking once or twice a night at about three-months. I’d just feed her back to sleep,” Emily explained.
But when Emily returned to work, initially three days a week, when Lily was seven months old, she moved her into a cot in her own room.
“She started waking hourly. I was only back at work three days a week, so it was manageable, but then I started back full-time when she was nearly ten months and she was still waking hourly,” she said.
Emily would get up and sit in Lily’s room and feed her back to sleep in the rocking chair. Often, she’d find herself falling asleep and panic about dropping Lily.
It wasn’t long before the lack of sleep caught up with her and her work and health began to suffer.