I haven’t slept through the night for five years. Yes, you read that right. Five years. That’s 1825 nights of broken sleep. And 1825 days of wondering how I’m going to make it through to bedtime.
My children, now five and two, like to wake at regular intervals through the night, and have done since the moment they were born. No matter how much coaxing, encouraging or bribery my husband and I attempt, they still wake – and therefore wake me up too – every three hours or so (on a good night).
When I first became a parent, I expected a certain amount of sleeplessness. In the first year of a baby’s life, the average parent gets just four hours and 44 minutes of sleep a night, according to a UK study. What I didn’t expect was to still be severely sleep-deprived five years down the track.
Sean Szeps shares how to sleep again with young children. Post continues after video.
There’s no way round it – sleep deprivation is awful. It’s affected every area of my life; my friendships, my career, my marriage and my health.
I look in the mirror and am horrified by what I see. I’ve aged insurmountably. Gone is the plump creamy skin I used to be proud of. Today, my face has a pallid grey sheen to it, no matter how many brightening or tightening creams I use. I don’t go to the gym anymore; sleep is prioritised over everything else.