Dear Dr. Ellen: My husband says that since the birth of our baby, he
feels very distant from me. We have been married for 5 years and it took
3 years for me to get pregnant so I take motherhood very seriously. Here
is where I need your help. Our son, who is 8 months old sleeps in our
bed every night. My husband resents that, but I feel that a child needs
closeness and comfort and it's much easier than getting up and going
into his room every time he cries. A child is this needy for only a
short time and I think it's selfish for my husband to act needy as well.
- Carol
Dear Carol: For years I've heard this complaint mostly from men - that
once their child starts sharing their bed, they feel very distant from
their wives and their sex life becomes nonexistent. After all, if the
child is in your bed, you are not going to be cuddling, kissing, wearing
a sexy nightgown or sleeping in each other's arms. The other problem I
have with having your child sleeping in your bed is that you actually
train your child to need you physically close in order for them to fall
asleep. So forget about ever going out on a date or going away for a
weekend getaway. You can't keep catering to your child's needs and
forget about your husband's needs. Eventually your relationship is going
to be destroyed. Listen to my rule: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN A MAN AND A
WOMAN MUST BE STRONGER AND OF A HIGHER PRIORITY THAN THE RELATIONSHIP
BETWEEN A PARENT AND A CHILD. When a child is the center of attention,
and everything revolves around the child, everyone including the child,
suffers. Because, without realizing it, little by little, day by day,
you will lose your identity as a woman, a wife and a lover and just
become "mommy" 24 hours a day. I never thought twice about taking my own
children into our bed with us when they were scared or sick. In a few
days the cold cleared up, the diaper rash disappeared, the tooth finally
cut through the gum or the fever was gone and it was time for my child
to return to their own bed. There's a big difference with sharing your
bed sometimes and sharing your bed all the time. Take your husband's
feelings seriously and remember, what's best for your son is for mommy
and daddy to love each other. I vote for teaching your son that it is
his responsibility to fall asleep on his own, and if he should wake up
in the middle of the night...to fall back asleep on his own. You reclaim
your social life, your sex life and your own restful sleep. - Dr. Ellen