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The standard recommendation that you never co-sleep with a baby is kike propaganda aimed both at reducing medical liability by catering to the lowest common denominator darkies and at making the experience of having a baby as difficult as possible for new parents.

Yes, cosleeping can be dangerous, but here are the common risk factors:

Your wife is a nigger; your wife drugged her way through labor or ended up with a C section (if voluntarily then God help you); your wife is a drunk, druggie, or on prescription meds/painkillers; your wife is not breastfeeding through the night (if you are depriving a baby of breast milk by choice then you dont deserve to sleep ever again); your wife is a manatee; you fucked your child up and dulled their senses with vaccines.

That's it. Those are the risk factors. Babies need skin to skin contact and they need to hear and feel their mother's breath and heartbeat. If she has done her job properly through labor and is continuing to do her job properly by breastfeeding at night then she will naturally be on her side in the "freshman triangle" so-to-speak, and will have the baby lower in front of her safely in the hollow formed by her hips/shoulders rather than up on the pillow where roastie bottle-feeders put babies. Turn the heat up a few extra degrees, pull the bottom sheets tight, and sleep with light blankets. Check on them once in a while.

Only a kike would suggest splitting mother and baby up as a default plan so early in life. More infant deaths come from babies just quitting breathing than come from getting accidentally smothered by normal-weight White mothers. Feeling and hearing their mother breathe can help babies keep their own little breaths going if they ever falter.

Extended sleeplessness is not normal for healthy parents and babies. Don't fall for the typical tricks.

The standard recommendation that you never co-sleep with a baby is kike propaganda aimed both at reducing medical liability by catering to the lowest common denominator darkies and at making the experience of having a baby as difficult as possible for new parents. Yes, cosleeping can be dangerous, but here are the common risk factors: Your wife is a nigger; your wife drugged her way through labor or ended up with a C section (if voluntarily then God help you); your wife is a drunk, druggie, or on prescription meds/painkillers; your wife is not breastfeeding through the night (if you are depriving a baby of breast milk by choice then you dont deserve to sleep ever again); your wife is a manatee; you fucked your child up and dulled their senses with vaccines. That's it. Those are the risk factors. Babies need skin to skin contact and they need to hear and feel their mother's breath and heartbeat. If she has done her job properly through labor and is continuing to do her job properly by breastfeeding at night then she will naturally be on her side in the "freshman triangle" so-to-speak, and will have the baby lower in front of her safely in the hollow formed by her hips/shoulders rather than up on the pillow where roastie bottle-feeders put babies. Turn the heat up a few extra degrees, pull the bottom sheets tight, and sleep with light blankets. Check on them once in a while. Only a kike would suggest splitting mother and baby up as a default plan so early in life. More infant deaths come from babies just quitting breathing than come from getting accidentally smothered by normal-weight White mothers. Feeling and hearing their mother breathe can help babies keep their own little breaths going if they ever falter. Extended sleeplessness is not normal for healthy parents and babies. Don't fall for the typical tricks.

(post is archived)

[–] 5 pts

All of my children slept in bed with us until 2 or 3 at least. Most afternoons after work I'd pass out on the couch with a baby or toddler snoozing on my chest. My wife and/or I would wake up at the slightest disturbance be it a fart, sneeze, or the baby just being up and deciding to babble at the dark. All my kids remember that dad was a mattress.

[–] 2 pts

That's how it should be. If you aren't hormonally or chemically dulling your senses it's a non-issue if you exercise the most basic level of commonsense.

[–] 2 pts

Didn't drink or smoke. If either my wife or I had to be on meds the other would shelter the baby. For instance if she was on pain meds for her back I'd be between her and the baby. If I was just zonked from work she'd be between. We had a baby bed thing that went right up against the bed with one side open but the kid would roll over to us anyway so that was a bust. Not having the child be right there with us was never an option though.

[–] 0 pt (edited )

This is absolutely barbaric.

haha