I Didn't Want Co-Sleeping to End.
'Have you gotten used to sleeping alone?
After my divorce in 2014, my married friends had a lot of questions. That one surprised me at first, but then it made sense. What could be more jarring, even scary, than an empty space where your spouse used to be? Than a bed that seems twice as large because it is half as full?
For years, I didnt have to get used to sleeping alone, because I fell asleep with one child and woke up with the other.
My co-sleeping arrangement with my kids has persisted in some form or another since their father and I split up, when my son was 4 and my daughter was 2.
It started both by accident and necessity: A few weeks after the separation, I became really sick. What began as a sinus infection took over the rest of my body. I ran a low-grade fever, was intermittently nauseated, and coughed until I doubled over gagging. Weeks went by and I made multiple visits to the doctor. Nothing improved. . .
I dont want her to stop coming in. I swallowed. I am not ready to give that up.
He resumed watching the swimming lesson.
What I told myself over the years was that sleeping side by side was important for my children because they were still vulnerable after the trauma of the divorce. Yes, they were becoming more independent, speaking in full sentences and even long fluid paragraphs. But they still needed me to cut up their food. They still reached for my hand.
What I told myself wasnt really true, though. It was important for me, the parent, after the trauma of divorce. The physical immediacy of my children when I was at my most broken and vulnerable was healing in a primal way that nothing else was. Those of you who co-sleep too know exactly what Im talking about.'
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/13/opinion/sunday/co-sleeping-with-toddlers.html?