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Episode Overview

Laying the Foundations of Rest

In this conversation, pediatrician and sleep consultant Allison Egidi breaks down what it really means to set healthy sleep foundations from the earliest weeks of life. She explains where the idea of “drowsy but awake” actually comes from in sleep science—and why it’s often misunderstood by exhausted parents. Rather than offering rigid rules, Allison clarifies the research behind infant sleep cues, biological rhythms, and the gentle frameworks that support babies as they learn this essential skill.

“I Reserve the Right to Change My Mind”

One of Allison’s core parenting philosophies—the right to change your mind—guides this entire episode. She opens up about how every child, season, and challenge invites a new approach. What worked yesterday may not work tomorrow, and that doesn’t make you inconsistent—it makes you responsive. This segment dives into the emotional and mental freedom parents gain when they let go of rigid rules and allow themselves to evolve alongside their children.

Different Children, Different Sleepers

Using the analogy of four-year-olds stepping onto a soccer field for the first time, Allison beautifully illustrates how children arrive with different innate abilities. Some take to sleep easily, others struggle, and neither is “right” or “wrong.” She emphasizes that sleep is a skill, not a moral benchmark, and that parents should never judge themselves—or their children—against someone else’s timeline. Compassion and understanding take center stage in this part of the discussion.

The Mental Load, Society’s Pressure & a Mother’s Well-Being

Kianna and Allison explore the invisible weight mothers carry when it comes to sleep. Society expects babies to “sleep through the night,” often without understanding what research actually means by that phrase—or how developmental stages change sleep patterns constantly. Allison breaks down what science suggests counts as “sleeping through,” and why expectations must be age-appropriate. The conversation then turns toward maternal mental health: sleep is not a luxury—it is survival.

CIO, Supportive Approaches & What Really Matters

The episode tackles misconceptions around “cry it out” and how this approach looks very different across families. Allison highlights that the goal isn’t choosing a side—it’s choosing what works for your child, your capacity, and your home. Whether parents choose responsive settling, gradual methods, or structured intervals, the focus is always on support, connection, and learning.

Circadian Rhythms, Time Changes & Structure

As the episode wraps up, Allison explains how circadian rhythms shape sleep over time, and why even simple routines help anchor a child’s internal clock. She shares guidance on navigating time changes, adjusting schedules, and building rhythms that make sleep easier for the whole family.

You can find Allison on instagram @sleepandwellnesscoach and all of her free resources at https://linktr.ee/sleepandwellnesscoach

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