Should you—or should you not—co-sleep with your baby?
Most parents have heard the warnings: don’t do it, it’s dangerous, never even consider it. But real life doesn’t always match the ideal—and avoiding the conversation entirely can actually make things riskier.
In this episode of Surviving Tiny Humans: 10-Minute Triage for Your Baby, Body, and Mind, Dr. Kailey Buller—physician, mom of two, and author of Surviving Tiny Humans—breaks down what really matters when it comes to co-sleeping, without shame or scare tactics.
We cover:
How common co-sleeping actually is (even when no one admits it)
Why “accidental” sleep on couches or chairs can be higher risk than planned co-sleeping
What safe sleep truly means—and how co-sleeping fits into the bigger picture
Practical harm-reduction steps if co-sleeping is happening
How to make safer choices in imperfect, exhausted, real-world situations
This episode isn’t about telling you what you should do—it’s about helping you make informed decisions and avoid riskier setups when reality hits at 3 a.m.
Key takeaway:
Ideal sleep is great when it’s possible.
But when it’s not, the safest available option matters more than guilt or shame.
Because safe sleep isn’t one rigid rule—it’s thoughtful triage.
If this helped, follow the show so you don’t miss upcoming episodes on setting up realistic sleep environments and navigating early-parent exhaustion!
Is breastmilk really better than formula?
And if it is… why does this question feel so loaded?
In this episode of Surviving Tiny Humans: 10-Minute Triage for Your Baby, Body, and Mind, Dr. Kailey Buller—physician, mom of two, and author of Surviving Tiny Humans—breaks down the medical reality, the emotional weight, and the systemic pressures behind infant feeding decisions.
We talk honestly about:
The actual medical differences between breastmilk and formula
Why, for most healthy babies, those differences are smaller than you’ve been led to believe
The most common barriers to breastfeeding—and why they’re usually systems failures, not personal ones
Why “fed is best” often gets said… but not truly supported
The benefits and trade-offs of both breastmilk and formula
Why feeding doesn’t have to be all-or-nothing (hello, combo feeding and expressed breast milk)
This episode also tackles the myth that not breastfeeding is a personal failure—and why praising breastmilk without supporting women (paid leave, access to lactation care, partner support, realistic workplaces) misses the entire point.
Key takeaway:
Feeding your baby is not a morality contest.
You don’t owe anyone an explanation.
Your job is to nourish your baby and protect your family system.
Whether you breastfeed, formula feed, pump, combo feed, or change plans along the way—you are doing your job.
If this episode helped, hit subscribe and join me for the next dose of sanity.
Few parenting beliefs are as emotionally loaded as this one:
You should never let your baby cry.
For many parents, this single idea creates exhaustion, anxiety, and deep guilt—along with the fear that one wrong decision could cause permanent harm. In this episode of Surviving Tiny Humans: 10-Minute Triage for Your Baby, Body, and Mind, Dr. Kailey Buller—physician, mom of two, and author of Surviving Tiny Humans—slows this myth down and triages it properly.
We unpack where this belief comes from, what the evidence actually says, and—most importantly—how to tell the difference between responsive waiting and neglect (because they are not the same).
In this episode, you’ll learn:
• Why crying is communication—not automatically harm
• The difference between protest, frustration, and true distress
• What research says about crying, cortisol, attachment, and brain development
• Why responding doesn’t always mean intervening immediately
• How pausing—when done safely—can actually help babies learn sleep skills
• Why your own nervous system, tolerance, and values matter too
We also talk honestly about the emotional side of this: listening to your baby cry can feel unbearable, even when something is safe. And no parenting approach should force you to choose between guilt and exhaustion.
Key takeaway:
Crying alone is not necessarily harmful.
But fear, shame, and chronic exhaustion absolutely are.
If this episode helped, download the free “7 Sleep Training Lies” guide for a simple, reassuring breakdown of this myth and the others. You can find it here:
https://www.vitalswithdrbuller.com/sleep7
And follow the show so you don’t miss the next triage -- where we switch gears for a minute to talk about that age old question: is breastmilk superior to formula?
Few parenting topics carry as much confusion, fear, and guilt as sleep training. Is it cruel? Does it harm attachment? Should you avoid it completely—or is avoiding sleep help actually making things worse?
In this episode of Surviving Tiny Humans: 10-Minute Triage for Your Baby, Body, and Mind, Dr. Kailey Buller—physician, mom of two, and author of Surviving Tiny Humans—kicks off a new mini-series called “7 Myths”, starting with the myths that keep parents stuck and exhausted when it comes to baby sleep.
We reframe “sleep training” as sleep teaching—a skill that can be taught in many developmentally appropriate, responsive, and loving ways—and break down what the evidence actually says.
In this episode, you’ll learn:
Why sleep training isn’t automatically harmful or cruel
What research says about attachment, brain development, and crying
Why chronic sleep deprivation matters more than most parents are told
The difference between responsive waiting and neglect
Why there’s no single “right” method—and how to find what fits your family
You’ll also hear a practical, no-pressure starting point for what to do tonight—without becoming a sleep expert or making drastic changes.
Key takeaway:
Sleep is not a luxury. It’s a biological need—for babies and parents.
And there is no prize for suffering.
Download the free companion guide “7 Lies You’ve Been Sold About Sleep Training” here: https://www.vitalswithdrbuller.com/sleep7
And subscribe so you don’t miss the next episode—where we dive deeper into the myth that trips parents up the most.
When your baby seems off, it’s hard to know whether you’re dealing with a true emergency… or something that feels scary but can safely wait. This episode is about helping you make that call with clarity and confidence.
In this 10-minute triage, Dr. Kailey Buller—physician, mom of two, and author of Surviving Tiny Humans—walks you through the same simple framework used by paramedics and emergency departments every day: The Primary Survey, or Emergency ABCs.
You’ll learn:
How to recognize dangerous breathing vs normal baby noises
What “circulation” means at home (hydration and colour)
When behaviour changes really matter—and when to trust your gut
Why inconsolable crying is always a valid reason to seek care
The key fever situations that should never be ignored
Most importantly, you’ll leave with a grounding checklist to ask yourself in stressful moments:
Are they breathing normally, having wet diapers, and alert and consolable?
If yes—you likely have time to think.
If no—you go to the ER.
If you would like my free, no-thinking-required ABC flowchart you can download it here: https://www.vitalswithdrbuller.com/infant-er-flowchart
Because being cautious isn’t overreacting—and you’re never wasting anyone’s time by keeping your baby safe.
Subscribe so you don’t miss the next triage.
If you're a new or expecting parent wondering what actually matters -- and what you can safely ignore -- you're in the right place.
Parenting today comes with an overwhelming amount of advice: social media reels, late-night Google searches, well-meaning opinions from everyone you know... and somehow the pressure to do everything perfectly (including baking sourdough bread).
In this podcast, physician and mom Dr. Kailey Buller offers practical, evidence-based, guilt-free triage for your baby, body and mind. We'll talk newborn sleep, feeding, postpartum recovery, hormones, mental health, relationships, and the many things that are surprisingly normal -- but rarely talked about.
Most parenting decisions aren't black and white. There's more than one way to be a great parent. And you don't need to have it all together to be a loving, capable keeper of tiny humans.
If you're looking for advice that feels grounding instead of overwhelming, hit follow.
You're not meant to do this alone.
Let's survive these tiny humans -- together.