My son Felix was a light sleeper from the beginning. Not a bad sleeper in the colic sense — he fed well, settled reasonably, and was not in distress — but he woke at every sound. A door closing two rooms away. The boiler firing. A car outside. Our house is a Victorian terrace in Sheffield, which means it is not particularly well insulated against sound, and the street outside is not particularly quiet. Felix was waking four or five times a night not from hunger or discomfort but from noise, and we were waking with him each time.
We needed to mask the environmental noise. White noise was the obvious solution — a consistent sound that covers the variable sounds that were waking him. The Zello Portable White Noise Machine was the device we chose, and it solved the problem within the first week.
Why White Noise Works for Light Sleepers
White noise works by raising the ambient sound level in a room to a consistent baseline. When the ambient level is consistent, sudden sounds — a door, a car, a boiler — do not produce the sharp contrast that triggers waking. The brain registers the sudden sound but does not interpret it as significant because it does not stand out dramatically from the background. For a light sleeper who is waking at environmental sounds rather than from hunger or discomfort, white noise addresses the actual cause of the waking rather than the symptom.
Why the Zello
The Zello Portable White Noise Machine had the specific features I needed. Thirty sounds — white noise, fan sounds, nature sounds, lullabies, womb sounds — which meant I could find the sound that worked best for Felix rather than being limited to a single option. A 20-hour battery life, which meant it could run through the night and into the following day without recharging. A child-safe clip for attaching to the pram or pushchair, which meant the same device could be used at home and on the move. And the voice record function — the ability to record up to four minutes of my own voice or household sounds — which I had not specifically sought but which turned out to be the most useful feature of all.
I found it through ALTOE's Sound Machines collection, which is the obvious starting point for anyone comparing baby sleep sound options. It also sits within the Baby Soothers, Baby Toys & Activity Equipment, and Baby & Toddler collections if you want to browse the wider range.
The Voice Record Function: The Feature I Did Not Expect to Need
Felix settled most easily to the sound of my voice. Not words — just the sound of me talking or humming. At three in the morning, sustaining that for long enough for him to fall back to sleep was exhausting. The voice record function on the Zello allowed me to record four minutes of my voice — talking, humming, shushing — and play it on loop. Felix responded to the recording the same way he responded to the real thing. I could start the recording, put him down, and leave the room.
This single feature changed our nights more than anything else. The white noise masked the environmental sounds that were waking him. The voice recording settled him when he did wake. The combination meant that by the end of the first week, Felix was waking once a night rather than four or five times.
The Moon Nightlight: A Practical Bonus
The moon-shaped nightlight with seven colour options and three brightness settings has been consistently useful for nighttime feeds and nappy changes. A bright light wakes both baby and parent fully, making it harder to settle back to sleep. The Zello's nightlight provides enough light to see clearly without being bright enough to signal to Felix that it is daytime. We use the warm amber setting for nighttime care and the breathing light mode — which pulses gently — as part of the settling routine.
Travel: The 20-Hour Battery in Practice
We have taken the Zello to my parents in Leeds, to a holiday cottage in the Peak District, and on a long-haul flight to visit family in Australia. The 20-hour battery meant it ran through every night without needing to be charged mid-sleep. The child-safe clip attached to Felix's travel cot, the pram, and the seat back on the plane. The same settling routine — white noise, voice recording, breathing nightlight — worked in every environment because the device created a consistent sound environment regardless of where we were.
Felix slept on the long-haul flight. Both ways. I am aware this is not a universal experience. I attribute it entirely to the Zello.
Felix is now eight months old. The Zello has been running every night since he was six weeks old. It is the first thing I pack for any trip and the last thing I would give up from his sleep routine. If your baby is a light sleeper and environmental noise is the problem, the Zello Portable White Noise Machine is the device I would start with. Browse the Sound Machines collection at ALTOE. Record your voice. Set the white noise. Sleep.
Sam Whitmore is a first-time dad and secondary school history teacher based in Sheffield. He writes about the early months of parenthood, the products that have made the nights more manageable, and the long-haul flight to Australia that Felix slept through entirely.
0 comments