November 2014 Moms

fighting sleep ... cry it out?

My LO is 6 weeks as of yesterday, we've started trying to lay her down drowsy so that she can go to sleep on her own. She's sleeping great - already sleeping 8 hr stretches in the middle of the night, but getting her to sleep is the really tricky part. She just fights it!! You can tell she's tired, heavy eye lids, etc but will just wake up randomly 5 minutes after dozing off and cry. At this point we have been rocking her, putting the pacifier back in her mouth, and eventually picking her up again, rocking her, starting the whole cycle again. We'd really like to transition her to her crib soon but I'm kind of at a loss for what to do when she's fighting sleep... leave her alone? And for those that do let your LO's cry, how long is too long? I really can't go more than a minute - when her scream cry begins. Just breaks me heart. :(

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Re: fighting sleep ... cry it out?

  • I swaddle her with a pacifier and sound machine. It's almost like she is absolutely indignant on fighting sleep for 2 hours before she finally goes! It's weird ... she does it at night when we lay her down in her rnp - usually when she's already asleep. Right now we are going on 30 minutes in the crib, not a peep...fx'd this is a real nap!

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  • KMW08 said:

    I've recently started using a heating pad due to a bellyache. I've noticed though that the heat calms and makes him super relaxed. So while I'm rocking him & he's fighting sleep I put the heating pad over him & a blanket. Works like a charm,

    What kind of heating pad do you use? @KMW08 I know the gas drops aren't working and my LO tummy hurts a lot.
    @lovebuggies1‌ Whatever the cheapie one was, around $10. Nothing fancy, has a high/med/low setting. It plugs into the wall.

    BFP#4 3/17/14 - rainbow Baby BOY arrived 11/10/14 !!

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  • Sounds like we are doing everything we can! I felt like it was too early to cry it out but I also think sometimes its how she gets herself tired enough for a deep sleep, unfortunately :( we will keep doing what we've been doing and maybe shoot for more awake time in the evening.

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  • Thank you! Yeah, its at night so we are trying put her down for the night around 9 and it ends up being midnight.

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  • Just a question...what temp is the room? My LO has a tougher time if the room is below 70, even in a footed sleeper with a swaddle. We keep it between 70-72.
    Baby girl N born 10/29/14!

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  • Same boat. I nurse her for a very long time. Throw her in the miracle blanket. Lol I would be happy with midnight. (I went until 3am a few nights until I decided that midnight was my cutoff to put her in the rnp where she usu passes out) anyways-i suggest buying the miracle blanket and giving yourself a cut off time and start the routine earlier.

    N14 mommy to be :)

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  • MrsAdventureMrsAdventure member
    edited January 2015
    Maelara said:
    Babies always fight sleep. Hell, kids and toddlers do too. Welcome to parent hood. As others have said, it's WAY to early to Cio. The fact that you just said that it's the only way she gets tired enough to sleep makes me think she isn't tired enough to sleep yet and that you are already doing CIO. Seriously, babies cry because they need something. Even if it's just attention. Everyone here was too nice. I don't care if you're a reg, this is ridiculous and you should NOT be doing this yet. My baby is colicky and there is no way in hell I would ever cio at this stage. I'm flabbergasted.

    This so much.

    Edit: quote fail
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  • MrsLillyG said:
    Same boat. I nurse her for a very long time. Throw her in the miracle blanket. Lol I would be happy with midnight. (I went until 3am a few nights until I decided that midnight was my cutoff to put her in the rnp where she usu passes out) anyways-i suggest buying the miracle blanket and giving yourself a cut off time and start the routine earlier.

    I really hope I'm reading this wrong because I don't like you. You don't seriously put your kid in the rnp and just let her cry at the 'cut off time' do you?
  • I didn't say I'm letting her cio, so I'm sorry you had to get all flabbergasted over nothing! :P when she gets tired she fusses. Pretty bad. She's drowsy, her eyes are closing ... then, wam they are open and crying. I can tell she's tired, that's why it leaves me feeling clueless as to what to do. Does she need to cry ... does she need picked up ... I'm just trying to figure this out like the rest of us. No need to jump down anyone's throat :)

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  • MrsLillyGMrsLillyG member
    edited January 2015
    Maelara said:


    MrsLillyG said:

    Same boat. I nurse her for a very long time. Throw her in the miracle blanket. Lol I would be happy with midnight. (I went until 3am a few nights until I decided that midnight was my cutoff to put her in the rnp where she usu passes out) anyways-i suggest buying the miracle blanket and giving yourself a cut off time and start the routine earlier.




    I really hope I'm reading this wrong because I don't like you. You don't seriously put your kid in the rnp and just let her cry at the 'cut off time' do you?

    Youre reading it wrong. No cio. My baby doesnt like her crib but loves her rnp. Everytime I put her in her crib she would scream within 15 min. I pick her back up when she screams and console her again. Repeat until midnight where I would give up and put her in her beloved rnp where she passes out INSTANTLY 99 percent of the time.

    But now I start early, use the nurse for an hour, and stick her in her miracle blanket and then the crib method. This usually works. If it doesnt, I repeAt until midnight.

    Again, no crying. I pick her up after a scream. I also wake her up by 6 at the latest to start the day. But with the miracle blanket shes been sleeping 10-5.

    Eta capitalized instantly
    Idk y I bother to respond to someone that "does not like me"

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  • We had this problem and it's obviously incredibly hard to handle, and very emotional. We generally let our LO fuss a bit but not cry. The thing that finally worked for us (though admittedly only for the last week or so, so far) was to get her on a schedule.

    We got her feeding every four hours day and night (still not 8 weeks so not trying to make her go through the night, though we won't wake her to feed so sometimes 5 at night), and we tried different nap times and lengths during the day. We are currently settled on a one-hour nap in the morning and a 2-2.5 hr nap in the afternoon, but then we keep her awake between 3:15 feed and 7:15 feed / bed. The naps and schedule have been crucial to get her to sleep more easily at night. She fusses for a few minutes but no longer cries. We also don't pick her up once we put her down (just rub her back, etc.).

    Good luck, hang in there =).
    It's a girl! Due November 22, 2014
  • kegcrc said:

    Have you heard of a book called Sleep Sense? A friend just sent me a copy. I haven't read it yet...any thoughts? I hope it's not the same type of thing as babywise.
    I went to the website and blog, and it definitely seems to be in the sleep training category (although not as extreme as Babywise, I'd say).

    I filled out the questionnaire on the website, and the results said that I need to change my newborn's bedtime to about 7 p.m. Cue eye roll. Like I can tell my newborn, "Nope, you're going to bed at 7 even though you prefer to stay awake until 11. That shouldn't be a problem, right?" But I'm sure the book has at least some good tips. You can always use the stuff that works for you.

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  • Thanks for all the great suggestions, we have been doing a little more of a nighttime routine, and just kind of going with her feeding times as to what time that is. We aren't staying awake for that 11-12 feeding anymore, as I've found if she falls asleep before then (even if it's 30 min before) she will usually stay asleep until morning.

    As far as the other conversations stemming from the post - I'll go ahead and add in my 2c for what it's worth! I did read baby wise, it was suggested to me before I had heard all the negative feedback from it- and luckily I'm able to read something and take what I want out of it and leave the rest. I'm also extremely fortunate in the fact that my baby already sleeps through the night, with no forced action on my part - other then sticking to a 3 hour feeding schedule - which was strongly advised by my physician. Feeding her sooner than that was over stimulating her gut and causing lots of fussing and discomfort. I struggled with this "clock feeding" so much in the beginning as I feared she wasn't getting enough to eat - however her weight showed she was getting plenty and me as a new mom had to learn that the cue to suck, and the cue for hunger very closely resembled each other but was NOT the same thing.

    There are some fears I have right now with having our baby being soothed constantly to go to sleep. Sometimes, she can go down sleepy and fall asleep ... swaddling helps, pacifier helps (when it stays in) noise machine, everything. But there are those times that she will cry out and fuss and it's then that I struggle with - do I let her fuss, or do I pick her up? We've been picking her up and rocking her until she's asleep and we will continue to do so as long as we can. The fact of the matter is that she will be going to a daycare when I go back to work, and there will be times when she has to cry it out - b/c no one is going to constantly be picking her up the way she is at home. So, eventually she's going to get broken of that, which is sad and hard for me to think of - but I also don't think it's going to crush her spirit or cause irreparable damage. I'd like to think that part of my job is to make that transition a little easier for her, when that time does come, so she's no shell shocked and forced to adjust to a night and day scenario when I'm not with her constantly. 

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  • I agree with you 100% but we are kidding ourselves if we think our babies are going to be rocked to sleep every time it's nap time and the provider has got x amount of kids to get put down.

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  • We are taking her to a home daycare, I hope you are right, that there isnt lengthy periods of crying it out! I can't be the only one who has the fear of their lo not being given 100% attention when going back to work.

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  • Fair enough, maybe I'm making it worse then it will be in my mind. I will def ask her what she does in that situation though.

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