My eight-month-old daughter is still not sleeping through the night. We've had a couple of fluke nights that are bliss, but for the most part she's up twice per night. I'm at my whit's end! She wakes up for feedings, which I'm finding out she needs more for routine's sake now. I have tried to pick her up and soothe her, then put her back in bed. This just makes her scream louder. Her bed is in our room, and every time she ever goes to sleep we put her in bed while she's still awake. I'm trying to figure a way to do this without her shrieking waking everyone else up (hubbie who works in the morning and a toddler).
I usually will try to stuff her to the gills with food right before I go to bed, so I know that she can't be THAT hungry. We did try a crying-out method, which I regret, because she screamed for about an hour before I finally said "enough is enough". I don't know what to do and my days are about to start a lot earlier with taking care of a friend's 6-week-old while she goes back to work. I'm tired as it is! Help!
Re: STILL not sleeping through the night!
Not all babies sleep through the night - even at 8, 9, 12 months. If she's screaming until she is fed, then she is hungry.
You can do some research on night weaning and try to reduce the amount in her bottle very gradually. But trying to cut out a bottle (or 2) cold turkey is not going to go over very well, as you can see.
She should still be getting the same number of ounces (give or take just a little) as she was BEFORE solids were introduced. Solids themselves don't provide very much in the way of calories so my guess is that she's truly hungry because she's not getting enough calories during the day. Revert back to a full bottle every 4ish hours and supplement with the solids - not the other way around. But even still, she may not STTN, as others said.
She needs to be drinking mostly bottles, supplemented by solids. She's hungry, that's why she's waking up for milk.
Exactly. Even if it is routine, she is used to having those 2 bottles at those times. It's like if you eat breakfast at 9 am every single day, eventually you're going to feel hungry at 9 am. Do you absolutely NEED to eat your breakfast at 9? No. But you need to adjust to eating at a different time.
Whether it's routine or not, she needs to be gradually weaned to eat a different time.
Just to echo a couple of points mentioned by PPs:
1) Make sure that your DD is getting enough milk/formula during the day. Solids (esp fruits & veggies) don't have much calories and aren't as filling as BM or formula. DS has been on solids for almost 2 months now, but he still nurses 8x a day (he STTN)
2) Once you are sure your DD is getting enough calories during the day, you can try night wean her. Ferber's book has a chapter on night weaning. I highly recommend you reading it before you start. If at all possible, move your DD to her own room at night.
3) Once you decide to night wean, be consistent. If you do CIO, you need to stick with it. If you end up going in to pick her up, you are undoing everything and all the crying she's done so far is all for nothing.
GL!
Failed multiple cycles of Clomid+TI and Clomid+IUI
3/2011 inj+IUI #1 BFP. 4/2011 missed m/c.
Fall 2011 inj+IUI #2&3 BFN
Jan/Feb 2012 IVF#1 BFP 2/23 EDD 10/31/2012 ~~~ Halloween ~~~
Our IVF miracle, Baby Boy M, arrived on 11/8/2012!
We were in a similar boat. DS was up multiple times a night for a paci, and always eating once. We were at our wit's end when he went several days with being up for several hours in the night and not being able to go back to sleep. My son simply didnt know how to put himself back to sleep without his paci. He needed to learn how to do it. Period.
Before you attempt just any ol' CIO, please read Dr. Ferber's book, "Solve Your Child's Sleep Problems". He covers SO many topics such as night feeding, paci weaning, sleep associations, etc. I knew DS got plenty to eat during the day and that his MOTN bottle was simply out of habit. I read the book from cover to cover, put on my big girl panties, and we are currently in the process of teaching DS how to put himself to sleep without the paci, which has also weaned him from MOTN feeding.
First night, he woke in the MOTN and cried for 45 minutes. But I didnt just leave him in there to cry. I did the checks as Ferber suggests, let him know he wasnt alone, and that I loved him. Once he was asleep, he slept until 7 am.
Second night he fell asleep fine without the paci, but at his first wake up he cried for 30 minutes. Back to sleep on his own.
The third night (last night), I laid him in bed awake and he whined for maybe 5 minutes and was out. I didnt hear a single peep out of him until 6:30 this morning when he woke up playing happily in his crib. He used to be awake at 5:15 so this 6:30 wakeup the past has been great!
It is ironic how the so-called CIO method as gotten my son, so far, to a very quiet, no-stress, no-frustration, no-cry sleeping routine. One thing I was so nervous about was DS crying and waking my older son. I put a white noise machine in my older son's room and low and behold he never flinched during those crying nights (I watched him on the video monitor). A few nights of crying is well worth many more weeks, and months, or crying.
If you choose to attempt a CIO again, I highly highly recommend you reading Ferber's book. It explains so much and helps you learn why your baby is doing what she's doing, and how you can help her fix it.
Good Luck!
View Raw Image'>
1. Most of baby's nutrition should be from bottles, not solids
2. Be consistent with whatever method you choose
3. 2x a night sounds pretty good!
If she doesn't stop crying until you feed her, she is hungry.
Be consistent with MOTN wakings.
Some babies don't sleep through the night until they are over a year. And technically if she sleeps something like 7 or 8 hour stretch that is sleeping through the night. My LO goes to sleep at 8 and doesn't wake until 3 or so to eat so I consider him to be sleeping through the night.
This.
ds#1 STTN @ 17 months old
so it's no surprise that ds#2 is still getting up 2 times/night @ 8 months old. i'm not getting my hopes up
~after 34 cycles we finally got our 2nd little bundle of joy~

My IF blog
I would definitely cut out some solids and focus more on BM or formula. Sounds like she is not getting enough to cover her nutritional needs. Solids are not the way to increase intake at this age. I really wouldn't give her solids overnight!!
ETA my daughter eats maybe 1-2oz of solids twice a day but nurses frequently and she STTN. Solids are not the answer at this age.