I am a first time mom and DD is 10 months. I am pretty AP when it comes to sleep (no CIO or major sleep training, following her lead for wakeups, nursing as needed at night). She usually wakes up 1-3 times per night, mostly twice. Eats, back to sleep without too much trouble. She is so distracted during the day However, she has really been hit hard with teething and wonder weeks and it just feels like sleep is getting worse and not better. She has only STTN twice in her life and I am starting to question whether I did the right thing by not sleep training and feeding her often at night. If you AP'd your first and you did not have a natural born sleeper, when did your LO start to STTN and did you have to intervene in some way or did they just grow out of waking up at night? I keep hoping that once i wean she will naturally go that way but am afraid I am not making the right choices for her.
Re: Second time moms RE: STTN
2.5 years old. We had to do some sleep training eventually at that point. It involved toddler alarm clocks, sleep lady shuffle, and some CIO.
Lots of kids don't STTN until they are older though (like between 2-5 YEARS old)
You've done nothing wrong responding to your daughter's cues and meeting her needs no matter the time of day. Great job, mama! Hang in there. Infant sleep phases are always changing. The great thing about sleep is that if you don't like it, it'll change soon. And the awful thing about sleep is that if you like it, it'll change soon.
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Night wakings are natural and normal. It's not unhealthy for a toddler to wake up in the middle of the night. It's just inconvenient.
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Just like one of the PP's said, where is the line between healthy wakeups and not? If everything has been going well she goes down well at night, wakes twice to eat and goes back down no problem. That I am ok with because it seems normal, however I dream of a day when I can have a night's rest since I have a really hard time sleeping in chunks. However whenever anything is out of whack (wonder week, teeth, cold, constipation) the wakeups ramp up (which I am aware is also normal) but I just wondered if our parenting style sets our LO's up for more fitful restless sleep. I know this is a huge genralization since there will always be rough sleepers and excellent sleepers despite parenting but sometimes I feel torn as to which priority is more important - my child's sleep quality or her emotional wellbeing. I am just hoping that if I meet her emotional needs that she will learn to meet her own sleep needs but my sleep deprived self is praying that it doesn't take years. I have no idea how people can feel this way for years and no idea how anyone could think about a second child when their first isn't even close to STTN. It makes me want to cry.
DS2 is just over 2 months old. So we have a 2 mo, 19 mo, and 3 yo. I don't know that I'd say we are AP parents, but I do (and have for all 3) nurse on demand. And J. (the 3 yo) was a very, very high needs baby. He didn't sleep more than 45 minutes at a stretch until he was 1 yo. I was so sleep deprived. He rarely fell asleep with nursing to sleep. It was awful.
Also, DH and I knew that we wanted more children. And it seemed there were 2 options: space them way out so I could forget how horrible the NB/first year was or have them close together so the sleep deprived state was still my normal. Anyway, A. was born was J. was 18 months.
2u2 was hard, but having 2 was easier for us than having 1. J matured so much when A. was born. And so our family expanded again when A. was 18 months.
With both my second and third pregnancies, I wondered how I could do it. Would I be able to? There were tears (both happy ones and ones born of fear). I've found out that when push comes to shove you just do it.
So in short, I've been there. And made (am making?) it through.
And like others have said it wasn't a magic fix, they still wake at night sometimes, illnesses always throw things off as do time change. But I don't regret it. (Nor am I well rested most days, bummer! But at least I have enough sleep to function)
DS2 was a much better sleeper, but things were rough around 12-15 months, so much is going on in their little brains around then! He really started STTN here and there around 18 months, and has been regularly since 24 mos.
You're not doing anything wrong! Baby sleep just sucks!!
DS2 - Oct 2010 (my VBAC baby!)
Do you co sleep or do you have to get up and go in her room to nurse her at night? If you aren't currently bedsharing, you might get a lot more sleep if you did that.
DD slept in our room for 7 months, then in her own room. I got up at night and nursed her 1-3x usually until she was 22 months old. Then I nightweaned. I went to her when she woke up, held her, sang to her, and told her the nurses were asleep, etc, until she fell back asleep. The first night it was 45 min of crying but I was with her the whole time. She literally started STTN from then on. Now, she still occasionally wakes up at night, I go to her, pat her, adjust blankets, and we are both back asleep in less than 5 min.
I don't think there is a right or wrong. There were many times I thought about nightweaning her before when I did, but it seemed like just when I thought I couldn't take it anymore, she'd go back to only waking once for a while, or I'd realize she was getting teeth, or what have you. If you are currently nursing her fully to sleep, you could work on some gentle ways of getting her to fall asleep on her own (No Cry Sleep Solution is good) as a first step. Although, my LO started falling asleep on her own around 15 months but it didn't improve MOTN wake ups, despite what all the books said.
((hugs)) I know it is so hard. This too shall pass!
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DS2 - Oct 2010 (my VBAC baby!)
We tried CIO, it didn't work and I hated it. I think there's a big misconception that it works for every kid. She was (and is) exceptionally smart. She hit every milestone early, is rarely sick and is pretty easy to parent but she has never been a great sleeper.
I weaned at 16ish months. I wouldn't say it was "baby led" but it wasn't baby resisted if that makes sense. As soon as I dropped her last feeding she started inconsistently STTN and by 18 months was STTN with much more consistency. At 2 she still wakes up occasionally and DH or I bring her into our bed for snuggles or get her water or whatever and she typically goes back to sleep.
We tried bed sharing, co-sleeping, room sharing (separate beds), separate rooms, CIO, sleep lady shuffle, rocking, bouncing...you name it we tried it and nothing really "worked." IMO, she started STTN when she was ready.
I know this isn't really that helpful but it is just a stage and it will pass. It sucks and at the time seems like it's never ending, but it will end and one day your child will STTN and after a few months you'll look back and it won't be a big deal. Promise
Charlotte Ella 07.16.10
Emmeline Grace 03.27.13
My daughter is on the same path I think - 8 months old, no where close to sleeping through the night. The sleep deprivation and lack of free time (going to bed early, holding for naps, etc.) had been SO HARD on me. I have been tempted to sleep train, but I just can't bring myself to do it. I am still in awe every night when my son sleeps through. I know my daughter will get there too eventually and in a few years this will all be a memory.
It is nice to hear the stories although years of not STTN absolutely terrifies me but at least I know that even if I do nothing about it that she will eventually get this on her own.
I think most of her wakeups at the point are comfort based and regarding nursing since my husband is much more likely to let her cry and even when he does respond she often doesn't really want a bottle.
I am not anti-sleep training if it is gentle but I swear that a person's response to a baby crying is biological and that some people just have a higher tolerance for it. I say this because I was completely pro-CIO and sleep training before I had my daughter and it was absoluetly like a light switched once she was born. Her crying absolutely makes me nauseous and sweat - I feel like a caged animal and even when I know it is good for her (I did some very light fuss-it-out for naps at around six months) I end up a pacing wreck. It is seriously a biological response for me. I mean, some people go into it with those values from the beginning but I didn't and it was not until she was here that I realized that I would never be able to handle it.
My other theory about my complete inability to deal with DD crying is that she had severe reflux and colic as a young baby and I spent months trying to get her to NOT cry so purposely leaving her to cry is against everything I have dealt with thus far. It feels like PTSD I swear.
I just don't understand what is so wrong with sleep training? There are gentle ways to do it. Not telling you what to do, of course, just saying.....
There's no way I'd be OK with exhaustion and sleep deprivation for years, as I waited for DS to STTN on his own. Just couldn't do it.
Wanted to respond, I don't think there's anything wrong with sleep training. For me, it's exactly what a previous poster said - a biological response to crying. I just personally CANNOT handle it. My husband is the same or worse. We're hopeless lol. I know other people have higher tolerances, I've seen it in my friends.My son never did "drowsy but awake" as a baby/toddler, we tried, and he would cry so hard he would throw up. It was horrible!! We read Ferber, Weissbluth, and West sleep books and all resulted in too much crying for me. I also read Pantley's books many times and never saw any real results from her techniques.
My son was always a happy thriving baby, so the frequent night waking didn't seem to negatively affect him. Thus, we waited it out. Like I said, did Jay Gordon's night weaning method when he was 26 months and everything improved from there. He did cry during the first two nights of that, but I think because I was pregnant and knew I needed sleep to keep myself and the new baby healthy, I could handle it better or something? Plus he was older and it was easier to explain things to him.
I have been exhausted for years and don't recommend it, but I just feel like I personally am incapable of doing anything else. Now I sound crazy, the lack of sleep has probably caught up to me.
"It is better to light a candle than curse the darkness." - Eleanor Roosevelt
DS is in a twin bed (since about 1 when we were ready to move him to his own room) and I could co-sleep in there with him if it was one of those nights, or let him sleep on his own. It made for a good transition for us from co-sleeping to sleeping on his own.
What's more, it helps me be better rested and stress less about LO's wake-ups. GL!