I have a ten month old daughter that has never really slept through the night. We got her down to waking up once and needing a bottle. But its been hard and the pediatrician insists that this is just a habit and that she doesn't need the calories.
So last week I tried to wean her off of that. I started giving her water instead. It worked for two nights in that she slept through the night but now she does this thing where I put her to bed at 8 and she wakes up around 1-2am. And we can't get her back to sleep. She doesn't want to go in her crib. I will rock her to sleep and the moment I lift her and she thinks she is going into crib, she grabs on to me. I finally caved the other night and had to bring her in bed with me. She fell asleep just fine right next to me! The same thing happened last night.
The hard part is I don't sleep well when she is next to me because I feel like I can't move a muscle all night long. I also don't want to create these habits.
Anyone else experience this? What should I do? I have had no luck with getting her to sleep through the night ever. I haven't done any sleep training by letting her cry it out because honestly I just can't listen to her cry. I'm wondering if I should have done this before. Any thoughts?
Re: Somebody help me with sleep!!
Also- when you put her to sleep at night is she getting put in her crib awake or asleep? You might want to try and see if she can fall asleep on her own if she is getting put in her crib awake- that could help things as well.
Whether that need is food, clean diaper or just cuddles. It's never wrong to meet that need.
Sleeping through the night is some magic milestone but we are not evolved to do this. Even most adults don't sleep all through the night. They just don't remember waking briefly.
It could be baby's natural sleep cycles. There is nothing "wrong" with her natural patterns. It's simply an inconvenience for you.
I'd advise not giving water in lieu of formula. Give her a bottle & put her back to sleep. Ride it out & meet her needs. She will grow out if it.
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With that, we stopped giving a nighttime bottle at 6 months and let her cry it out. Contrary to popular belief, our baby didn't die from crying or wake up the next morning hating and resenting her parents because we let her cry for a short period of time. After 2 nights our little one started going down for bed without a fuss and sleeps through the night for 10-11 hours, no problems. Almost 6 months later and our LO sleeps 10-12 hours a night and if she does wake up during the middle of the night she puts herself back to sleep.
Don't worry about parents that freak out about letting your child cry it out. It doesn't make you a bad parent and it doesn't harm your child. It's mostly resented by parents who think they know better than everyone else.
I did sleep training with my oldest from 2-3 months and by 3 months he was sleeping through the night! BUT, that meant I had to let him cry in the process. For our second child, I HAD to go back to work (for financial reasons) when our daughter was 2-months old and I never got to sleep train her. We are paying for it now.
So, here's what worked for me (and several of my friends as well):
For the first 4-7 days: Let baby cry for 10 whole minutes! (I know. I know. 10 minutes is an eternity when your precious child is screaming; but, if you don't give baby a chance to learn self-soothing, you will be depriving them of a crucial coping mechanism needed for his/her whole life!)
For each additional 3-4 days: Add 2-5 minutes to baby's "cry it out" time. (I never got past 20ish minutes with my little son.)
Where my almost 11-month old daughter is concerned, we are back to struggling some again. I do agree with that other mom who said no hugs. Baby WILL think you are going to pick them up and it will restart the crying cycle every time. I have sat/laid on the floor next to my daughter's crib and calmly told her things like, "I'm not going to pick you up, but Mommy's right here. It's sleepy time. Lay down and go to sleep. I'm right here. Mommy's right here." She eventually calms down and will lay herself down. (And yes, those crocodile tears DO break my heart; but, I remember that if I could have sleep-trained her a long time ago, I wouldn't be sitting on the floor with her now, and that eventually, I won't have to do it anymore (with the exception of illness and teething issues.))
As a teacher, I've seen the negative affects of too much indulgence in older children. Be careful not to let your perfectly normal and natural desire to comfort your crying child kept you from allowing baby to develop self-soothing skills. I promise both of my children still love me and want me around the next day!
Good luck!
I'm glad CIO worked for you. It's great you figured out what you felt was right in your heart and did it.
But choosing to wait will not create monster children.
For the record, I am also a teacher.
You can get your point and opinion across without being so passive aggressive you know?
All pediatricians say that eating in the MOTN after 6 months old is a habit. That's what they are told to say but it's not necessarily true for all babies. There isn't a magical age.
I'm not opposed to letting a baby cry a little while going to sleep but only after they have been fed, have a clean diaper and all their "needs" have been met but they are just tired. If my 9 month old wakes in the night and is screaming for a bottle, I would NEVER ignore her to the point that she gives up and just goes back to sleep. Believe it or not but it is possible that a 9-10 month old still needs a MOTN bottle. Do what works for your family but don't be so nasty to those that have differing opinions. It's unbecoming. Not everyone follows every single thing their pediatrician tells them to do. Instinct goes a long way with parenting.
You certainly are making a lot of assumptions about your students. How could you possibly know what type of indulgence they've received growing up? Wow.
No
No
Just NO to all of this. [-(
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Also, both of my kids never CIO & they are polite little toddlers 85% of the time. So that "indulging your kid will make them brats" business is complete horse shit.
CIO done in a controlled, caring way (not depriving them of food & ignoring their cries) can work for some babies.
"Habits" are not a thing until much later. If a 6 month old wakes during the night they have a need. Full stop. Meet the need & they WILL calm & go back to sleep.
Some kids just have higher needs & different needs. That doesn't make them "bad babies" it means they need their care giver.
Also-- any attachment problems (resentment etc.) may not present as clinical pathology until 10 years old or teen years. Anxiety, depression & lack of trust-- when the brain is flooded with cortisol on a regular basis this actually changes brain chemistry. Because science.
CIO is not inherently The Devil-- it's just like any other parenting method. It's just crazy people that mis-apply the guidelines that cause it to be a possibly harmful fixture in the kid's life.
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Feed the kid.
You wouldn't let them sit in a dirty diaper just to "teach them" would you? No.
Food, clean linens & comfort/cuddling are needs just as much as sleep is. You aren't teaching them anything except "mom won't come when I need her".
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There is literally a study for everything. And most related to sleep training are full of scare tactics and extremes. Letting your baby cry for a short period of time is not going to screw them up. And besides, even if my kids do turn out to be awful adults, do I blame letting them cry at 9 months old for a couple nights or should I blame drinking formula, vaccines, laundry detergent or GMO laden foods? HOW DO I KNOW WHAT CAUSED IT!!!!
Sleep training is the easiest thing to do and is over before you know it. Then everyone is happy and sleeping well. People need to chill. There are bigger problems in this world to worry about.
This is an old thread by the way.
If you feel like it, you can read about my fun at www.buildingmomentousmoments.blogspot.com
Well recently, that bottle stopped knocking him out and I realized my baby can't self soothe, he's never had to.
We just started CIO, pure hell, but it seems to be working. We're only on day 3, but already we've gotten away from the night feeding, and the crying is down to around 8 minutes from the initial hour for the bedtime, and only 3 minutes or so if he wakes in the middle of the night.
I never wanted to do it, but nothing else was working.
**** Formerly Snoflakes4eva****