This is a thread for anyone that has a colicky baby or even just for the ladies that are having a rough day/patch with their LO's to come and vent or look for support to get through it.
My son is 5 almost 6 weeks old and I've been going on two weeks now of him crying all day. I know he is going through a "wonder week" this week and we're hoping now that we switched his formula that it will be better but honestly at this point I'm not very hopeful. I think it's just something he is going to have to outgrow. On Saturday he cried from 8 a.m to about 3 p.m with only two short 30 min naps in between no matter what we did we couldn't calm him. I just walked with him trying to comfort him crying along with him. It's probably the worst feeling in the world not being able to sooth your baby. Makes me feel like I'm a crappy mother and should be better at this. We are going to the doctor today to make sure he doesn't have silent reflux on top of his lactose sensitivity but I don't think he does. He's not showing any signs or symptoms (besides the crying). I think I'm just grasping at straws to point a finger at why he is crying even though I think it's just going to be something he will have to outgrow.
Re: Colicky babies support
Everyone tells me, "It's just temporary, it will all be over by time he is 3 or 4 months," as if that is suppose to make me feel better. Sure, there is a light at the end of the tunnel, but when you are still potentially facing weeks of colic, it can feel pretty bleak.
I know the feeling of desperation very well too, you cling to hope that some remedy or soothing technique will be the miracle cure. It's enough to make you feel defeated at times, especially when something that seems to work for everyone does absolutely nothing for your child. And lord knows I've cried more in the past few weeks than I have in years. I've spent countless hours researching, visiting forums, and talking with people about it. It was to the point that every waking moment I was thinking about it, literally. My world revolved around it, which isn't good.
At this point I will say that my outlook is better and I've given myself enough pep talks (and have received them from loved ones) to know I shouldn't beat myself up. I'm doing the best that I can and, yes, this could go on a while but if we (my son, my husband, and me) take it day by day, we can get through it. I find I'm no longer anxious at night, dreading what tomorrow will bring too. I feel more prepared than I did initially and even if what worked to soothe him yesterday won't work today, the same could be true for the opposite. I do my best not to let the crying and screaming get to me and instead focus on just being close to my son, cuddling with him, playing with him, etc. He might be wailing but at least we're bonding!
I've found that if I do things that I know he and I both enjoy, on top of the million other soothing techniques, then I end up feeling a little better. If that means dancing around and singing like a fool to hits from the 80s and 90s with him in my arms, so be it. Today I took him onto our covered hole of a deck with his boppy lounger, armed with colorful textured balls, my music, and a lemonade and we actually had a good time. He went from an indoor screaming banshee to super chill outside. It was a nice little break. We still do at least one stroller outting if the weather permits, even if it no longer results in guaranteed naps when we get home.
I'm basically in survival mode
I read that it peaks at the 6-8wk point so at least I know it should start to somewhat get better sooner rather than later (hopefully).
My heart goes out to all of you ladies with babies with colic. Ignore the people who tell you "this is just temporary". It doesn't feel temporary when you are the one in the trenches with an inconsolable baby! But do remember that the research says that colicky babies are not hurting or in pain nor do they feel neglected by their caregivers. You all are doing amazing jobs and your babies know how much they are loved.
I wish he would cuddle though, I miss it a lot. I used to just lay him on me and we'd cuddle up for ages. It was great for post-feeds during the night. Not anymore! He doesn't full-blown cry but he definitely fusses, pushes, and kicks. LET ME LOVE YOU, TINY HUMAN! He might do it once in a bluemoon but usually it's with my husband and not me. When he's fussing, he prefers to be up by my shoulder, like your's does, so I try to make a cuddle out of that by wrapping one arm around him as much as possible and resting our heads together. His positioning doesn't always allow for that but I'll take what I can get. He did pass out in my arms the other day and napped for awhile, it was heavenly.
I don't have a solution for nighttime since I have to keep my son upright for awhile too. Since he's milk-drunk/sleepy, I rock him while holding him up at my shoulder for about 15-20mins. I can't figure out another way to do it other than maybe putting him in his boppy lounger or rnp for a bit, which I do during the day, but I'd rather not do that during the night.
I'm gonna look and see if they have that for iPhone. I currently keep my old iPhone in his crib for music because my white noise thing only plays for 45 min.
My son is 7 weeks old and his "witching hour" seems to turn into several hours. He isn't screaming at the top of his lungs but he's definitely fussy and crying despite food, diaper change and holding him. The last couple of days we have noticed that he sounds hoarse when he cries softly. According to dr. Google babies can sound hoarse from crying too much. Anyone else experience this before?
Yeah you cut the tip off and keep cutting it a little shorter each day till they don't like it anymore. Only thing is that I feel like that would make them swallow air.