I wanted to reach out and see what other moms have done for sleep regressions. My baby is 4 1/2 months and used to sleep great. For the last couple weeks though he won't go 3 or 4 hours at night without eating. It used to be every hour until the Merlin Sleep Suit gave us a few more between each feeding. Still it's starting to wear us out... I've tried mixing in cereal with breast milk, formula, being very consistent with naps and nap/bedtime routine, giving him lots of playtime during the day and nothing seems to help. I keep reading that by this age he should be sleeping longer at night. Any advice?? Btw he gets about 3 naps during the day and they're about 45 minutes long. Sometimes I get one good 2 hour one!
Re: 4 Month Sleep Regression
Hang in there!
https://thespinoff.co.nz/parenting/17-01-2017/emily-writes-my-baby-slept-through-the-night-six-times-so-now-im-an-expert-on-getting-your-kid-to-do-that/
I'm not sure this fits with a sleep regression, but my good little sleeper is gone! She is about 5.5 months old now and used to sleep from 8 until 6 every night. Now she has suddenly decided that 4am is the new wake up time, and it has been 5 days of this so it seems to be sticking around. Nothing in her routine has changed, just taking a bigger bottle at bedtime.
My question is, what approach should I take to get her to sleep again? Nursing her worked until last night, so I'm not positive that she is really hungry when waking. I change her if needed, keep lights off. Tried to sooth her in the crib and haven't been rocking her back to sleep. Last night nothing worked and I finally let her cry it out and she was asleep again within 5 minutes after trying everything else for over an hour! (soother, nursing, even gave her a bunny that worked for a few minutes...)
Am I just kinda screwed cause she has been STTN this whole time and now can't self sooth back to sleep? Should I nurse her every time just in case she really is hungry or just suck it up and try to get her back to sleep in her crib even if it takes longer?
Thanks in advance guys!
I went through something similar and we ruled out hungry so ultimately we would just soothe or have him self soothe. Not always the easiest option so I think you have to sometimes take it night by night and see how much strength you have or how tired you are. Sometimes it's just not worth the fight. Also ok to let them cry sometimes and try to figure it out (after you've ruled other things out). My LO has different levels of crying. When he's low level crying/fussing I definitely try to let him work it out on his own for 10-15 minutes. If he does his high pitched banshee scream, i come to his aid and help soothe.
My husband however is starting to suggest more frequently that we put him in the crib for nap time and I'm always the one vetoing the idea. I'm leaving town this weekend, so I have a feeling my husband will attempt to sleep train for naps, since I won't be there to stop it.
I don't really know the specifics of sleep training but I have been tryin to listen to her more. I will let her cry for a few minute intervals, going back in and putting her soother in. But if I have to do it more than 3 times or if the crying is escalating than I take her out and try again in an hour or so and she goes down much easier. When I was trying to get her on a schedule with naps it just ended up stressing us both out, and has been going much better listening to her and paying less attention to the clock. She goes down 2 hours after waking up and I aim for 4 pm at the latest for her last nap and anything in between is just guided by her crankiness level!
Really I'm just making all this up as I go along but it seems to be working for us for now !
Its not perfect and we've experienced regressions especially after we had a major illness (stomach flu then bad cold) So in my experience it's not a one and done type training, but usually we got back on track easily. Recently instead of retraining I put a stuffed animal in his crib and gave him a little piece of a burp cloth he likes to hold onto and it's helped tremendously. He'll play with the toy and hold on to the cloth for comfort until he falls asleep. I picked a toy that I didn't worry about suffocation, and he doesn't get the whole burp cloth. I think the official recommendation is nothing in the crib for the first year, so I was nervous giving him anything. I still worry a little and plan on talking to his pediatrician about it at his 6 month appointment.
My pediatrician friend actually suggested that book for our son. I'll have to look at it.
Thanks!