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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Cry it out method... do people still do this?

133 replies

gonewithtthewind · 12/06/2023 09:08

I'm NOT a cry it out parent, if whoever does it with their child wants to, that's fine... not my lane. But why when you don't use the Cry it out method do people have something to say?

I still contact nap, I love it and my baby will go down in her cot. I don't co-sleep.

When it gets the witching hour she can be difficult to put in her cot, but I just assumed that was to do with the witching.

I've posted about my MIL before. And she tells me to just leave her to cry and she will go to sleep, she says my SIL does it with her two children and it works so I should do the same! I feel like I'm doing everything wrong, it's so awful. I don't know if I'm just being unreasonable or what, I've cut contact for now but it's not my family so it can be tough.

OP posts:
Forestfriendlygarden · 14/06/2023 12:49

QueenoftheNimbleFlyingCat · 14/06/2023 12:18

Yep, being a mother seems very damned if you do and damned if you don't.

BBC News - Crying-it-out 'harms baby brains'

BBC News - Crying-it-out 'harms baby brains'

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/8636950.stm

ColonelDax · 14/06/2023 13:50

Wow, the words 'some', 'could' and 'may' are doing a hell of a lot of heavy lifting in that article from 2010 which seems to focus around a self described 'parenting expert' trying to sell her book.

🙄

Forestfriendlygarden · 14/06/2023 14:14

ColonelDax · 14/06/2023 13:50

Wow, the words 'some', 'could' and 'may' are doing a hell of a lot of heavy lifting in that article from 2010 which seems to focus around a self described 'parenting expert' trying to sell her book.

🙄

Dr. Penelope Leach is a grandmother of many with many many years experience in child development as well as a solid background in research.

She is by no means 'self-proclaimed' she is international recognised as extremely skilled and knowledgeable in her field.

Lelliekellie · 14/06/2023 14:30

I have twins. I’ve never tried the cry it out method as I’m a sucker and feel mean. I settle my two for naps and at bedtime. Bedtime can take an hour to get them to sleep (from reading them stories to actual sleep time). But they sleep form 9pm - 7:30am and only wake occasionally and generally go straight back down.

part of me wishes they would just be put in bed and then that’s it’s. But they’re 2.5 now I figure at some point they won’t want me. So while they do I’m here 🤷🏽‍♀️

SouthLondonMum22 · 14/06/2023 14:39

ColonelDax · 14/06/2023 13:50

Wow, the words 'some', 'could' and 'may' are doing a hell of a lot of heavy lifting in that article from 2010 which seems to focus around a self described 'parenting expert' trying to sell her book.

🙄

Exactly.

Also no mention of how poor the study is which claims it can cause brain damage. The data used case studies from Child Protective Services which is the US social services and the children involved had all experienced actual neglect.

stunning71 · 14/06/2023 14:54

Contact napping ! controlled crying ! Sleep training ! 🤣 sorry but why do we need all these terms for things that people have been doing with their children since time began ?
Do what works for you and nobody else ! You are the parent and every child is different and what works for you won’t work for someone else !

QueenoftheNimbleFlyingCat · 14/06/2023 14:57

Not sure why you sent that to me? I have already said that I have never and would never do CIO or controlled crying.

I was responding to PP saying there is unsolicited advice for everything!

SammyScrounge · 14/06/2023 14:58

gonewithtthewind · 12/06/2023 09:08

I'm NOT a cry it out parent, if whoever does it with their child wants to, that's fine... not my lane. But why when you don't use the Cry it out method do people have something to say?

I still contact nap, I love it and my baby will go down in her cot. I don't co-sleep.

When it gets the witching hour she can be difficult to put in her cot, but I just assumed that was to do with the witching.

I've posted about my MIL before. And she tells me to just leave her to cry and she will go to sleep, she says my SIL does it with her two children and it works so I should do the same! I feel like I'm doing everything wrong, it's so awful. I don't know if I'm just being unreasonable or what, I've cut contact for now but it's not my family so it can be tough.

Leaving a baby to cry verges on cruel in my opinion.It makes them insecure and then they cry more. I think you have the right idea and it's working for you.
In the end your MIL' s opinion or mine or anybody else 's is irrelevant. What goes on between you and your baby should be settled between you, not anyone else. Stand by your own instincts.

.

Forestfriendlygarden · 14/06/2023 15:09

QueenoftheNimbleFlyingCat · 14/06/2023 14:57

Not sure why you sent that to me? I have already said that I have never and would never do CIO or controlled crying.

I was responding to PP saying there is unsolicited advice for everything!

Oh dear. Just general info must have clicked wrong link.

Hollyppp · 14/06/2023 15:27

kernowpicklepie · 12/06/2023 15:06

I haven't done any form of sleep training because children don't need to learn how to sleep, they already know how to.
My DD started sleeping through the night at 12 months, my DS is 5 months and wakes twice a night.
We contact nap, co-sleep and respond whenever they need us.
All babies get there in their own time.

Never feel bad for doing what works for you. They don't need to be left to cry for them to sleep.
If you find yourself doubting what you're doing then check out these Instagram accounts for information on normal infant sleep:
Fox and the Moon Infant Sleep
Little Nest Sleep
Second Star to the Right
Hey Sleepy Baby
Lyndsey Hookway

This!!

I would also add join The Beyond Sleep Training Project on facebook, such a good group for those who are not up for cry it out

Lavellan · 14/06/2023 19:41

It's hard sometimes to listen to people struggle with terrible broken sleep, and they even ask for help, but they feel there is no answer because they have written off all sleep training. It's hard to see your friends go through that, sleep deprivation turns them into a shell of a person.

Staceyp788 · 14/06/2023 21:32

I think it's important to remember that we are the only mammals that are expected to sleep alone. Sleeping alone is something that will come developmentally. Having said that...whilst I tried the cry it out method with mine, I found that just letting them fall into their own routines was much better for them. They would play till they fell asleep and I would carry them to bed. And at night they were in bed roughly by 9 and would sleep through till 9. We only introduced a bedtime when they stopped napping in the day and they would go to bed peacefully at 7:30 because they were naturally tired and not because we enforced it. Every child is different and the most important thing is that they are healthy and happy. Stop worrying about what others do, and concentrate on the health and wellbeing of you and your baby. You are doing a fantastic job 👏

Chicichic · 14/06/2023 22:28

Hey!!! Registered here only because of your comment- that's just me! My bf baby 2 years old(march) wakes every 2-3 hours, randomly 4 hours stretch can give. Since birth like this and no sleep training changed that pattern! Only made it so much worse for 3 months while I was trying sleep fake training. Just to realise I better sleep these 2 hours!!than go full on waking with settling resettling omg gosh what's not doing. No thank you. And then reading comments like:" I sleep train all my 5 kids slept in their own room sinve they crawled out of my vulva and i know ppl who didnt sleep train and they still soothe their high needs babies in age 9. Or 11"Ooh Just shut up you ve got lucky, a kid that sleeps, enjoy the Biscuit.
I hope you find your peace! With love, other always on a nightshift lone heart mum.

Newnamenewname109870 · 15/06/2023 11:41

Lavellan · 14/06/2023 19:41

It's hard sometimes to listen to people struggle with terrible broken sleep, and they even ask for help, but they feel there is no answer because they have written off all sleep training. It's hard to see your friends go through that, sleep deprivation turns them into a shell of a person.

I’ve been that person and trust me, my friend banging on about sleep training being the answer really doesn’t help. You’ve got to realise that the mum guilt and desire not to do that goes deeper than lack of sleep.

Lavellan · 15/06/2023 12:28

Newnamenewname109870 · 15/06/2023 11:41

I’ve been that person and trust me, my friend banging on about sleep training being the answer really doesn’t help. You’ve got to realise that the mum guilt and desire not to do that goes deeper than lack of sleep.

Yeah that's why I just don't reply in the group chats. I only talk about sleep if I'm directly asked what I did, then I tell the truth.

I wanted to offer an explanation why it can be hard to stay quiet, it can be for the best of intentions but when nerves are frayed it can feel like an attack.

Splishsploshsplash · 15/06/2023 12:54

We let both of ours have a bit of a whinge but never outright crying (except the below). If they didn’t settle within 5 minutes one of us was in there picking them up.

The only time I ever did CIO was when DS (5 months at the time) lost it one night. He screamed for two hours straight and nothing worked - not feeding, not rocking, not burping, nothing. In the end he was arching away like he didn’t want us there so we put him down. He kept screaming but after about eight minutes he went to sleep. We hardly slept all night. We thought we had broken him…. He woke up happy as anything. I still don’t know what happened that night but I think putting him down was ultimately the right thing to do. He was over stimulated and beside himself.

Baba197 · 15/06/2023 13:40

orangie · 12/06/2023 09:17

I sometimes wish I could do some sort of sleep training because my 2 year old still wakes throughout the night wanting milk; she is breastfed.

I haven't had one nights 'full' sleep in the two years. I am drained. Just lucky I'm a sahm otherwise I'd be dead 😀 I think she wakes 2-3 hourly.

I am hanging on to the hope that one day she will sleep through and also won't be in our bed forever...

There is hope- this was my son, woke lots in the night and only milk would soothe him, he finally started sleeping better at 4 after having tonsils removed (sleep apnea) and supplementing his iron intake as he was very low. He still has the odd bad news got when ill etc and the next day I honestly wonder how I got through those 4yr with very little sleep!!

Baba197 · 15/06/2023 13:41

Bad night even!!

Baba197 · 15/06/2023 13:43

We contact napped, Co-slept etc and people were always commenting. You do you and what suits you both. If mil makes comments just smile and move the chat on. If persists just say we are doing what works for us. Personally I didn’t want to let mine cry it out and was happy to stay with him but it isn’t for everyone

Newnamenewname109870 · 15/06/2023 16:03

Baba197 · 15/06/2023 13:40

There is hope- this was my son, woke lots in the night and only milk would soothe him, he finally started sleeping better at 4 after having tonsils removed (sleep apnea) and supplementing his iron intake as he was very low. He still has the odd bad news got when ill etc and the next day I honestly wonder how I got through those 4yr with very little sleep!!

How did you know about the bad iron?

Newnamenewname109870 · 15/06/2023 16:04

Lavellan · 15/06/2023 12:28

Yeah that's why I just don't reply in the group chats. I only talk about sleep if I'm directly asked what I did, then I tell the truth.

I wanted to offer an explanation why it can be hard to stay quiet, it can be for the best of intentions but when nerves are frayed it can feel like an attack.

The issue is I find I’m not ever allowed to say I’m tired or it’ll come up as well have you tried this?
no, I’m just tired. I’m fine with it this way.

Poesy88 · 15/06/2023 16:32

Oh same! Do you cosleep? Have you got any plans to try and change the situation? My boy turned 2 last week and is exactly the same as yours. Don't know how to approach it!

GC1 · 15/06/2023 19:08

Your 5 month old is perfectly fine. Witching hour is just that!! I used to bath my son during that time he's 8 months now. It happens too every child. Honestly you know it coming and it's horrible but it doesn't last forever. Cuddles and try other things I don't like crying it out especially at such a young age they don't understand it. I changed my sons routine to fit around it again so that's when he'd get a bath and bottle so it kept it minimum we got it down to a 15 min cry and I'd do half of it then pass to partner. So it's not just me stuck with screaming in my ear.. some nights he'd only want one of us the whole time that's fine too. Just ride the wave. Nothing stops it try work round it. My sons sleep 9pm till 9am every night aince he was 4 weeks old and everyone told me I was doing everything wrong. Honestly I wouldn't have changed my way of doing any of it. I also found cuddling him in our bed just for that time helped with Netflix on until he was settled worked too. Don't tell people what your doing it only opens up for unwanted shine from people. Xxx hope this helps and in the moment you feel guilty and like a shot mum.... your not! Good luck xxx

Flufferz · 16/06/2023 09:50

Ahh yes every mums group I’m in… “ahhh DC doesn’t sleep, how awful, poor you, I’m so lucky mines a great sleeper” “oh but I did sleep train” then said mum goes on to spend a good 5 mins justifying why she sleep trained which in its self leads me to believe they too don’t actually agree with it. Usually followed on with “well if you don’t teach them to self settle they will NEVER EVER sleep!

The BBC did an article on it where it followed research that showed sleep trained babies wake up as much as not sleep trained babies they just don’t bother crying as they know no one is coming… how incredibly sad that babies have already learnt that their parents don’t give a s**t and aren’t coming! How is that affecting them and their little personalities. Funnily enough it’s only even a thing in the UK and USA, every other nation accepts that children need looking after overnight too, it seems to be a thing now that parents only want to parent at times that are convenient to them.

My daughter is 8 months, sleeps through the night in her cot in her own room 8:30pm - 8:30am. If she stirs in the night she can “self settle”. It hasn’t always been like this till 6 months she was waking every 2 hours and would take an hour to go down at bedtime, at 3months the witching hour went on till 1:30am it has been very very hard.

My daughter has learnt to sleep by knowing that it is safe in her cot, in her room. If she needs something, anything, mummy comes. Even if that something is just a cuddle to help her feel safe… how many cry it out mums lay in bed snuggled up to their partners whilst ignoring their baby crying for that same comfort.

I am so incredibly proud of myself that I ignored all the (very loud) voices telling me I was wrong and making a rod for my own back. I know I have made the right decision and both me and my daughter are happier for it.

Keep going Mama you’re doing an incredible job and I hear ya that it’s f’ing hard!