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What worked for us. Hope this helps.

870 replies

nectarina · 29/01/2012 21:03

This post is going to be massive - no apologies however.

So I've posted at least 5 queries about DD's sleep and read about 1 billion threads, because DD only napped for 30mins  in the day, would only BF to sleep (since a newborn I wanted to get out of the habit, but nothing else did it). She spent  the first 5 months in her cot, only for us to end up co-sleeping so we could get a bit of rest. She would BF every 2 hours at  least in the night, and by the end she'd wake every half hour before we went to bed. I knew I couldn't do CC/CIO, I'm not  strong enough even if I thought that was the right thing to do, but I thought that I would be forced to if things carried on  the way they were.

We read No Cry Sleep Solution, which is complicated and didn't work for us.

So a friend had tried a technique, that she recommended and I thought that it was too much of a leap for DD, but i kept  the email, and one evening I sort of snapped and decided that IT WAS TIME. DD was  8 1/2months. I don't know from  what age this technique is recommended, but I don't think I'd have wanted to do this earlier, as you still have to cope with  the baby crying. I knew DD was ready because now she quite clearly has two cries - one properly sad and scared, the  other a bit shouty and put on, so when doing this technique you know what's going on (but I'd like to add that I still  comforted DD when she was shouty - she's still trying to say something, but I deÞ nitely wouldn't pick her up and panic!)

 I'll paste her email to me, hoping she won't mind. We didn't do it in the ten days, as it was just a bit too much, but i wonder if the way we did it made things a bit complicated. So I recommend doing it as laid out.  

But now DD takes 20mins to fall asleep by herself (with one of us in her room) in her cot, in her room. and I do not feed at  all between 7pm and 7am. Dh goes in in the night and he gives her water in case she's thirsty but she's quite happy  without. It takes him no more than about 3mins to resettle her (unless ill).

After starting this at the beginning of January  she still wakes up once or twice a night but it doesn't affect me as I wear earplugs and DH goes in! ha ha ha! (I still hear  her and wake up, but I don't wake up fully and find it difFicult to go back to sleep) Do I need to tell you how I feel like a  different woman?

So here's the email -  

^"Ok, this is a plan thing that we first tried with dc1 when we got to the point where we knew something had to change. There seems to come a point where not only do you get tired of 'helping' your baby get to sleep, but whatever you do seems to work less and less - as if they know something has to change too! It takes a bit of work for about ten days or so but mostly the first couple of days you really put your back into it and then it gets easier. I remember vaguely doing it with dc1 and have just rediscovered it with Dc2 she is a bit of a firecracker so I was expecting trouble but babies love to learn something new, especially around this age and she only woke once last night despite having a cold, which is a HUGE improvement. Dc1 found this very easy and never shed a tear. Dc2 screamed 'TRAITOR!!' at me many times during the first night (she does that a lot), so I'm not saying that there won't be some crying because you will be doing something different to before but you don't have to leave her side and can reassure her as much as you need to, physically and verbally. 
The idea is that you are no longer going to help her go to sleep - in whatever way - if you rock her, feed her, jiggle her, whatever it is. You can be there and reassure her but it is no longer your job to MAKE her go to sleep. It is your job to support her whilst she does it herself. 
First of all, you know that thing that everyone says about having a bedtime routine (which I imagine you already have) is utterly true. By the time they are a toddler, the sound of a running bath is enough to set the bedtime clock going. When you choose to do this thing, it is really important to stick to your bedtime routine without fail for the ten days and it needs to be between 20 and 45 minutes long. Also, this plan also applies to naps, so you need to be able to be at home for naptimes - just until Dd has the thing established - ten days usually does it. Lastly, you are aiming for Dd to be in bed by 7ish in the evening and not much later. If you're like me you're knackered by about half four, so starting bedtime at a quarter past six is no trouble. You've probably done all that so on to the plan. I'll do bedtimes first and then naps. 

Day 1, 2 and 3 - Place a chair right next to the cot. Make it a comfortable chair, you may get to know it fairly well. Have a duvet, cushions, iphone, book to hand. Do your bedtime routine and put Dd in the cot awake. She may well not know what to do next and try all sorts of things. If she stands up you can gently pop her back down again but only a few times - if she insists on standing for a bit then let her - it may just be one of those things she incorporates into her own burgeoning routine, and I daresay she is capable of getting back down again by now. You can pat the bed to let her know you want her to lie down. Sooner or later she is likely to sit down for a bit and eventually plop on to her front. She has to find her own way through this so she may try eating her blanket or playing with a toy before she lies down - that's up to her. If she cries, you can pat her and speak to her. As long as you remember that your patting and comforting is not there to get her to sleep, just to help her calm down in this new and confusing situation so as soon as she starts to settle, lighten your touch with a view to taking your hand off her, and stop speaking. She may go back and forth a bit needing you to touch and speak to her a few more times, but each time lessen your touch when she has settled. Stay there until she has fallen fast asleep and creep out. This bit can take ten minutes for some babies, but most fall asleep after 45 minutes. Two hours is the longest on record! I expected Dc2 to be a two hour effort but no - 45 minutes almost exactly. As long as you know that it is going to take that long, you can get through it. When she wakes up in the night, you do exactly the same thing, each and every time. The first few times she wakes, she will probably yell for you, but as she gets the idea that she can drift back to sleep herself, she may just squeak and go back (sounds unlikely? I thought that too.) The idea is that as time goes on you can wait a tiny bit longer before you go in, to give her the opportunity to practise her new skill.

Days 4, 5 and 6 - move the chair a few feet away from the cot. Keep everything else the same except you are further away. Once you have had your bedtime cuddle and put her in the cot sit down. You can still go to her if she really needs you, and you can still speak to her but she may not need as much help by now. Again, wait until she is asleep before you leave. Repeat as often as necessary when she wakes although, again, leave it a few minutes before you go in.

Days 7, 8 and 9 - move the chair to the door or the other side of the room. Make sure she can still see you, but once you have settled her in her cot and gone to the chair try not to go to her unless she has got herself into a daft position and can't get out. By now she will start developing her own strategy to get to sleep, and you will be able to tell what stage she is at, because you've been watching it all the way through.

Day 10 - you have several choices. If you think things are going really well and baby can cope with you not being there  you can leave the room and see how she gets on. You can hover by the door out of sight and watch what happens, and  reassure her with your voice. If you feel apprehensive about it and think she needs longer you can try the Bustle -  instead of sitting down, tinker about in her room, cleaning up or folding washing or whatever. Or you can continue in the  chair.  The idea of the plan is ultimately for you to be able to plonk and go, but I quite like spending that extra time with DC so I  use a mixture of the bustle and the chair. For night wakings you now really have to give her the chance to go back on her  own. Wait ten minutes ( I know - such a long time!) before you go in.  I got up last night to Þ nd by the time I got to DC's  door, she'd already curled up again! That's the main brunt of it. Just bear in mind that the first couple of nights are the worst - she might wake more frequently,  but stick at it and you'll see an improvement. The other thing is that when they start sleeping longer in the night they get  up properly a bit too early in the morning - but this usually improves over a few weeks as they get the hang of sleeping.  I've kind of assumed that you are going to move her into her own room - there's no reason you can't start this as soon as  you move her in. If DC get ill and it disrupts her sleep, go back to whichever stage in the plan you think works best. You can sleep in her  room if you want to keep an eye on her, but don't bring her in with you.

Naps - Do the same for naps as you do at night times only you can't sit there for as long as it takes - give it an hour and if  she hasn't gone to sleep, get her up and feed her or do something different and try again a bit later. If she resists  napping like this twice in a day you can resort to taking her out in the buggy or something. just so she gets a bit of sleep  in the day. You are aiming at two solid naps a day by the way. If you've started this thing at bedtime the night before, the  nap thing is usually not a problem.  I can't think of anything else right now! By the way this is based on a Canadian lady's idea. I chose to use it because it  doesn't mean leaving a baby to cry. They learn to fall asleep without you intervening, although you might argue that your  presence is a sort of intervention, but before long you will find yourself saying goodnight and shutting the door, because  she'd not taking any notice of you anymore!" ^


So for us the First night it took 3 hours 10mins, which is why for nightwakings later on that night I just fed her instead of  sitting with her. Within the first few nights she woke LOADS less and then DH would go to her and he would just ask her  to put her head down and she would and go straight back to sleep. Needless to say that sort of thing just wouldn't  happen before. So if I remember rightly it was only after 4 or 5 nights that I stopped feeding her. The other thing we've  found a bit hard is waiting a few mins before going in to her when she wakes. We just give it one or two minutes more  than we'd usually do instead of waiting 10.  

DH would like to add that he thinks the important thing is to teach DC to put their head down and close their eyes - he  says' put your head down, put your head down, now close your eyes' and repeats it a bit like a mantra gently until DD  does, and then stops as soon as she does what he says. He says for our 9month old that after a week she knows what it  means and does what he suggests! He says that this is useful in the night and that's all he needs to do to get her to go back to sleep.

For the first night I recommend a large glass of wine that you take in with you. For the second night, have  the bottle waiting for you on the table in the lounge. Also on the first night we both did it together for a bit of moral  support and took it in turns but I'm assuming that none of you is as much as a wimp as I am.

I hope this isn't too much of a mess, my friend's writing is very clear, and mine is all over the shop. I'm just a bit  enthusiastic about how its gone. I hope this is of use to someone.

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confusedduck86 · 16/02/2012 21:52

I just want to say thanks for this thread! 2 weeks ago i was waking up every hour as was co-sleeping and my son got into the habit of having a few sips of water and a cuddle. Anyway, i followed this and it has worked fabulously :). I hated the thought of seeing/hearing him cry but the most he ever cried for was 15 mins. I now sit with him in his room for a few mins and then leave and he goes to sleep a few mins after. He has woke up at most 4 times, but i just move him into the position he likes, put his muslin over him and leave and he's asleep again within a couple of mins :). It's changed him as he is happy to go to bed and i now get some decent sleep as he's going from 8-6ish. He's 8 months now and so glad i tried this!

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KittyBump · 16/02/2012 21:53

hi everyone, thanks for the encouragement. I have tried again tonight, she protested but went to sleep after about 5 minutes!!! And has been asleep for nearly 2 hours, this is amazing for us! I thought after I gave in last night it would be harder as she would know that I would pick her up eventually if she persevered but I really shouldn't jump to the worse case scenario before even trying.
When she wakes up i will try to resettle without picking her up and see how it goes. Good luck to everyone else x

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multicolourcat · 17/02/2012 05:43

Going to start this tonight, or tomorrow. I just wanted to ask a question before we start. DD for the last 4 nights has coslept with me becuase the night wakings became unbearable - we have never coslept before. Is it fair to refuse to cosleep tonight, alongside asking her to self settle? I am thinking yes, might be a very disrupted nights sleep for us all but I don't want her to get used to cosleeping. Thanks. x

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confusedduck86 · 17/02/2012 07:45

I dont know about anyone else but we'd been co-sleeping for 3 months so i thought the first few nights were going to be awful and especially as he'd be in a new room aswell. The first night it only took 15 mins of crying and he soon learnt that i wasnt going to pick him up, just pat him and sing to him. The first few days he did wake up about 3-4 times and took about 10 mins of crying/patting/singing, but 2 weeks on and he's so much better. It might be hard to start with but everyone i've spoke to say most get the idea in a few days.

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tootiredtothinkofanickname · 17/02/2012 09:33

Another amazing night here, 7.30 to 5, up for a bottle then settled after 30 mins and asleep until 6.30.

Multicolourcat, I don't think co-sleeping will make it harder, not much harder anyway. It's only been for a few nights. The way I see it, we will "have to" co-sleep again in the future, when the LOs are poorly for example, I think that as long as they are used with their cots and self-settling it will be ok.

Kitty, well done, how did the rest of the night go?

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multicolourcat · 17/02/2012 09:42

wow, well done tootired , it's really good to hear your progress - spurs me on to start this. 7.30 til 5am exists only in my dreams! I'm going to start tonight, getting in the wine, chocolate and a cosy chair with cushions and preparing to camp out in her room! She is a little firecracker to be honest, with a scream and a half, so i think we might have a battle on tonight! I'll let you know how we do Grin Going to spend hte whole day psyching myself!! x

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KittyBump · 17/02/2012 19:39

It's so encouraging to hear everyone's progress :) we had a brilliant night! DD sleep 2 hours till 10pm then DH went to her, he settled her within 5 minutes by rubbing her tummy (he has never settled her before!) then she slept till 1am, DH went to her again but she was really distressed this time, he gave it a few minutes then came to get me, he said he could hear her stomach gurgling. I got her out and fed her and I was seriously considering not putting her back in the cot. I did put her back and she murmured a bit then went to sleep! Shock she then slept till 5.15am ( I can count on one hand the amount of nights she has done a 4/5 hour stretch!) she settled herself then properly woke up at 5.30am so I brought her in with me and we had another hour. All in all a fantastic night!
She has had her MMR today though so we shall see what tonight brings. DH thought we shouldn't do it again tonight but she has been fine all day so I thought we should give it a go.
Hope it goes well mcc mine's a screamer too but it does seem to be working!

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ebmummy · 18/02/2012 05:08

Well, night 1 and so far not to good. Ds got up at 4am for usual bf and was at a quandry as to what to do-just give him milk or start the night weaning. So decided on the latter-which I'm kind of regretting now. 1 hour on and he's still not settled. Dh has given up and gone to sleep in the spare room. Ds's alternating between fury and being genuinely upset-suffice to say am feeling really shit. After an hour of crying, offered him water which I don't know was a mistake or not-just thought he might be thirsty. Feel terrible for inflicting this misery on the poor little mite. Also hate dh for being so unsupportive :(

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KittyBump · 18/02/2012 07:06

ebmummy what had the night been like up till 4am? Are you trying to eliminate all feeds at once? Sorry you aren't getting help from your DH, mine has been saying for ages that we need to let DD CIO but I knew I wouldn't do that. Now we are doing this much gentler technique he is questioning whether this is too upsetting!? I never thought it would be me advocating sleep training!
Our night wasn't as good but this may be down to DD having her MMR jabs yesterday. I ended up bringing her in with me at 4.40am this was her 4th waking and it was getting harder to settle her at each one. Oh well let's see what tonight brings x

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1Catherine1 · 18/02/2012 09:41

Morning all,

ebmummy, shame your OH is so unsupportive. If I were you I would make him do all the get ups till he gets the point - armed with a bottle ofc Wink. The threat is usually enough to put them in their place.

I'm not sure about the night weaning at the same time. For me it is a nightly judgement call. Is it habit or is she hungry? Only you know.

Night 8 last night. She slept from 7:30 till 5am when she woke up hungry so I fed her and she went back down till 6:30. She woke a few other times too but self soothed.

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multicolourcat · 18/02/2012 09:51

Good morning.

A bit of a mixed night here, but pretty good on the whole. I was so nervous before bedtime that I had a big glass of wine for strength! She took 40mins to go down, she did cry but not horrendously. Initially she kept standing up and crying andI would put her back to lying, but in the end I actually didn't just sit in the chair, but leant over the cot and kept my hand on her back, with a bit of force so she would lie down and everytime she tried to pull up I would say 'lie down, close your eyes' and push a little. This isn't cheating is it? I thought I would keep my hand on her back for 3 nights and then move away to the side of the cot and then to the chair - just that she is VERY clingy at the moment, a bit of separation anxiety going on I think. So, she settle like this about 40 mins,by 8pm and then woke at 12.20. I went in and she went crazy, as normally at this time i take her and cosleep, so in the end DP came in and was with her until 2am. She cried ALOT, really alot, and i wan't sure if we were doing the right thing Confused but decided it is now or never. Then she slept until the morning and I woke her at 7am and she seemed a bit grumpy with me :( . So, a good night really. I think the 2 til 7 sleep was maybe due to the horrible amount of crying that must have exhausted her :( I did hear her wake a couple of times and let out a little cry but she settled her self straight away.

This morning it took 20mins to settle her for her nap, and i did the same, keeping my hand on her back...this is ok, isn't it? I don't want top be defeating the object, but i am not rubbing or anyhting to help her sleep, literally just restraining her holding her down.

eb I am angry with your DP. DOn't know what to suggest, but he is being selfish.

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ebmummy · 18/02/2012 10:02

DS actually went from 7pm to 4am when he woke and the dramatics started. So could it have been that he was hungry? He was refusing to settle-took till 5.30 am when he slept till 6.30 am. He woke and was smiling at me in his cot when I went into his room though, so hopefully he's not too cross with me. I actually think it was cos he was hungry, and feel shit for not just bfing him, and putting him down when he woke at 4am. And when I put him down for his nap at 9.30, he cried when I left him, which he never does, he goes to sleep on his own during the day. So it's a mixed bag for me tbh.

Went for his 12month development check with the HV yesterday, and she said I should stop feeding him at night cos it will carry on through his toddlerdom. But his weight's dropped from 91st to 75th (which I know is still good), but he's seriously off his food during the days. So on the one hand don't want him to go hungry, but on the other, need to get some sanity into my life.

multi, yeah am pretty pissed cross with dh but you know what, I just want to get on with it now with as least fuss to DS as possible. Tired of moaning at him to help cos that saps my extra energy reserves which are severely depleted at the mo! xx

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tootiredtothinkofanickname · 18/02/2012 12:22

Hi everyone, I have to dash but just wanted to say to ebmummy that I also think going cold turkey on night feeding as well as doing sleep training (I hate the word!) could be a bit too much and puts a lot of pressure both on you and your DS. Maybe try to feed a bit less on each side each night? Although I am so sorry you get no support from your DH, you must be shattered. And night weaning a baby without his support is very hard, since your DS associates you with feeding... As for the HV, most of them will say that, but just go with your instinct. Some babies stop feeding at night even before 6 months, some others after 1, etc. I'm rambling but what I'm trying to say is that if you feel it's habit, then night weaning is the way to go, but if you think it's hunger then don't feel guilty for feeding at night still.

Multicolour, I'm sure keeping your hand on your DD is fine, if not touching her at all isn't working, then you're doing the right thing.

We had a so-so night, DS woke up twice before his feed at 4.30, didn't self settle but it only took me a couple of minutes to settle him each time. So not too bad, but not as good as the previous 2 nights. Tomorrow morning is my lie-in though, looking forward to it :)

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cmm · 19/02/2012 20:31

Hi

Can I join your thread and ask Your thoughts?! I have a little boy nearly 8 months. My little girl, now 5, was awful sleeping but did have a dummy and although bf too wasn't as reliant on the boob!!!!

My little boy slept well till 4 months and then been getting progressively worse, now the normal is every 20-40 mins evening and then each hour or more through the night, bf back to sleep each time! I know it's a habit now! He isn't that great on his food during the day but doesn't bf to sleep during the day or havr too many sleeps or bfs.

Been reading through your thread and know from chatting to friends and how tired I am I need to try and improve my little boys sleep (and ours!)

Had a friend who did gradual withdrawal successfully but her boy was older than this. Just tried first night now and one hour later he was still hysterically crying and kept choking and coughing!!!! I can't bear to see it although I know the sleep deprivation is awful too. Ended up popping him back on quickly but pulled him off before asleep and he has now settled (although annoyed I have given in)

Any thoughts and inspiration welcome! I know everyone has different views and what works for one not another.. Everything can be cracked at some point but it would be good if I could sort this!

Thankyou x

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nectarina · 19/02/2012 21:35

Cmm - try it again tomorrow night and see if its any easier. Even if he's crying less hysterically it means you're going in the right direction. If you feel its too much, do what you need to to calm ds. He will get the idea and then the hang of it. Sending you some courage.

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cmm · 19/02/2012 21:50

Thanks necterina, that's so lovely of you to respond quickly and with lovely words too! Will try again tomorrow xxx

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KittyBump · 19/02/2012 21:57

Well I can hardly believe I'm typing this but last night my DD slept through!!! As I said before she has only slept for a 5 hour stretch 3 times in her life and last night she slept 8pm till 7.05am. It is an actual miracle. I heard her making a few noises around midnight and thought she was stirring but she self settled, then same again around 5ish.

Thank you so much for this thread, having a method spelt out for me gave me the confidence to try. I think DD was ready for this and that's why it has worked so well for us. (I know its only one night but honestly I thought this would take months for us to sort out).


cmm i hope tonight is better for you. My DD's feeding was similar, I kept thinking, 'she'll drop milk feeds as she starts eating more' but I think with some babies it is the other way round - i.e. they'll only be more interested in food when they aren't full to the gunnels on milk!

I don't have much advice, my DD was cosleeping and waking regularly all the way up to 14 months, she may have been ready for moving into her cot earlier and i was too tired and scared to try it but only maybe a month or so earlier. All I can say is I have stressed about our sleeping situation endlessly since DD first wouldn't go in her hospital bassinet, then moses basket, then cot but it has turned out ok and there are no rods for my back here!

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1Catherine1 · 19/02/2012 22:35

Another success here. My DD slept from 7:30pm to 6:45am last night. I was very impressed. That is within 9 days. She is still taking between 10 and 20 minutes to settle most nights and I can't move more than a foot away from her until she is asleep. I'm also having to sing to her to get her to settle. I'm happy with the progress though.

Cmm - it will get easier. My first night I was up and down stairs every hour, with 30 minute screaming sessions each time, until I gave up at 3am and co-slept for the rest of the night. The next night she woke every other hour. One night this week she was teething quite badly, (I could tell she was in real pain) so I fed her back to sleep twice. This method is great but you may well have to adapt it slightly, for your own sanity. Just be consistent and it will work out - eventually.

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cmm · 20/02/2012 03:13

That's so great to hear people making progress! Thanks for the words of advice!!! It's given me the courage to try again and hope each time slightly better! Will keep in touch.x

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multicolourcat · 20/02/2012 07:58

we've had a good couple of nights. Night 2 she went down in about 30mins and then woke just once at 12.20 and settled in about 30 mins. Last night, night 3 DD was put into her cot at 7.40 and settled by 8 and then SLEPT THROUGH until 5.20. Amazing, i can't believe it! I actually woke at 4.30 and started panicking if she was ok, and DP has to stop me from going in to check! Only problem is, she wouldn't resettle so had to start the day then. I think if she wakes at that time, she feels far too refreshed to go back to sleep again. Has anyone else had these early wake ups and found any solutions?

I have been keeping my hand on her back for these last 3 nights, no patting or stroking, but just so she can feel my presence, and so tonight is night 4 and I am going to move my hand away and just stand at the side of the cot instead, so we'll see how that goes! Fingers crossed. Once again, thanks so much for this thread. xxx

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nectarina · 20/02/2012 09:34

multicolouredcat
we had lots of early wakings that seemed to sort themselves out after a week or so. I wouldn't worry about it. Enjoy the peace!

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weedoll · 20/02/2012 19:03

Ok back from our hotel break and delighted to be reading these success stories! Ds has been moved into his own room (kept the dummy!) and set the timer for how long he would take to go to sleep....2mins 30 secs!! I felt rather emotional moving the cot (that ironically he never slept in!) out of our bedroom. I'm off to bed now, DH in charge til 11 then I'm on the nights shift!

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ebmummy · 20/02/2012 19:17

Hey guys-really really encouraging to hear the success stories! And it proves that the method does work cos though every baby is different, they're all settling more or less in the same way. Things not going bad our end-DS has only woken once on night 1 at 5am (where I gave him milk) and 3am night 2 (where I didn't, and it took him an hour and a half to settle down). I think my main problem is I don't know whether to night wean or not-if I stop giving him milk, then it might discourage him to wake up. Also, how long should I stay in the room with him when he wakes up during the night? I've stayed in for about 30 secs, then leave which starts hysterical crying, and I have to keep going in to lie him down and calm him. I've tried staying in the room with him for longer than 30 secs, but he just rolls over and wants to play.

So two questions-as he is only getting up once a night, should I give him milk or stick to mu guns and night wean?
Also, how should I comfort him when he wakes?

Thanks in advance.

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1Catherine1 · 20/02/2012 20:00

The night weaning is up to you ebmummy. I really don't know what to tell you with that one. As I've said before, it is your judgement on whether it is habit or hunger. The best way to tell would be to send your DP in but as you said before - he isn't very supportive so it isn't an option. Sorry I can't help you with that one.

As for comforting him when he wakes. Just do as you did the first time you put him down for the night. For instance, with my DD, I sit on the airbed a foot away from her cot and "shhhh" and sing to her until she nods off. When she is asleep, I leave. Then if she wakes in the night, I go in again, sit on the airbed a foot away from her cot and "shhh" and sing some more until she goes back to sleep. I then leave again. Although, I have been known to then fall asleep on the airbed.

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ebmummy · 20/02/2012 20:06

Thanks 1Catherine1, I know it's my call. Just wish someone would tell me how to call it! :).. Thanks also for the comforting tip (though I think I won't sing as it might distress him more!)

As for DH, had a PROPER moan at him today, and he's agreed to do next weekend so will see how it works out..

xx

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