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Controlled crying at 4 months old.

226 replies

Writerwannabe83 · 25/07/2014 13:25

Bedtimes have become a nightmare for me - DS just refuses to sleep.

Last night it took 4 hours for him go fall asleep once we had started his bedtime routine. That's a long 4 hours of grizzling, crying and screaming.

He will cry and cry in his Crib but the minute I pick him up, he stops. He looks at me, gives me a huge smile and a lovely laugh and starts flailing his arms and legs everywhere like he wants to play.

I calm him down and put him back in his crib and the crying starts again.

It goes on and on and on and on. He cries, I pick him up, he laughs/smiles, I put him back down, he cries again, I pick him up again, he laugh/smiles - you get the picture.

I offer feeds and change his nappy in between all these pick ups and put downs to ensure there's no reason for his screaming but absolutely nothing makes any difference.

Me and DH are nearly at breaking point - we just can't maintain this anymore.

Normally the pattern goes in for 2.5 hours but last nights record 4 hours just bought it home how insane it is.

Once he does go to sleep (usually from exhaustion) he sleeps very well. His first stretch will be 5-6 hours, then he has a feed, then sleeps again for another 3 hours. It's just getting him to sleep is the problem.

I spoke to a HV today who suggested we try controlled crying. She said to carry out his bedtime routine, pop him in his crib, turn the lights down and then for me to go and sit out on the landing. She advised that once DS starts crying to leave him for a minute before going back in, and I'm not to pick him up but just pat him for reassurance and then leave again. She told me to just keep doing this and prepare myself for having to go in and out about 50 times. She said it can be hard emotionally but after a week there should be a huge improvement in getting DS to sleep.

I don't know how I feel about it, but I know I can't spend 4 hours every night just picking him up and putting him down.

Has anyone else ever done it this early?

And if not, how did you deal with problems as bad as this?

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
perfectstorm · 05/08/2014 03:47

Your baby didn't infect you with thrush - he was not born with a yeast infection in his mouth. You got thrush because your nipples were warm, wet, and covered with milk and hence provided a good environment for a yeast infection. Then you gave it to your baby. Similarly with staph infection, your nipples would be the initial site of infection, not your baby's mouth.

Gosh, really, Cote? How fascinating that you know better on my baby/breasts than the consultant paediatrician treating her. In point of fact, the baby was vaginally infected at birth - very common, apparently. So yes, she did then infect my breasts. You're right that her mouth didn't infect my nipples with staph, though - staph infection was all over her body, and why she was back in hospital at one week old. Her face was covered with pustular blisters, and that infected me via my nipples.

If you think that's nonsense perhaps you should set the medical professionals advising us straight? I'm sure they would be grateful for the input, and your superior knowledge of "science".

OP, this too shall pass. Hang on in there - sometimes, with babies and sleep, I think that's all you can do.

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