[quote zastle]@BabySleepTeacherUK
He's awake between 1.5 to 2 hours MAX between naps and bedtime. Any less than that and he resists sleep or wakes up shortly after I put him down. My LO never shows any sleep cues until he's overtired, so I make sure he's asleep at the first yawn! He sleeps 20-30 min naps 4 times a day. Like I mentioned in my first post, those naps used to be 45 minutes or so before the sleep regression started.
I rock him until he is visibly drowsy (heavy eyelids, deeper breathing, etc.) and I set him down. He closes his eyes and looks like he's about to sleep but he rubs his face and wakes himself up most of the time. Sometimes he looks like he's trying really hard to fall asleep but stirs and gets frustrated and cries. He's used a dummy since he was 3 weeks old but sort of lost interest in it around the time the sleep regression started. It's not that he rejects it but he can do with or without it. These days he screams until he comfort nurses to sleep (sometimes barely even a minute). No amount of shushing or patting works, it's either be rocked to sleep or nursed to sleep.
I. Am. Exhausted.
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Sorry I took ages to reply @zastle
He's awake between 1.5 to 2 hours MAX between naps and bedtime. Any less than that and he resists sleep or wakes up shortly after I put him down.
That's too long awake. As a general rule awake time wants to be around double nap length. So 20-30 min naps should be having awake times of 40-60 minutes. That's why I mentioned your baby being overtired.
My LO never shows any sleep cues until he's overtired
That's not unique to your child, outwardly visible sleep cues mean baby was actually tired about an hour earlier and indicate baby is now overtired. The best time for getting baby to sleep is at the 'just starting to feel tired' point where the only sign might be wanting to be held or crying while on the floor playing.
The rocking in your arms can be a problem, because of the physical difference when being put down. If baby needs movement to sleep you would be developing better sleep habits by getting him to sleep in something that moves, rather than in your arms and then being put down. It's really important for good sleep hygiene that baby goes to sleep where they stay asleep.
So how about a cheapy bouncy chair? As soon as awake time window is up (or before if baby is clingy or cries, even once) put baby into the bouncer fully awake. Give dummy and get baby actively sucking, by tapping the outside of the dummy as needed. Then maintain a rhythmic bounce (I used my foot to do this, while sitting on sofa with bouncer at my feet) at a consistent tempo. Just keep going until asleep.
Try to follow awake time windows, in a repeating cycle throughout the day:
Wake (note time, mentally calculate awake time as double nap length +/- 15 minutes)
feed
awake time floor pla
At first cry / clinginess or once at awake time window...
settling to sleep
sleep
Resettle as soon as initial signs of stirring start (before waking)
Wake > repeat from the begining