Hi, Handlemecarefully.
The passage that Pantley qoutes comes from the Continuum Concept, a book about anthropology written in the 70's. Please bear in mind that this is only an idea of what might happen:
(This is a baby waking in the middle of the night)
'He awakes in a mindless terror of the silence, the motionlessness. He screams. He is afire from head to foot with want, with desire, with intolerable impatience. He gasps for breath and screams until his head is filled and throbbing wth the sound. He screams until his chest aches, until his throat is sore. He can bear the pain no more and his sobs weaken and subside. He listens. He opens and closes his fists. He rolls his head from side to side. Nothing helps. It is unbearable. He begins to cry again, but it is too much for his strained throat; he soon stops. He waves his hands and kicks his feet. He stops, able to suffer, unable to think, unable to hope. He listens. Then he falls asleep again.'
Now, I know several mums who have used CC with their babies and it most definitely not was like that - twenty minute's crying off and on, then sleep. And in CC you go in and come out, which some babies like, rather than not go in at all as in this excerpt. But for some babies I personally believe it is like this- certainly it would have been like this for my dd1, who screamed every night for months and who just couldn't be left. I only ever tried it once and it was as if me going in gave her false hope, and then me leaving again dashed it.. I really wish I hadn't tried it. I think maybe my dd2, who is very different from dd1, would take to CC okay, but I haven't needed to try as she is responding so well to the NCSS. A friend of mine has three dds, the first two who both went really well with CC, and they thought that those of us who say it doesn't work for all babies were just being soft. Then they had their dd3 who was just like my dd1 and they realised that all babies are different, and we had a point after all.
HTH
Ionesmum x