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All those opposed to Controlled Crying...

56 replies

Jennyusedtobepink · 26/09/2008 13:20

So I started the above thread this morning, and whilst researching other similar threads on MN, came across one that called CC 'assault'.

SO for all those parents vehemently opposed to controlled crying, WWYD in my shoes???

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Jennyusedtobepink · 26/09/2008 13:21

fgs

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Jennyusedtobepink · 26/09/2008 13:27

Really? No one?

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PuppyMonkey · 26/09/2008 13:29

Sorry - what's the question???

ruddynorah · 26/09/2008 13:32

ok.

what time does she go to bed now?

what happens if you cut her nap to half an hour?

Jennyusedtobepink · 26/09/2008 13:32

Er, WWYD? When there is no obvious light at the end of the sleeping tunnel with a child that has not slept through in 16 months and now thinks its playtime at 2am.

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Becky77 · 26/09/2008 13:32

It's quite quiet in here today... may explain lak of responses

Jennyusedtobepink · 26/09/2008 13:34

She goes to bed between 7 and 8. Last night went straight down at 7. (woke at 9 and then awake from 12am to 2.45am)

I've never consciously cut her nap down, but when she is really tired, she tends to fall asleep on her milk, but still wakes up 2-3 hours later.

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ruddynorah · 26/09/2008 13:36

there's so much to your other thread it's difficult to imagine it or break it down.

can you explain stuff to her? i mean is she the sort of child who can be explained to?

Jennyusedtobepink · 26/09/2008 13:36

here

This is the thread I'm referring to. I would stress however that I have always agreed with the ladies to an extent, but I am lost now in relation to finding an answer.

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Jennyusedtobepink · 26/09/2008 13:38

ruddynorah - At 16mo I can say things like, 'are you tired', 'do you want to go to bed' etc etc and she understands.

In the middle of the night last night, I was trying desperately to reason with her and keep my tone low and voice calm, but whenever I mentioned the words sleep or bedtime she started having a dicky fit.

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PuppyMonkey · 26/09/2008 13:40

Sorry, bit dim and got confused by link to other thread. So if you're asking would I do cc, the answer is no. I would do cold turkey.

BoysAreLikeDogs · 26/09/2008 13:40

Jenny

I have looked at your other thread.

I think you need to pick one technique to use and then stick to it.

DD may be confused by crying for 2 hours then being given milk, then allowed into your bed.

(I think that's what you described, I got a bit confused )

So

Shush/pat, pupd, rapid return, withdrawal, whatever, start it and stick to it.

Be prepared for a few long nights, and for the problem to escalate before it improves.

Good luck

Jennyusedtobepink · 26/09/2008 13:41

And just let her cry it out until she falls asleep?

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Jennyusedtobepink · 26/09/2008 13:42

BALD - I can't believe I've started giving her milk in the night. Most of the time I can't even get her to drink milk. Talk about rod for your own back.

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PuppyMonkey · 26/09/2008 13:42

Yep! Two or three nights worth of hell, then problem solved!

BoysAreLikeDogs · 26/09/2008 13:43

Plus you are tired and hence not thinking straight

Awww

ruddynorah · 26/09/2008 13:43

i think you need to concentrate on her bedroom, to stop the going into your room thing.

so how nice is her room? does she have a night light or one of those glo worms or something to help her know it's bed time and that bed time is a nice thing? how does the bedtime routine go? is it all about how snuggly and nice her bedroom is? does she have a snuggly toy or something? can you go and buy something special with her?

Maveta · 26/09/2008 13:43

oh you poor thing

I kind of am/am not against cc. I think it has it's place and imho 16mo would definitely fall into that category. And I am the wettest blanket in the box re. cc. Never got more than about 1 min into it in the past but ds (17mo) hadn't ever slept the night through either until about a week ago.

Do you still breastfeed? When I cut out night feeds his nightwaking went from once to 3-5 times a night but dh went instead of me [evil ] and we were getting pretty desperate about it. That lasted a couple of weeks and when it didn't look like settling on it's own dh decided to cc him. Although it was more 'blearily ignoring him and burying head under covers'. Miracle of miracles after a few nights he started sleeping through!

I doubt I've been of much practical help but maybe just knowing there is light at the end of the tunnel might help? In your shoes, I would totally get dh to do cc.

Jennyusedtobepink · 26/09/2008 13:43

And just wanting the crying to stop. I'm such a sap. Supernanny would have a bloody field day.

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ruddynorah · 26/09/2008 13:45

well first thing, like i say is to keep her in her room. even if at first this means you end up sleeping in there, not ideal. but at least she's getting the idea that she does not go in your room.

Jennyusedtobepink · 26/09/2008 13:46

Oh, those gloworms are fab. Maybe that's a good idea - I do have a night light but I've never used it.

Routine is just play, bath, milk, bed. Nothing exciting but I stick to it rigidly. It's what happens then that is so unpredictable.

Maveta - what have you done with ds - details please?? No, not BFing.

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foodfiend · 26/09/2008 13:47

Apols if this is the obvious, but have you tried staying with her in her own bed/room until she sleeps, and then move further away every few nights. We did this with dd when nearly 5months as she was up 9 or 10 times a night, so very different scenario, but very effective. The first few days were hard (an hour or so of crying, but she'd been crying that much in the night anyway), but it was easier to keep resolve at 8pm than the middle of the night, and as has been said on the other thread, you have to follow through, which is almost impossible in the middle of the night when you're shattered. You do the same drill all night if they wake again (dd was still night feeding then), but we found that she settled better after feeds right from day 1.

fwiw i'm not opposed to cc as such, but really didn't want to do it if I could help it... and was happy we didn't need to.

PuppyMonkey · 26/09/2008 13:47

Get prepared mentally asu will feel awful throughout this ordeal but far less cruel in the long run - choose a day when you can have a lie in maybe. Put baby to bed at 7 or whatever, leave room. Don't go back in.

BoysAreLikeDogs · 26/09/2008 13:47

DP did CC with DS1 at about this age - of course back in them days we didn't know it had a name har har har

I stayed downstairs sobbing while DP did it. Music/telly on to drown the sound, which on reflection wasn't too bad.

He hung over the cot, patting/rubbing/shushing.

Took literally three nights, tops.

Jennyusedtobepink · 26/09/2008 13:48

foodfiend - I stay with her until she is asleep in the evening, then come out. I have tried gradual withdrawl, but she seemed to get more upset because I was just sitting there and not paying her any attention.

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