Anonymous wrote:My pediatrician suggested going in with a bottle with water in it instead of formula.
1st night baby drank an oz or so of water.
2nd night, too like one sip and didn’t want any more and then I put him back to bed 3rd night he basically looked at me and the bottle of water and turned away and went back to sleep.
My sone was 6 months old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate when people recommend these long books. Surely sleep training doesn’t require more than a one-page how-to?
It doesn’t. Tell the baby you’ll be back in the morning. Put the baby to bed and close the door. Don’t reenter until 6 am. The end!
I’m a huge proponent of sleep training, sleep trained with CIO and night weaned both my kids right at 4 months. And I think this is harsh. Baby is used to eating overnight! She’s going to wake up hungry, and you’re just going to let her CIO for 12 hours hungry? That is harsh, and incredibly hard on the parents, and for no reason. Sleep easy has a gradual system of nightweaning so you know your baby isn’t crying out of hunger, just habit.
She is not waking up because she is hungry. We all wake up. She is waking up and wanting a bottle because she can’t self-soothe. If she was really hungry, she would take more than 1-2 ounces. A 9 month old who eats enough during the day can go 12 hours at night without eating. She will not starve.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate when people recommend these long books. Surely sleep training doesn’t require more than a one-page how-to?
It doesn’t. Tell the baby you’ll be back in the morning. Put the baby to bed and close the door. Don’t reenter until 6 am. The end!
This is horrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate when people recommend these long books. Surely sleep training doesn’t require more than a one-page how-to?
It doesn’t. Tell the baby you’ll be back in the morning. Put the baby to bed and close the door. Don’t reenter until 6 am. The end!
I’m a huge proponent of sleep training, sleep trained with CIO and night weaned both my kids right at 4 months. And I think this is harsh. Baby is used to eating overnight! She’s going to wake up hungry, and you’re just going to let her CIO for 12 hours hungry? That is harsh, and incredibly hard on the parents, and for no reason. Sleep easy has a gradual system of nightweaning so you know your baby isn’t crying out of hunger, just habit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate when people recommend these long books. Surely sleep training doesn’t require more than a one-page how-to?
It doesn’t. Tell the baby you’ll be back in the morning. Put the baby to bed and close the door. Don’t reenter until 6 am. The end!
I’m a huge proponent of sleep training, sleep trained with CIO and night weaned both my kids right at 4 months. And I think this is harsh. Baby is used to eating overnight! She’s going to wake up hungry, and you’re just going to let her CIO for 12 hours hungry? That is harsh, and incredibly hard on the parents, and for no reason. Sleep easy has a gradual system of nightweaning so you know your baby isn’t crying out of hunger, just habit.