Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again. How do you get longer naps? The baby wakes up and good for ten minutes then starts to yell.
And the baby is tiny - under fifteen pounds - So pediatrician said to do a dream feed and feed once during the night.
Then I think you can’t sleep train. It doesn’t work with night feedings. As you now know.
Anonymous wrote:OP again. How do you get longer naps? The baby wakes up and good for ten minutes then starts to yell.
And the baby is tiny - under fifteen pounds - So pediatrician said to do a dream feed and feed once during the night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks everyone. (OP) co-sleeping is not an option and neither is dropping the night feeds. I do think she’s overtired from not napping. We have to keep working at it.
Ferber doesn't work unless you drop the night feeds. Dropping the night feeds is step one in ferber if you read the actual book. You have to gradually reduce them one at a time first. Signed, someone who ferber'd a tough 7.5 month-old
Anonymous wrote:Thanks everyone. (OP) co-sleeping is not an option and neither is dropping the night feeds. I do think she’s overtired from not napping. We have to keep working at it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TBH you can’t exactly sleep train if you’re still doing overnight feedings. You’re either going to have to continue with this pattern if you keep up feeding overnight or wait until you drop night feedings and then train.
The problem is your child is waking up and expecting to be fed and held every time bc sometimes that happens. How would she know the difference between the times she wakes up and it’s time for a bottle versus the times she wakes up and it’s time for her to stop crying and go back to sleep without you coming in? Think about it…
OP again. No, the problem is the baby not falling asleep on her own whether there is a feeding or not. Sorry that wasn’t clear.
Anonymous wrote:TBH you can’t exactly sleep train if you’re still doing overnight feedings. You’re either going to have to continue with this pattern if you keep up feeding overnight or wait until you drop night feedings and then train.
The problem is your child is waking up and expecting to be fed and held every time bc sometimes that happens. How would she know the difference between the times she wakes up and it’s time for a bottle versus the times she wakes up and it’s time for her to stop crying and go back to sleep without you coming in? Think about it…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Drop the nighttime feeds. Don’t do checks. Just close the door and don’t come back until 10 hours later. Repeat the next day.
+1. Yep - unless your pediatrician said to keep night feeding there's no reason a 6.5 month old needs to eat in the middle of the night.
Anonymous wrote:Drop the nighttime feeds. Don’t do checks. Just close the door and don’t come back until 10 hours later. Repeat the next day.