Anonymous wrote:I have not yet read the book, but I just bought it. From the beginning my baby was naturally an easy sleeper, and we just did everything to encourage that and instill good sleep habits. And this was before I read any other books, I just used common sense.
Right at 6 weeks, baby started sleeping through the night, probably 8pm-4/5am. Then around 8-9 weeks baby was sleeping a solid 12 hours. Most days I go into her room and wake her up after 12 hours.
She was eating (exclusively BFing) every 3ish hours, during the day since 8 weeks, but once I tried doing every 4 she seemed to do much better and fall right into a more regular routine.
The main reason I am wanting to read this book now is because it's nowhere else can you find the scenario of a baby this age (now 14 weeks) sleeping 12 solid hours. Trying to iron out the kinks in day time napping and hoping this will give some good info for my situation.
Anonymous wrote:Bunk. I'm not saying there aren't some babies who can go 12 hours without food at 12 weeks, but it's certainly not the norm. Mine refused bottles bigger than 4 oz until 6 mos (would just spit up anything more). Also, being a "good sleeper" at 12 weeks doesn't keep away the 4 mo sleep regression.
Anonymous wrote:We roughly followed ideas from this book.
We always did a bed time routine, same thing, every night (blinds closed, lights low, lullabye music on, change in to pj's and sleep sack, breastfeed, supplement with bottle, burping, story time, lights off, rocking for 10 minutes).
We also slowly shifted to 4 hours between feedings around 8 weeks old (was at 3 hours previously). That said, if it was clear she was hungry, we would only try to hold her off for 10-15 minutes (distract with a toy, or go outside, or play in the swing), and if that didn't work, she would eat earlier.
She then just fell in to this pattern of about 6 oz. every 4 hours, again around 8 weeks old. And then she would sleep about 8-9 hours through the night. Then a few weeks later, she would sleep 8-10 hours (and we upped the first bottles to 8 oz.).
It worked out for us, but I do think we have a sleepy baby. I never got the nap part right though. She just naps when she wants - usually about 1.5 hrs after the end of a feeding. She would also nap in between the 3rd and 4th feeding, but still sleep through the night.

Anonymous wrote:Doesn't hurt to stock up your cupboard with various "tricks" to get a sense for what works for you and your child. But honestly, different folks, different kids, different strokes. If the peg doesn't fit, try something else. Sometimes your kid just needs to grow into it.
But warning: Many children don't and won't sleep through the night for long. I had an 8 week old who slept for 11 hours... and then didn't. And then did. And then didn't.
Parenting young kids is brutal on the ol' shut eye. It just is.