Jackson loves his bottle. Seriously. When I put him to bed and give him a bottle of milk he sighs and says "baba..." in such a loving way! He loves his milk, if he's fussy or cranky, offer him a bottle and he's fine. He will carry it around, dangling from his mouth, while playing, talking, running, whatever. I know it's my fault. I read the books, I read about not letting the baby fall asleep while nursing. But it was easy! So easy, and when you are tired, well easy works.
So here we are at almost 16 months and my little baby wakes up at least once, if not twice, in the middle of the night and cries. What he wants is his bottle. My baby doesn't use a soother, he has a bottle. And it has me concerned. How do I get him to give it up? I mean with a soother, at night, he'd have it in his crib and when he wakes up he'd find it and voila! But I don't want to leave him with a bottle in his bad all night, so now he wakes up and cries, and I go in and give him his baba. I used to stay with him, we'd rock and cuddle. But now, since I'm back at work and need my sleep a little more, I give him the bottle and leave.
I know, I know! His teeth are all going to rot out of his head, and he'll have speaking and dental issues. But it's easy. Between the extra milk, the very full diapers with occasional leaks, and the sometimes having to go fill up another bottle because I didn't take enough up in the cooler bag, well it's not as easy as it was but I think it's still easier than having him upset and crying. I'm sure he'll grow out of it eventually, even when he's older and I can talk to him about it, then it might be easier.
I googled it of course, to find out if there are nice, friendly ways to get him to give it up. And I read about kids who are 3 or 5 when they finally gave it up. One kid was 7! So I am going to continue as is. Though I will be switching him to water instead of milk for the overnight bottles, but probably not until the weekend. I can always have a nap Saturday and Sunday after all :-) And if it doesn't go well those days, I'll try again over Easter when I visit my parents, maybe the change of scenery and routine will be enough to do it.
The things I've learned from all of this? Soothers aren't the enemy :-) And letting baby fall asleep while nursing is not the best idea. What will I do with baby number 2? Whatever works lol, so yes, I might make the same mistakes again, who knows! But I won't feel guilty over giving my child something that comforts them. Talk to me in a few weeks after we visit my parents and my mom goes on about how I gave up my bottle at 6 months... though she also loves to tell the story of how she'd prop a bottle up in the corner of my crib for when I woke up in the middle of the night... So not really sure what the truth of that situation was, but I'm sure she'll have an opinion about my situation.
For now, Jackson will continue to get his baba at bed time, and over night. And I will continue to smile when he grabs it from me, flops over and sighs... baba...
Showing posts with label cry it out. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cry it out. Show all posts
Monday, April 4, 2011
Oh the bottles!
Labels:
CIO,
cry it out,
parenting,
single mom by choice,
smc
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Sleep Training
A lot of people on a message board I'm on do sleep training with their babies. They follow a cry it out (CIO) method and let their babies cry, sometimes for more than an hour! I just really do not understand it at all, how can you let a little person who cannot speak and tell you what is wrong just cry? I do understand the temptation, it is certainly tiring when your little baby is crying and will not sleep as you think they should. My son is just over a year now and will rarely fall asleep on his own. He usually has a bottle in his mouth and is cuddled close to fall asleep. He is still waking at night, not every night but often, and will want to nurse again back to sleep. Some nights it becomes difficult, especially now that I have gone back to work. It is hard to get up in the morning when you've been up in the middle of the night with a crying baby.
But I would never let him CIO. If he is up and upset there is usually a reason for it. He may be hungry, or wet, it could be that his teeth hurt, perhaps he is just lonely or missing me. He's currently cutting a few teeth and has been off on and since he was 4 months old. The other night he woke up at 4:30 crying, I went in and gave him a bottle, he fell asleep and I put him back down. Ten minutes later he woke up crying again, I went in to pick him up and could feel dampness through his sleep sack, so he had soaked not only his diaper, but his pajamas and his sleep sack! he was probably wet and cold when he woke up the first time but I didn't notice. If I was a proponent of CIO I probably would have left him in his bed the first time, to be cold and wet until I deemed it time to wake up.
I have no illusions that my son probably doesn't need to have those midnight bottles, but I also know that what I think about what he needs is not really the important thing, what he thinks he needs is. I trust that as a baby he is more in touch with his own needs than I am. Of course I know he needs to wear a snowsuit in the cold, and a hat when he goes outside, he may not know that. But he does know his phsyical needs in the sense of what he needs to eat.
I have also noticed that on the days he is in daycare he is harder to get to sleep at night, I believe because he is overtired from late naps, not enough time napping, and getting up early for daycare. It is frustrating because he needs the sleep but is more restless and wakes more often. On the weekends he makes up for it, has great 3 hour naps and is easy to get to bed, even sleep straight through. But I cannot take him from daycare, and hope that in time he will grow out of his need for the extra sleep.
I have wondered for awhile if the methods I have chosen for his sleeping are the best. There may be better ways, and there certainly would be quicker ways, but I feel this is the best for us. I tried to wean his night bottles by diluting them, it didn't work. I've tried to leave him in his bed, sitting beside it while he fusses, but he wants me to pick him up. I have tried shushing and patting his back, but he gets frustrated and wants to be held and rocked.
I know that in time I won't need to spend so much time with him, overnight or falling asleep. He falls asleep well at daycare for his naps, he even falls asleep on his own at home for naps or at bedtime - if he is not over tired! I try to remember, as I rock him and watch the clock tick on that this will not last forever, that he is only a baby for awhile, that there will come a time when he will not want me to hold him or rock him. He is my son, I chose to have him, it is my responsiblity to take care of him and to help him. It is not my job to train him, he is not a dog or a pet to teach a trick to. He is a child, who needs to grow and learn and develop. And who needs to be cuddled when he's upset. Learning to self-soothe is not a skill, it's not something an infant needs to learn how to do. Parents are there to help infants.
To be perfectly honest it angers me that mom's on that message board are all so eager to "train" their child, to teach them how to cry themselves to sleep. I find it dissapointing that in our society this is considered normal, and acceptable. I try to remain diplomatic but have to admit that all the posts on the topic really just make me mad! Every child is unique and individual, they will grow and develop at their own rate, for some this will mean they can sleep straight through the night and fall asleep on their own with no problems from an early age, others it will take time. But to do the child the disservice of not being there, of leaving them to cry alone, is teaching them to not rely on anyone, but is that really a good thing? Teaching a child to be alone and lonely... who does that serve? I think the parent is the only one who gains from any method of CIO.
But I would never let him CIO. If he is up and upset there is usually a reason for it. He may be hungry, or wet, it could be that his teeth hurt, perhaps he is just lonely or missing me. He's currently cutting a few teeth and has been off on and since he was 4 months old. The other night he woke up at 4:30 crying, I went in and gave him a bottle, he fell asleep and I put him back down. Ten minutes later he woke up crying again, I went in to pick him up and could feel dampness through his sleep sack, so he had soaked not only his diaper, but his pajamas and his sleep sack! he was probably wet and cold when he woke up the first time but I didn't notice. If I was a proponent of CIO I probably would have left him in his bed the first time, to be cold and wet until I deemed it time to wake up.
I have no illusions that my son probably doesn't need to have those midnight bottles, but I also know that what I think about what he needs is not really the important thing, what he thinks he needs is. I trust that as a baby he is more in touch with his own needs than I am. Of course I know he needs to wear a snowsuit in the cold, and a hat when he goes outside, he may not know that. But he does know his phsyical needs in the sense of what he needs to eat.
I have also noticed that on the days he is in daycare he is harder to get to sleep at night, I believe because he is overtired from late naps, not enough time napping, and getting up early for daycare. It is frustrating because he needs the sleep but is more restless and wakes more often. On the weekends he makes up for it, has great 3 hour naps and is easy to get to bed, even sleep straight through. But I cannot take him from daycare, and hope that in time he will grow out of his need for the extra sleep.
I have wondered for awhile if the methods I have chosen for his sleeping are the best. There may be better ways, and there certainly would be quicker ways, but I feel this is the best for us. I tried to wean his night bottles by diluting them, it didn't work. I've tried to leave him in his bed, sitting beside it while he fusses, but he wants me to pick him up. I have tried shushing and patting his back, but he gets frustrated and wants to be held and rocked.
I know that in time I won't need to spend so much time with him, overnight or falling asleep. He falls asleep well at daycare for his naps, he even falls asleep on his own at home for naps or at bedtime - if he is not over tired! I try to remember, as I rock him and watch the clock tick on that this will not last forever, that he is only a baby for awhile, that there will come a time when he will not want me to hold him or rock him. He is my son, I chose to have him, it is my responsiblity to take care of him and to help him. It is not my job to train him, he is not a dog or a pet to teach a trick to. He is a child, who needs to grow and learn and develop. And who needs to be cuddled when he's upset. Learning to self-soothe is not a skill, it's not something an infant needs to learn how to do. Parents are there to help infants.
To be perfectly honest it angers me that mom's on that message board are all so eager to "train" their child, to teach them how to cry themselves to sleep. I find it dissapointing that in our society this is considered normal, and acceptable. I try to remain diplomatic but have to admit that all the posts on the topic really just make me mad! Every child is unique and individual, they will grow and develop at their own rate, for some this will mean they can sleep straight through the night and fall asleep on their own with no problems from an early age, others it will take time. But to do the child the disservice of not being there, of leaving them to cry alone, is teaching them to not rely on anyone, but is that really a good thing? Teaching a child to be alone and lonely... who does that serve? I think the parent is the only one who gains from any method of CIO.
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