What on Earth Is up with This Sleep Issue?

Updated on January 17, 2013
S.F. asks from West Palm Beach, FL
7 answers

i had done ferber when my daughter was 6 mo. it only took one night and she only cried for an hour. after that i was fine. no, i dont need anyone telling me how horrible i am for doing ferber. if that is your opinion great, just keep it to yourself. she is now 8 mo and now getting her down is an issue again. at first she went down fine but woke within an hour hysterical. i honestly thought something was wrong so i went to her the first few nights. maybe that was a mistake because now getting her down is quite hard. she has a glow worm that does not seem to be working. we got a soother that projects onto the screen and plays music, but that does not seem to be working either. at her 2 am feed she has been hard going back as well and i have to rub her back to put her down. i dont mind rubbing her back for a couple of minutes, but it can take upwards of 10 before she is asleep and i can leave. i feel soooo badly for her. she is fine if i am with her but loses her little mind as soon as she even thinks i am going to walk away. i am home on fmla with her now and will be for a few more weeks. i have to return to work then and she will have to go back to her sitter (whom she loves). i dont know if this is separation anxiety or what. i dont think it is teething that is causing it (tho i am sure she is teething). after she wakes up and we get her back down she is fine the rest of the night and just wakes twice to eat. any advice? co-sleeping is not for us (have tried it and none of us sleep well). she naps just fine during the day without screaming (maybe a little fussing but not hysterical in any way).

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So What Happened?

yeah she has a fan on in the background and the soother that projects onto the ceiling has music (we just started this...there was an ipod playing soft music before). yes i nurse her twice at night. i really wanna cut those out, but am unsure of whether to cut both at once or one at a time. should i do it now with this new issue or wait till this passes? so lost.

More Answers

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D..

answers from Miami on

To answer your SWH question, cut out both of the feedings at the same time, S.. She has to understand that the night bar is closed.

If you cannot bear to let her cry it out for a week until she stops waking for your nursings, then ask your husband to go in when she cries, pat her on the back for a few seconds, walk out and add 5 minutes to the clock each time. So, in 5 minutes, then 10, then 15, then 20, etc. You have to REALLY watch the clock. She may cry for over an hour for a few nights, but then she will finally sleep through the night. OR, tell him to go in and sit on the floor beside her crib and put his hand between the slats and touch her leg. She will want to be closer to him, so she will lay down in the crib and cry. He should do NOTHING ELSE. No patting, no talking, no holding, no picking her up. Just sitting and touching her leg. She will cry. No matter. She has to learn that night time is different than daytime. You ALL will finally get sleep and you won't end up losing your job from fatigue or ending up with extreme exhaustion.

Your husband has to be 100% consistent. If he gives in and picks her up and changes the minimal contacct, it encourages her to stay awake and wake herself up. She needs to learn to self-soothe. Tell him that the reason that HE needs to do this instead of you is because she knows YOU are all about milk. It will make it much harder for her to settle while she is smelling you and your milk. It's fine for you to nurse during the day around your work hours. However, he needs to do this for you both.

Original:
She doesn't need a feeding in the middle of the night. Stop feeding her. That is your major problem.

Dawn

4 moms found this helpful
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B.F.

answers from Dallas on

Yeah she doesn't need the feeding. Ignore her. Much easier to do now then when you go back to work. It's most likely separation anxiety.

3 moms found this helpful
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☆.A.

answers from Pittsburgh on

Have you tried some white noise or music?
Something might be waking her up...furnace, fan, etc.
I agree with Dawn, she's eating twice in the middle of the night?

2 moms found this helpful
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G.B.

answers from Oklahoma City on

She's not been waking up at all for night time feedings? I bet she's hungry now. It's about time for her to have a huge growth spurt.

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M.S.

answers from Tampa on

My son always woke up for extra bottles when he was teething.... It's a possibility that it's teething... Does your daughter use a pacifier? That may help...

Good luck!

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N.M.

answers from Orlando on

Do you have the book Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child? I highly recommend it. It is a research based book and talks about the natural sleep bio rhythms of the body at different ages. It gives strategies to use and discusses situations you may face. I went through a similar situation with my daughter and we discovered she was getting over tired and wasn't catching her body's natural sleep pattern which caused her to wake in the night. We started putting her to bed 30 min earlier and she stArted sleeping 12 hrs uninterrupted!! The book is awesome. Good luck!

R.R.

answers from Los Angeles on

Are you turning on the light when you go in during the night? If so, don't, keep a nightlight on and use that. Keep your voice at a monotone whisper, don't take her out of her crib. Lay her down, change her there, pat her a minute or so, then quietly say "goodnight, time to sleep" and leave. Make middle of the night visits boring ;)

Stop the feedings, she doesn't need them anymore, you may want your husband to tend to her a couple of weeks as she adjusts. Nurse her right before bed and she'll be fine.

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