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I've a 7 months old baby boy. Until he was 4 months old he had no problems getting asleep. Then, he started to cry and protest until he fell asleep, even when he is in our arms and we are rocking him. Since after that he slept for 9 or 10 hours straight, we didn't worry. The problem is that one week ago he started to have a lot of awakenings during the night (probably the eight-month crisis), and not only he does not sooth himself into sleep again, but he protests and cries even when he is is in our arms and is being rocked. We have read a lot about "cry it out" and "no tears" methods...the thing is that in our case, even using a "no tears" method there are always a lot of tears. We would really appreciate any suggestion.

Thanks in advance!

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may be are the teeth ? – Felice Pollano May 27 '12 at 9:56

4 Answers

It's possible that this is just a sleep regression - you yourself mentioned the "eight month crisis" (sometimes known as the 9 month sleep regression, but the timing varies by kid) which is a common time for bad sleep. With these "the only way out is through;" it's quite possible that no matter what you do the wakings will continue until the underlying cause (developmental leap, new skill, etc.) is over. According to The Wonder Weeks separation anxiety may hit just before 7 months causing fussiness, and Wonder Week 37 with its associated fussy phase is right during 7 months.

The book Bed Timing would suggest that 7 months should be before separation anxiety begins and that it is actually an ideal time for some form of sleep training. The book also makes a great point that no form of sleep training has been proven more effective than any other - the key is consistency in all methods. So if you are comfortable with a form of crying - whether it is total extinction or gradual waiting - this may be a good time to try. However the timing in Bed Timing contradicts the timing in The Wonder Weeks, so based on your child you'll want to decide whether now is a good time to sleep train. Based on what you're seeing I'd guess that the developmental leaps Bed Timing attributes to 8 months are happening early in your son and you may just need to soldier through until a happier phase, when you can begin to address any sleep issues that remain. Or you can try to address them now - depending on your child they may work despite the developmental issues.

It's also possible that your baby became overtired at some point - did you go on vacation or change your routine somehow? Being overtired tends to lead to more night wakings. Consider trying an earlier bedtime for several days and see if sleep improves. Just slide it 20 minutes for 4 or so days. If it gets better you may want to try even earlier. Make sure naps are in order as much as you can, too.

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My first son didn't start sleeping well until he was about... 19 months? I remember it consistently taking 90 minutes of holding and bouncing slightly and walking around in a large circle singing to him to get him to sleep (that was a long several months). It took forever to get him to sleep and then he would not stay asleep all night (wife usually just fed him back to sleep).

I almost never got him to sleep by rocking. He would get PISSED if I ever sat down while he was awake and trying to fall asleep. I had to be standing and bouncing very slightly and swaying or walking. It sounds like your son just doesn't like it when you are sitting down.

Every kid is different. Some sleep soundlessly through the night (none that I've ever seen). Some wake up every 30 minutes (mine). In a few years, this will all just be a memory, it's up to your attitude as to whether it is a bad one or a good one. If you fight him, it will be a bad one. If you lovingly work with him and try and do everything you can to get him comfortable (which could mean you being uncomfortable because you have to walk him around a lot or something) it will be a fond memory of hard work and sacrifice and you will bond.

Good luck!

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Promising that every 30 minute wake-ups will be a fond memory if one just adjusts one's attitude may be over-promise. For some parents it will be. For others no amount of self-coaching will make them enjoy the late-night process of helping a baby back to sleep. Iit is important for a baby to get rest for his or her health - for some families that means lots of work by the parents to ensure that the baby sleeps, for others it means working on self-soothing in the infant. Neither has been conclusively proven wrong. – justkt Jun 20 '12 at 14:54
I never said you would "enjoy" the late-night process, I simply said it could be a fond memory of hard work and sacrifice. I would disagree with anyone that posited that parenting was all about personal fun and enjoyment. In most areas of early parenting you have to find a balance of either changing yourself or changing your child. If you find yourself consistently leaning towards changing your child and fighting their demands, I think you should take a hard look at your actions and outlook on life. – cmcculloh Jun 20 '12 at 19:22
No argument that parenting is not about your own personal enjoyment. I 100% agree that parenting is hard work and sacrifice and those things bring joy. Perhaps we simply disagree on what a child's nighttime needs are. In my opinion sleep for a baby is as important as food and comforting, which means parents need to work to get it. How they do so is entirely up to them, and even though my baby is very young I've learned that it's valuable not to judge other parents' methods. – justkt Jun 21 '12 at 13:10
I agree that sleep is very important. But, when I hear "sleep training" I think "cry it out" (which most people I've ever encounter do "wrong", if there even is a right way). I chose not to do, and would never recommend cio, because: askdrsears.com/topics/fussy-baby/…, babycenter.com/…, psychologytoday.com/blog/moral-landscapes/201112/…, thestir.cafemom.com/baby/130267/cry_it_out_sleep_training, etc, etc, etc... – cmcculloh Jun 22 '12 at 16:40
Have you heard of "The No Cry Sleep Solution" or "The Sleep Lady's Good Night, Sleep Tight?" What about the no-cry sleep training methods from Tracy Hogg? Or the gentle "sleep shaping" that can be done with young babies to encourage them to learn to sleep young? These things all fit under my rubric of "sleep training." Realistically babies will cry about sleep. My almost 4 month old will scream while falling asleep if I can't get her to sleep before she gets overtired even while I'm soothing her. But there are gentler ways than CIO to help them sleep. – justkt Jun 22 '12 at 17:18
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My first kid was tough this way, to get him to sleep I did the following: Car rides, Carrying him in the sling while vacuuming, putting him in his car seat on top of the washer machine.

All three worked with varying degrees of success.

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If he is crying anyway cry it out seems to be the way to go. When he awakens, check his diaper, if he is cold, etc but don't look at him, don't come right out and snuggle or rock him and don't make eye contact and don't say anything. You have checked and he is okay so let him go back to sleep on his own. The other thing I would check is sleep tremors. He is a bit early but this is when they cry uncontrollable in their sleep but they are not awake. Two ways to deal with this. Wake them up and comfort them or don't wake them. My pediatrician said if you wake them the more nights this will take to dissipate. (we are talking 2 to 3 weeks normally, 5-6 weeks if you wake them) so we went for not waking them. One of ours did start sleep walking during these episodes, so, on Dr. advice, we put a baby gate in the door way of their room so they would be safe to walk around and be able to find their bed again, which they did.

Either way is hard. Good Luck!

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Some babies need to cry to release tension to go to sleep. Cry it out works well with those babies. – justkt May 28 '12 at 0:25

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