Joined: 26 Jul 2006 Posts: 1128 Location: , San Diego,California
Fussy 3 Month Old Posted: 09-03-06 10:34am
My 3 month old child is very fussy.He
never wants to be put down.He would always
wanted to be carried.I would change his
diaper,feed him,everything.He wont stop
crying.Please help me.Im going out of my
mind.And the fact that hes heavy already
makes it worst because he likes to be
standing up when he eats.He was never like
this.And through the day he would only
sleep for 1-2 hours striaght.And night 4
hours if I get lucky.
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diamondsz
Extremely EHEALTHy
Joined: 07 Oct 2005 Posts: 3257 Location: , Candyland-Canada
Thanks: 89
Thanked:128
Posted: 09-04-06 06:17am
Hun you need to learn on how to let a
child cry, put him in his crib and let him
cry for 10-15 mins at a time. If a child
doesn not learn how to self comfort
themselves, they will always be reliant on
you and never independant, makes sure you
rule out sickness though. Honestly
there is nothing wrong with letting them
cry for a certain time frame, if I didnt
do it neither of my children would have
slept, it does bother me so I turn the
music on for a few mins and clean (usually
he is asleep after.)
another thing you could do is buy a child
sling/carrier and walk around the house
with baby, personally I didnt like it and
I still couldnt clean up. It is up to you
but like I said rule out sickness first
and then work on others things baby swing
also work miracles!!
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Eyes Wide Shut
Especially EHEALTHy
Joined: 04 Jan 2006 Posts: 7892 Location: *UPTOWN*NEW ORLEANS*, La
Posted: 09-04-06 10:08am
I totally agree with diamondz. Just let
him cry. Know that he's fed, clean, and
in a safe place, and let him belt.
Oni just sits there all day long because
i've let her cry it out and don't give in
to her.
He could also be teething. I know it
seems early, but teething can begin at as
early as 3 months. Oni has been teething
for about a month, but has yet to cut a
tooth.
Those baby slings I can't deal with
anymore. They make me feel like i'm
pregnant again and hurt my back!!
Hahahhaa...But I want to get one of those
hipster slings for when we go out or walk
the dogs.
Anyways, it'll pass if you teach him that
him crying does not equal you holding
him!!
Youre child is way too young to be using
the "cry it out" method.
The ferber method is not recommended for
children under 6 months old. A baby that
young cries for a reason, whether it be
they dont feel good or they just need to
be held. Babies need affection and
attention.
Once a baby is about 6 months, they can
then be taught to self soothe, as they do
sometimes cry for attention or to
manipulate. Your baby could be hurting,
so dont just leave him to cry. Talk to
your doctor about his behavior.
Here is a great dr sears artcile that
discusses why you should not leave your
baby to cry. Please take the time to read
it.
"the cry is not just a sound; it's a
signal – designed for the survival of
the baby and development of the parents.
By not responding to the cry, babies and
parents lose. Here's why. In the early
months of life, babies cannot verbalize
their needs. To fill in the gap until the
child is able to "speak our language,"
babies have a unique language called
"crying." baby senses a need, such as
hunger for food or the need to be
comforted when upset, and this need
triggers a sound we call a cry. Baby does
not ponder in his little mind, "it's 3:00
a.M. And I think i'll wake up mommy for a
little snack." no! That faulty reasoning
is placing an adult interpretation on a
tiny infant. Also, babies do not have the
mental acuity to figure out why a parent
would respond to their cries at three in
the afternoon, but not at three in the
morning. The newborn who cries is saying:
"i need something; something is not right
here. Please make it right."
at the top of the list of unhelpful advice
– one that every new parent is bound to
hear – is "let your baby cry-it-out." to
see how unwise and unhelpful is this
advice, let's analyze each word in this
mother-baby connection- interfering
phrase.
"let your baby." some third-party advisor
who has no biological connection to your
baby, no knowledge or investment in your
baby, and isn't even there at 3:00 a.M.
When your baby cries, has the nerve to
pontificate to you how to respond to your
baby's cries.
The cry is a marvelous design. Consider
what might happen if the infant didn't
cry. He's hungry, but doesn't awaken ("he
sleeps through the night," brags the
parent of a sleep-trained baby). He
hurts, but doesn't let anyone know. The
result of this lack of communication is
known, ultimately, as "failure to thrive."
"thriving" means not only getting bigger,
but growing to your full potential
emotionally, physically, and
intellectually.
"cry…" not only is the cry a wonderful
design for babies; it is a useful divine
design for parents, especially the mother.
When a mother hears her baby cry, the
blood flow to her breasts increases,
accompanied by the biological urge to
"pick up and nurse" her baby. ("nurse"
means comforting, not just breastfeeding.)
as an added biological perk, the maternal
hormones released when baby nurses relax
the mother, so she gives a less tense and
more nurturing response to her infant's
needs. These biological changes – part
of the design of the mother-baby
communication network – explain why it's
easy for someone else to advise you to let
your baby cry, but difficult for you to
do. That counterproductive advice is not
biologically correct.
"it…" consider what exactly is the "it"
in "cry-it-out": an annoying habit?
Unlikely, since babies don't enjoy crying.
And, contrary to popular thought, crying
is not "good for baby's lungs." that
belief is not physiologically correct.
The "it" is an emotional or physical need.
Something is not right and the only way
baby has of telling us this is to cry,
pleading with us to make it right. Early
on, consider baby's cry as signaling a
need – communication rather than
manipulation.
Parent tip: babies cry to communicate –
not manipulate
"out" what actually goes "out" of a baby,
parents, and the relationship when a baby
is left to cry-it-out? Since the cry is a
baby's language, a communication tool, a
baby has two choices if no one listens.
Either he can cry louder, harder, and
produce a more disturbing signal or he can
clam up and become a "good baby" (meaning
"quiet"). If no one listens, he will
become a very discouraged baby. He'll
learn the one thing you don't want him to:
that he can't communicate.
Baby loses trust in the signal value of
his cry – and perhaps baby also loses
trust in the responsiveness of his
caregivers. Not only does something vital
go "out" of baby, an important ingredient
in the parent- child relationship goes
"out" of parents: sensitivity. When you
respond intuitively to your infant's
needs, as you practice this cue- response
listening skill hundreds of times in the
early months, baby learns to cue better
(the cries take on a less disturbing and
more communicative quality as baby learns
to "talk better"). On the flip side of
the mother-infant communication, you learn
to read your infant's cries and respond
appropriately (meaning when to say "yes"
and when to say "no," and how fast). In
time you learn the ultimate in crying
sensitivity: to read baby's body language
and respond to her pre-cry signals so baby
doesn't always have to cry to communicate
her needs.
What happens if you "harden your heart,"
view the cry as a control rather than a
communication tool and turn a deaf ear to
baby's cries? When you go against your
basic biology, you desensitize yourself to
your baby's signals and your instinctive
responses. Eventually, the cry doesn't
bother you. You lose trust in your baby's
signals, and you lose trust in your
ability to understand baby's primitive
language. A distance develops between you
and your baby and you run the risk of
becoming what pediatricians refer to as a
doctor-tell-me-what-to-do. You listen to
a book instead of your baby. So, not
listening and responding sensitively to
baby's cries is a lose-lose situation:
baby loses trust in caregivers and
caregivers lose trust in their own
sensitivity.
Mother loses trust in herself. To
illustrate how a mother can weaken her
god- given sensitivity when she lets
herself be less discerning about parenting
advice; a sensitive veteran mother
recently shared this story with us:
"i went to visit my friend who just had a
baby. While we were talking, her
three-week-old started crying in another
room. The baby kept crying, harder and
louder. I was getting increasingly driven
to go comfort the baby. Her baby's cries
didn't bother her, but they bothered me.
My breasts almost started to leak milk!
Yet, my friend seemed oblivious to her
baby's signals. Finally, I couldn't stand
it anymore and I said, 'it's okay, go
attend to your baby. We can talk later.'
matter-of-factly she replied, 'no, it's
not time yet for his feeding.'
incredulous, I asked, 'mary, where on
earth did you get that harmful advice?'
'from a baby-training class at church,'
she proudly insisted. 'i want my baby to
learn i'm in control, not him.'"
this novice mother, wanting to do the best
for her baby and believing she was being a
good mother, had allowed herself to
succumb to uncredentialed prophets of bad
parenting advice and was losing her
god-given sensitivity to her baby. She
was starting her parenting career with a
distance developing between her and her
baby. The pair was becoming disconnected.
"
Ps- babywearing is awesome! I have a
baby bjorn I got at my shower and I love
it, and so does my son.
Also here is a dr sears article you may
find helpful
11 ways to soothe a fussy baby
babies fuss and parents comfort. That's a
realistic fact of new family life. It
helps to understand what calms a baby and
why. Most calming techniques involve at
least one of these four interactions:
* rhythmic motion
* soothing sounds
* visual delights and distractions
* close physical contact and touching
calming techniques (except visual ones)
are like re-inventing the womb that baby
has been used to for nine months. Here
are baby-calming techniques that we have
found worked with our own fussy babies,
and that we have been able to glean from
experienced baby-calmers in our pediatric
practice. Remember that your baby has
individual needs. Try these techniques as
a starting point and improvise. After a
few months, you and your baby will have a
large repertoire of fuss- busters that
work.
8 motions that mellow
1. Wearing baby in a sling
a baby carrier will be your most useful
fuss- preventing tool. Infant development
researchers who study babycare practices
in america and other cultures are
unanimous in reporting: infants who are
carried more cry less. In fact, research
has shown that babies who are carried at
least three hours a day cry forty percent
less than infants who aren't carried as
much. Over the years in pediatric
practice, I have listened and watched
veteran baby-calmers and heard a recurrent
theme: "as long as I have my baby in my
arms or on my body she's content." this
observation led us to popularize the term
"babywearing." "wearing" means more than
just picking up baby and putting him in a
carrier when he fusses. It means carrying
baby many hours a day before baby needs to
fuss. This means the carrier you choose
must be easy to use and versatile. (we
have found the sling-type carrier to be
the most conducive to babywearing. Baby
becomes like part of your apparel, and you
can easily wear your baby in a sling at
least several hours a day.) mothers who do
this tell us: "my baby seems to forget to
fuss." the sling is not only helpful for
high-need babies it's essential. Here's
why babywearing works:
the outside womb. Being nestled in the
arms, against the chest, and near the
parent's face gives baby the most soothing
of all environments. Mother's walking
motion "reminds" baby of the rhythm he
enjoyed while in the womb. The sling
encircles and contains the infant who
would otherwise waste energy flinging his
arms and legs around, randomly attempting
to settle himself. The worn baby is only
a breath away from his parent's voice, the
familiar sound he has grown to associate
with feeling good. Babies settle better
in this "live" environment than they do
when parked in swings or plastic infant
seats.
Sights aplenty. Being up in arms gives
baby a visual advantage. He now can have
a wider view of his world. Up near adult
eye level, there are more visual
attractions to distract baby from fussing.
The distressed infant can now pick from a
wide array of ever—changing
scenery—select what delights him, and
shut out what disturbs him. And seen from
such a secure perch, even the disturbing
sights soon become interesting rather than
frightening.
Instant replay. The expanding mind of a
growing infant is like a video library
containing thousands of tapes. These
tapes record behavior patterns that baby
has learned to anticipate as either
soothing or disturbing. Babywearing
mothers tell us: "as soon as I put on the
sling, my baby's face lights up with
delight, and he stops fussing." the scene
of mother putting on the sling triggers a
replay in baby's mind of all the pleasant
memories she's experienced in mother's
arms, and she can anticipate the pleasant
interaction that is soon to follow. She
stops fussing. She's no longer bored.
Sucking on the move. Sometimes motion
alone won't calm a frantic baby; she needs
an additional relaxation inducer. Settle
baby in a carrier and, while walking or
dancing, offer baby the breast, bottle, or
pacifier. Motion and sucking are a
winning combination that settles even the
most upset baby.
Makes life easier for parents. Not only
is babywearing good for the infant, it's
good for the mother as well. The carrier
gives you a comforting tool that usually
works. After baby gets used to being worn
and you get used to wearing baby, you have
more options and more mobility. You'll
feel as though you've gained an extra pair
of hands, especially around the house, and
you can go more places. Baby is content,
since "home" to a tiny baby is being with
mom, even though mom may be in the middle
of a busy shopping center or at a party
full of adults.
A baby who fusses less is more fun to be
with, and drains less energy from the
parents. Infants and parents can then
direct the energy they would have wasted
on managing a fussy baby into growing and
interacting. That's why carried babies
thrive—as do their parents.
Familiarity breeds contentment. Living in
a carrier keeps infants content because it
keeps them in constant contact with the
familiar sounds, touches, movements, and
visual delights of the parents. Being
nestled in a familiar position is
especially calming for the baby who is
easily distracted and falls apart at the
first sight of a strange person or place.
The worn baby is always surrounded by
things he knows. From this secure
homebase, the baby has less fear of the
unfamiliar—and adjusts without a fuss.
Proximity fosters calmness. A baby who is
worn is in mother's arms and literally
right under her face. With this close
proximity, mother can teach baby to cry
"better." as soon as baby gives a hint
that he is about to fuss, mother, because
she is right there, can preempt the cry
and keep it from escalating into an
all-out fit. Being close to your baby
helps you learn to read your baby's
pre-cry signals so that you can intervene
to meet baby's needs before he has to
fuss. Baby in turn learns to be more at
ease using non-crying modes of signaling
since, during babywearing, he has learned
that these signals receive an immediate
nurturing response.
Babywearing and daycare. Carrie had a
high- need baby who was content as long as
he was in a sling, but she had to return
to work when evan was six-weeks-old. I
wrote the following "prescription" to give
to her daycare provider:
rx. To keep evan content: wear him in the
babysling at least three hours a day. --
william sears, m.D.
How to wear your baby in a sling. Some
mothers take to babywearing like a duck
takes to water; others may initially find
the sling awkward. Also, some babies at
first have difficulty settling in the
sling. Perhaps they find it too
confining. For the best long-term
results, get your baby used to being worn
in the first week of life, so that she
soon realizes that the sling is where she
belongs. It takes some practice, but the
sling will soon become your norm of infant
care. Take lessons from veteran parents
who have logged many miles wearing their
babies in a sling in various carrying
positions and in many circumstances. Find
one of these experts to show you how to
wear the sling so it's most comfortable
for you and most settling for baby. Keep
experimenting with various positions until
you find one that works; the favorite
position may change with baby's moods and
motor development. Most high-need babies
prefer to be carried in the forward-facing
position.
For a busy parent of a fussy infant, a
baby sling will be one of your most
indispensable infant-care items. You
won't get dressed without it.
Babywearing story
"i thought for sure I would have a baby
who slept through the night, in his crib,
in his room, and that he would awake only
to feed and to get his diaper changed.
How naive! Jason knew what kind of
parenting he needed right from the start.
He was truly a fussy baby, and we
nicknamed him "more." he screamed if I put
him down even to get dressed. He seemed
to nurse constantly, and he rarely slept.
As long as he was in my arms or nestled on
my husband's chest, he was content, happy,
and alert. Any deviation from that was a
disaster for everyone. A friend of mine
recommended a baby sling so that I could
have my hands free to do other things and
so I wouldn't feel resentful of all the
time a baby takes up. The sling was our
savior! I loved carrying him, and it
allowed me to get other things done. The
sling ended the pass-the-baby-around sport
that so many parents have accepted as just
the way things are. There is no way jason
would have stood for being bounced around
from person to person for an entire day.
An added benefit of the sling was that he
was able to nurse anywhere and everywhere
while in the sling. We went everywhere
with him—weddings, funerals, dinners,
grocery shopping, doctor's visits and
vacations. Christmas shopping with jason
in the sling was a breeze. I can't
imagine how mothers maneuver strollers
through the narrow aisles in most stores.
Everywhere we went people remarked how
wonderful my baby was. I always pointed
out that since my child felt right and was
getting his needs met, he really had no
reason to be upset."
for instructions on how to use the sling,
and more information on carrying babies,
Joined: 04 Jan 2006 Posts: 7892 Location: *UPTOWN*NEW ORLEANS*, La
Posted: 09-04-06 15:33pm
I understand that many mommies dont "like"
to hear their baby cry. This is why many
babies have "arm-itis" and the mommies
aren't able to clean, bathe, etc. Without
fearing their baby is going to start
screaming.
I know every child is different, and I
cannot compare .Oni to .Angelo, but I do
know that letting your baby cry it out is
not as inhumane as many people believe it
to be.
The ferber methos is "suggested" to begin
at month 6. Not "made" to start at 6
months.
And I don't use the ferber method often,
as my child does not cry or beg for my
attention/touch 24/7.
There's gonna be alll kinds of opinions
and suggested methods of how to soothe
your baby.
The best thing is to care and love your
baby and know what's best. If you know
your baby is safe and fed and is in no
physical harm, than it's really up to you
wheter you let him cry it out. If you
relay crying with being held, the baby
picks up on this and plays on it. If you
relay crying with no special attention
than the baby gets bored and stops crying.
I love cuddling with my baby!! It's the
beest experience ever!! Just know that
cuddling often and picking up as soon as
he/she's lip starts to quiver is totally
different.
I agree with everything nataliachick7 has
said about this. My son just turned 6
months and I still won't let him just cry
it out. I can tell the difference between
an attention cry. And a cry where
something is hurting him. Even if he
cries for attention, i'll pick him up just
for the fact that he's only this little
once and when he hits his teens i'll be
dying for him to be that little again,
wishing he would cry for attention so I
can cuddle him.
I love brayden being a baby, and I won't
doubt it if I have like 15 kids just
because there's nothing like seeing your
baby smile and watching them learn new
things so fast. It's priceless and I just
love it!
I had a friend named tonya, she had a baby
and the baby never ever cried because she
knew if she cried no one would come and
get her. This friend of mine ended up
getting her baby taken away and is now in
jail because of drugs.
I think letting your baby cry it out &
putting them in a room, shutting the door
is a form of neglect, unless it's really
nessasary (sp)
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Ingi
Moderator
Joined: 09 Mar 2006 Posts: 8924 Location: Grinning like a Cheshire Cat,
Thanks: 174
Thanked:198
Posted: 09-04-06 16:22pm
Nataliachick7, it is so nice to see
someone baby wearing!!! I loved, loved,
loved my sling!! My daughter had colic
and cried and cried. She never stopped,
so there wasn't a 'cry it out' option -
she never ran out!! It would only get
stronger and, obviously, it didn't benefit
anyone - especially her. She was just a
little baby.
I got everything done with that sling on!
Laundry. Cooking (very carefully!).
Dishes. Yard work. I even took her to
work in the sling and worked my job when
she was 2 weeks old and they really,
really needed me there.
You cannot 'spoil' babies with attention.
Babies crave attention because it
stimulates their growth and development.
Babies gain trust in people and their
world through close contact. This is also
why you should always, always hold your
child while feeding them.
Babies are only babies for 1 year. Then
they are toddlers. It gets better.
Before you know it (trust me!), they won't
be so dependent. It gets tiring, I know,
but when they outgrow it, you will miss
it.
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Meandering Away
Active User, Really EHEALTHy
Joined: 06 Jul 2005 Posts: 535
Posted: 09-04-06 17:52pm
dalicialynn
wrote:
i agree with everything
nataliachick7 has said about this. My
son just turned 6 months and I still won't
let him just cry it out. I can tell the
difference between an attention cry. And
a cry where something is hurting him.
Even if he cries for attention, i'll pick
him up just for the fact that he's only
this little once and when he hits his
teens i'll be dying for him to be that
little again, wishing he would cry for
attention so I can cuddle him.
I love brayden being a baby, and I won't
doubt it if I have like 15 kids just
because there's nothing like seeing your
baby smile and watching them learn new
things so fast. It's priceless and I
just love it!
I had a friend named tonya, she had a baby
and the baby never ever cried because she
knew if she cried no one would come and
get her. This friend of mine ended up
getting her baby taken away and is now in
jail because of drugs.
I think letting your baby cry it out &
putting them in a room, shutting the door
is a form of neglect, unless it's really
nessasary
(sp)
hi, not posted here before being male an
all, lol. I have six kids from 18 down to
5 and I have to agree that watching them
learn and the wonder on their faces at
things as tiny as a flickering light is a
joy, plus the fact they believe everything
you tell them as they get a little
older,lmao.I must say though that if you
do always pick them up when they are
crying for attention is making a rod for
yourself, if they just want attention, yes
you can tell the difference, then sit next
to them where they can see you and talk to
them, that way they get the attention but
learn that you wont pick them up just
because they want you to.
One question is anyone else as paranoid as
me when baby is first born, for the first
three months I wake up at night and prod
them to make sure they are still
breathing,how sad am I .
I'll pick my baby up when he whines
because it makes him feel safe &
secure, and if picking him up and cuddling
him makes him feel safe & secure, i'll
continue to do it because I want him to
feel like that. I understand what your
saying though.
I can't stand to see a baby cry or whine
when you can change something to make them
stop.
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diamondsz
Extremely EHEALTHy
Joined: 07 Oct 2005 Posts: 3257 Location: , Candyland-Canada
Thanks: 89
Thanked:128
Stop Putting caca In Peoples Heads Posted: 09-05-06 07:40am
Actually natalia/dalicia I dont agree (but
hey whats new)
babies can actually cry because they are
tired/overtired, thus baby needs to cry it
out until they fall asleep, I have no care
how everyone else raises there kid but no
kid is the same.
If all kids were written on one page then
every kid would be perfect and we would be
given a manual to go home(from hospital)
on how to raise a child, now thats
unrealistic. If all children were
raised the same, the cameron would have
been walking by now and would have had 5
teeth like elisa at 7 mths, also he would
have been saying a few words.
No two kids are the same and honestly(to
orginal poster) everything is your choice
some kids may need that extra attention,
some may just need to cry it out.
telling people that they are neglecting
their child for letting a child cry it out
is complete caca
i called child service a few months back
to clarify this;
as long as the child is safe,
being(crib,playpen etc) a child may cry
whether it be to the parents wellbeing,
childs wellbeing etc, as long as the
parent checks up on the child and ensures
their safety, every so many minutes.
The parent must ensure that the child is
not crying out of hunger or sickness which
could result in trauma and other possible
side effects.
Anyways it was some jargon along that line
but yep people its not >.N.E.G.L.E.C.T
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Eyes Wide Shut
Especially EHEALTHy
Joined: 04 Jan 2006 Posts: 7892 Location: *UPTOWN*NEW ORLEANS*, La
Posted: 09-05-06 09:14am
I don't neglect my child at all , yet, I
don't pick her up if she crying and i'm
doing the dishes. If I just fed, changed,
and played with her and I need to do
something, i'll let her cry. She normally
doesn't though, only if she's waaaay
sleepy.
She absolutely loves her jumper!! She
will jump herself to sleep!! I swear it'a
insane how much she enjoys her jumper. I
started using it at 3 months because she
was able to hold her head on her own.
Ever since then, she's been a jumping
fool!!!
There's all kinds of things 3 months old
enjoy! I know .Oni looooves to watch the
baby einstein dvd in her swing. That
always buys me about an hour!! She
loooves her walker too! Hell, she even
loves just sitting and playing in her high
chair! I think it's the view!!
Nobody is doing anything wrong though. No
style of parenting is wrong. Maybe it's
different than your style, but it's not
wrong.
I never said any of you were neglecting
your child. It's my opinion and I think
it's a form of neglect if you let your
child cry when you could just as easily do
something to make them better.
Some situations I think differently of but
my son cries when he's tired. Do I lokc
him in a room by himself for him to fall
asleep? No, I pick him up make him a
bottle of juice and rock him to sleep. If
I put him in a room because he's tired
& he's crying and if I just let him
cry to sleep when he would even be put to
sleep faster if I rock him that's just
stupid.
I don't believe in letting your child cry
it out, I tried it personally and I don't
like it at all. You guys can raise your
child how you want too, i'm not telling
you whats right and wrong but this is how
i'm going to raise my son.
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Eyes Wide Shut
Especially EHEALTHy
Joined: 04 Jan 2006 Posts: 7892 Location: *UPTOWN*NEW ORLEANS*, La
Posted: 09-05-06 10:31am
I hear what you're saying dalicia. I'm
not criticizing the way you raise your
child. Everyone's style is the "right"
style ya know?
My baby has slept on her belly since she
was in the nursery at the hospital, so she
can be wide awake when I lay her for her
nap. I give her her noonie, and she does
the rest. At night is when I cradel her
and cuddle with her because it's out
special bonding time.
I choose to put her to sleep like this
because I want to make it easier for the
people who watch her, when I begin to
work, to get her to fall asleep. I don't
want her to need .O.N.L.Y my touch to fall
asleep. I know too many babies that can
only be soothed by mommy. Oni is not one
of them.
I'm not talking about letting her cry it
out in the sleeping matter. I let her cry
it out when she's just crying to cry. You
know the difference with your child's
cries.
I seee waaaaayy ytoo many women having to
carry their baby around to do the dishes
and I couldn't imagine having to do that.
It would be miserable. The older they
get, the heavier they get!! Screw
that!!
i don't neglect my child at
all , yet, I don't pick her up if she
crying and i'm doing the dishes. If I
just fed, changed, and played with her and
I need to do something, i'll let her cry.
Sarah
what if she is hurting? You dont know for
sure.
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Eyes Wide Shut
Especially EHEALTHy
Joined: 04 Jan 2006 Posts: 7892 Location: *UPTOWN*NEW ORLEANS*, La
Posted: 09-05-06 11:52am
My child is 4 1/2 months old. I have
learned each cry. Her pain cry and her
boredom/sleepy cry are totally
different.
If you haven't learned your baby's
specific cries, it would be of best
interst to learn.
my child is 4 1/2 months
old. I have learned each cry.
Her pain cry and her boredom/sleepy cry
are totally different.
If you haven't learned your baby's
specific cries, it would be of best
interst to learn.
Sarah
im glad you are so sure. I feel sorry
for any baby that is forced to cry it out.
Very sad.
Laziness plays a part in
that.
actually, sarah is right. I know bray's
hurting cries, I know his attention cries
and his tired ones. If you don't know
your babies cries then your obviously not
paying any attention to him/her.
I'll say this though. Bray has never
cried just to be crying. He always cries
for some specific reason. Therefor if
he's crying i'll pick him up or try to
understand what he's wanting. If he dont'
quit crying when i've done everything.
I'll pick him up and cuddle him, sing to
him a little bit because I can't
understand baby talk or what he really
wants me to get for him.
I don't think babies cry for no reason and
I do think it's messed up if someone let's
them cry when they can do something to
prevent it.
When my hubby isn't at work he's at home
with brayden and i. If I have to do the
dishes I wait until he gets off of work so
he can help with the baby while I clean or
make bottles, whatever.
Last edited by DaliciaLynn on 09-05-06 12:09pm; edited 1 time in total
i never said I didnt know
the difference between his cries.
My point was, 4 1/2 months is a little
young to be "crying it out"
richard ferber created his method for 6
months old and above. He concurs that
babies any younger cry for need, not
attention.
i know, and I totally get what your saying
but even though we think it's messed up.
It's her child and what we say aren't
gonna change the way she thinks it's right
to raise her child. So going on and on
about it will do nothing but cause
problems.