Helping Your Baby to SleepAre you struggling with a baby who just won’t sleep through the night? Not sure which sleep method is right for you? Or have you found the answer exhausted parents everywhere have been searching for? Share tips and get advice (and get some sleep!) from other parents on this board!
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Your moderator is: Naudia
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Sleep, Play, Feed
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06-05-2009 11:26 PM
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Lena751


- Joined on 07-25-2008
- St. Petersburg FL
- Posts 1,564
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Find a routine that works for you, and stick to it, no matter what! It'll take a few weeks of being constant until she begins to "get it" and start to anticipate naptime, playtime, and bedtime.
The bedtime that works for my son, now 6 months, is 8, but sometimes it's earlier or later depending on his mood. I had to change his bedtime from 11pm to 8 and it was he!! trying to do that, but I was consistant with it and now he knows that bedtime is coming.
As for sleeping through the night...When she wakes up to feed, feed her if she wants it. Otherwise, rock, cuddle, sing, or rub her back or belly until she falls back asleep. This also helps when shes fussy because she's tired but fighting sleep.
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Carolyn2891887


- Joined on 06-22-2009
- Posts 4
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It took me quite a while to figure out how to effectively sleep train. It used to be my baby would only nap in my arms! Now (and since he was about 6.5 months old) he naps well and goes to sleep well at night. Here is what I have read in Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child and have found to work for me: 1. Put baby to bed for the night between 6 and 8 pm, depending on how their naps happened during the day and when their last nap occurred. 2. Have a CONSISTENT sleep routine--for naps I nurse him in the dark bedroom, then read a short book or two, then walk around the room rocking him while singing a few songs, then I put him in his crib awake and leave the room; for bedtime I do the same thing only I give him a brief bath beforehand (I only use soap every few days so his skin doesn't get dried out). 3. Put baby back to sleep for another nap during the day after only being awake for a couple of hours. 4. Until they get a routine down, start the process of putting them to bed for the morning nap just 1 hour (yes, only 1 hour!) after they wake up in the morning. Establishing the morning nap is often key. 5. Don't let them sleep much past 7 am in the morning. 6. Be consistent, consistent, consistent in leaving the baby alone to sleep for 1 hour minimum per nap. That's if you're letting your baby cry, which was the only way I could do sleep training. Once I became consistent and stuck with it, we got improvement really quickly.
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