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experiences with sleep "training" for toddler who wakes at night?
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06/01/2013, 06:58 AM
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Posts: 2,097
Joined: 31-October 09
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Has anyone sought the help of a sleep expert to help with a toddler who settles readily in the evening, but when waking in the night wants to breastfeed to get back to sleep?
DD2 wakes and wants milk. She cries, escalating to a scream, if I don't feed her (can be as often as hourly all night). We have co-slept up until recently (and still often do), but lately we have been trying putting her in her cot and DH resettling her at night. This is working, kinda, but it involves her crying while he rocks or soothes her and since her crying is loud, this is waking our neighbour (see my thread in venting about the joys of having a neighbour screaming at us at 4am).
I thought that sleep training was mostly about setting, rather than resettling, and since DD2 settles very easily in the evening and for her naps, I figured that they wouldn't have much to offer us. Is it worth us seeking help for this resettling-without-milk business?
I think that part of it is a question of teaching her that she really doesn't need the milk all night and part of it is dealing with her increasing levels of toddler-defiance about it as best we can.
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06/01/2013, 07:09 AM
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Posts: 2,097
Joined: 31-October 09
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QUOTE (axiomae @ 06/01/2013, 08:05 AM)  She suggests night weaning after 6 months (which is a little early IMHO) if you are trying to break a feed to sleep, resettle association. She basically does a form of controlled settling/resettling, which involves interpreting cries and responding to distress but not to protest, which I'm sure you know all about. I found it interesting because it deals with resettling more than other sleep books I've read - having a specific routine so that you don't confuse your LO and they know what is expected at them of certain times. Does she have a suggestion for night weaning at 18 months when the toddler is aware enough to be angry about it? Toddlers are rather different to babies in quite a few ways (as I'm sure you'll find out in due course), and they require different approaches.
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06/01/2013, 07:54 AM
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Posts: 212
Joined: 19-November 12
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We used Jay Gordon's approach to night weaning and it worked well. I don't see the point in changing from a gorgeous relationship to one where your child cries themself to sleep - at the age where she is aware as you say, she's also going to be aware of you abandoning her to cry, which is what some sleep schools suggest. That said - a book on nighttime parenting might give you some ideas. What happens when she wakes? Do you get up to her, or lights on, or a bit of muttering, or what? Telling a toddler that boobs are sleeping and being consistent with no more is what worked for us. As did continuing to co-sleep but just me and her, and DH continuing to get sleep. With the last feed of the day - which was the last one she gave up, just at Christmas gone - was that I counted down and then she came off, rolled over and went to sleep. What does she eat during the day? I find that feeding her a big breakfast, a good lunch and a small dinner helps her sleep better. Miss breakfast, only have snacks for lunch, or an upset dinner and she doesn't sleep as well. Now to get her to not take an hour to *go* to sleep.
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06/01/2013, 11:17 AM
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Posts: 9,200
Joined: 9-October 09
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If a cat doesn't like you, then what's wrong with you?
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OP my have my sympathies, I have a frequent waker, who likes to be attached to me all night. This morning from 5-8am he was attached and every time I tried to unlatch him he just latched himself back on.
My DS is almost 15 months old and wakes probably every 2 hours. If he does a 3 hour stretch its a miracle. He always wants boob to go back to sleep.
I have tried many times to wean him. I have let him cry (me there to pat, rub, soothe, talk to) and he screams hysterically to the point of choking for over an hour and a half. He did fall asleep eventually, only to wake up 40 minutes later and then he screamed fr another hour. Repeat all night. No improvement over a week, just a moody, depressed, clingy child for the next month that takes us ages to recover from.
I offer water, tried cuddling, rocking, patting everything else other than feeding back to sleep but he doesnt want a bar of it.
I don't know what the answer is, people keep saying that it's about consistency, but it hasn't worked for us. People assume I must not be trying hard enough because it hasn't worked for us.
If I had the money I'd hire a sleep specialist to come out to my house and help me.
If you can afford it OP maybe give sleep school a try or a sleep specialist?
Good luck.
This post has been edited by Sunnycat: 06/01/2013, 11:18 AM
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