I agree, the advice of BF every 2 hours and cosleeping is NOT HELPFUL advice for some people. The OP has gotten good advice on both sides of the issue and she can choose what works best for her situation..
well said. may I add, cosleeping is NOT a good idea at all. the baby can smother very easily.
To the OP just stopping and saying when you're up in the middle of the night. I'll be the one up with you. I'm in the same boat. 4 mth old just really doesn't want to sleep. during the day or at night. I should have known shed be trouble with her foot always in my gallbladder.
I was completely spoiled by my 1st. She started sleeping through the night at 8 wks.
And to this day she is 2.5. she still loves her sleep. She takes a nap and sleeps all night. I was soooooooooooo not prepared for the 2nd to be a complete opposite. Oh also we cosleept. Everyone said it was a horrible idea, we would never get her out of bed (we did it safely; she had her own area) At 6 mths I layed her in her crib, it took a few tries. turns out she wanted it dark no night light and has sleep in her own bed since.

I agree, the advice of BF every 2 hours and cosleeping is NOT HELPFUL advice for some people. The OP has gotten good advice on both sides of the issue and she can choose what works best for her situation.
I guess I just find it so odd because I have always worked FT and been around lots of working mothers. Some BF and others FF. But I must say that in my 10 years of working at several large corporations, every single mother that I was friends with had their children sleeping on a decent night schedule by about 3 months of age (when most came back to work). Most had to get up maybe once during the night, but not every 1-2 hours. My DS was sleeping through (9-7) by 10 weeks. I don't know...maybe since we knew we had to function for work that we stopped letting the baby dictate the schedule and we set the schedule
I also agree that the baby might be hungry and BM might not be enough. DS was exclusively formula fed and he was maxing out on formula by 10 weeks. The Ped said that as long as he could take it off the spoon, to start cereal. It took some experimenting to find the right texture (thicker than I would have thought) but he took it really well off the spoon. We fed him cereal at breakfast and dinner and it made a huge difference. As soon as we started cereal, he started skipping the middle of the night feeding. Again, maybe coincidence, but I don't think so.
Does OP know how much milk baby is taking at night? Maybe OP should express some milk for at night to see if she is really hungry or is just sucking.
Another idea is DS never really took a pacifer...but sometimes I would just hold one in his mouth for a minute or so and he would take a few sucks and be out like a light. IF I held it he would suck it, but if I didn't he just spit it out. We did that a lot when he was fussy at night but didn't need anything. Only took a few seconds rather than holding him, rocking him and then trying to lay him back down with out waking him (then starting the cycle over when he inevitably woke up). That might be a good way to transition her from using mommy to starting to self soothe.
I know how you feel, my dd is 18 weeks and we went throught the same thing. I spoke with her pediatrician, and his recommendation was a nighttime routine so that after a few nights, she would learn when bedtime was. He also stated that at 4 months we could start to give her some rice cereal mixed with water as solid food twice a day. That night, we started a routine that was at about 9:00 pm we would feed her some cereal, then give her a bath with the jhonson's bedtime bath (the lavender one), then we would get her in her jammies, swaddle her, nurse her (she was still hungry after the cereal, and the cereal is not a substitute for milk) and then lay her down for the night. She was still awake when we laid her down, but she was very tired and would go to sleep on her own within a few minutes. After a few nights, she would sleep from about 10:00pm - 7:00 am, and would get up maybe once during the night but only once in awhile (not every night). I know that you have stated that she does not like to be swaddled, but you could do whatever you feel is right for you and your baby. I think the bath right before bedtime really helped to calm and soothe her. Also, every baby is different, so if you try the cereal, please speak with your ped. 1st. Our ped. actually recommended it and she absolutely loves it =) Hope all works out for you, keep us posted!!
) could not hear the baby cry . I could not bring myself to let baby CIO, knowing he was so needy. So we sort of compromised...Our youngest is 10 months old and co-sleeps with my dh and I. I just feel that is natural for a child to want to be close to his mother and/or father. He actually wakes up once in a while looks at me and then goes right back to sleep. Some nights he wakes up numerous times (thinks its from different foods he's starting to try), but if he was in a crib he would probably start crying and get upset that he is in a room alone without anyone to comfort/soothe him. I would never let him cry hysterical for me while I am in another room ignoring him. He is the most smily, content and happy loveable baby and my sister always says the reason is because "all his needs are being met" and I do believe that is why. Good luck, Linda

Well, ya know........
I shouldn't brag that they slept through the night no problem by that age (which they all did) because...
NOW the two youngest are 6 and 8 and I swear to God, I am woken up in the middle of the night by one of them every single miserable night of my life.
Every.
Single.
Night.
But that's another thread....![]()


I've had some very smiley, content, happy babies, who slept peacefully in their cribs at night...![]()
so I took night care. I eventually found a book by Dr William Sears called Night time parenting ( I think?) that saved me. There are all types of babies,some are easier than others. some will eventually fall asleep if left to cry,others won't. SOme parents feel babies should be independent,others feel babies deserve all the closeness they desire.well said. may I add, cosleeping is NOT a good idea at all. the baby can smother very easily.
absolutely not true. there are some 'scare studies' out there that would try to make us all believe this is true,but it's not. millions of babies cosleep around the world safely. In countries with a far lower infant mortality rate than the US. so cosleeping is a great option for those who wish to use it.
or vice versa,if it's what you want to do.
I would be concerned with safety when starting it while already exhausted, though. I would be afraid that I would be so tired I wouldn't be aware enough of where the baby was.
Based on talking to lots of other moms, I don't think it is a good idea at all. Everyone in my aquaintance who has done it for any extended period has found that the long term problems that resulted were not worth any short term convinence it provided. Without exception they would all classify it as one of the bigger mistakes they made in parenting an infant. Most ended up with toddlers that the could not get to sleep through the night in their own beds. Some I have talked to say that they felt like it made their kids more dependent in general. I did a lot of asking around while I was pregnant, because I was really debating this. I planned to nurse and thought it would be sooo much easier to have her right there in the bed with me. I am personally glad I went on the advice of my friends and never put her in the bed with me, unless she was sick and needed to be monitored. I don't think I would have gotten her out before she was 3, based on DD's stubborn personality. Others on this board seem to have a different experience with it.
