‘My husband joked, ‘How will you handle not sleeping when the baby arrives?’ We let them cry it out. Learning to sleep on your own is a necessary life skill.’: Mom shares tips for sleep training

More Stories like:

“I LOVE TO SLEEP. In fact, when I was pregnant I couldn’t even count all the times my lovely husband made comments and jokes about how he just didn’t know how I was going to handle not sleeping when the baby arrived.

I admit I also wondered how I’d handle this. I had been known to bite anyone’s head off that tried to wake me before I absolutely needed to be woken up my entire adult life. However, when that first baby came…adrenaline kicked in, and I operated with very little sleep for months. However, we all have our limits, and once that four-month sleep regression hit with both kids, it was time to sleep train! As is my usual course of action, I did extensive research and over prepared.

By the time my first child was 4 months old and the sleep regression hit, she was basically waking me up every 30 min asking for her pacifier to be placed back in her mouth. She didn’t need to eat. She didn’t need to be changed. She just didn’t know how to put herself back to sleep since she had used the pacifier since 6 weeks old, and I’d make that choice again. It really helped during the early stages, but it was clearly no longer serving my girl or us. It was time to sleep train. What follows is my advice for sleep training based on what worked for me with my two very different children.

Before I start, I do want to note I know how controversial this all is for everyone – please try to keep an open mind. Also please know I am not saying that different choices from mine are less than my choices. People with the available capacity and resources can research and determine if sleep training is the best, healthiest course of action for their family, as I did. I wanted to share that clearly and unashamed, so others can feel more informed and less guilty if this is their choice. I also know many families that happily bed share, and I support them. It is important for each family to decide for themselves what works best.

BABY YEARS

Sleep training was life-changing for me. It was the right decision for me and my family to have sanity, balance, and harmony. How do you know if sleep training is right for you? Well, if you are doing things to put your child to sleep that are leading to physical pain, or leading you to have no time with your spouse, or generally anything that is making your life miserable, or maybe you’re feeling like, ‘I can’t live like this,’ then most likely sleep training is right for you.

Maybe you have a baby in your bed and you want your child to sleep in their own space. Maybe you’re feeding the baby many more times a night than they need to eat. If the baby is over 4 months old, you can absolutely sleep train.

I highly recommend based on my personal experience and everything I read to do sleep training prior to 8 months of age, since that is when separation anxiety often kicks in, and it can be harder the older they get, although, you can still do it at any age. When they are 4-6 months of age, it will be the quickest; it took 3 days max for both of my kids, and I have heard the same from a dozen or so of my friends that also sleep trained in the 4-8 month range.

The following is advice on sleep training a baby…

  • Make a plan based on what you know about your child, discuss with your partner, agree on a plan, and then implement it at a good time for your family.
  • Be consistent for at least a few days. If you get frustrated and change tactics, the baby can get confused. If you are consistent, they learn fast (especially when very young).
  • Make sure you pick a time to start when you can be home (no traveling, etc.) for at least the first week.
  • Not necessary, but it was helpful for us to have a great white noise machine.
  • Determine if there are ‘habits’ the baby formed that you want them to unlearn like the pacifier, breastfeeding to sleep, sleeping in swing or another device, swaddle, rocking to sleep, etc. I read, and agree from my experience, it’s best to do away with those items all at once as opposed to slowly changing one item at a time. We did away with the pacifier and swaddle with the first child, and the swaddle, tilted rocking sleep device, and rocking to sleep with the second child both at the 4-month mark.
  • It is better to start with nights and then work on naps. Night sleep is much more important than day sleep. You could start doing both at the same time if you want, just don’t try to do naps before nights. If they are overtired from naps being bad it might make night sleep harder, so at least don’t start naps until the day after starting nights.
  • Many sites recommend logging info so you don’t forget to be consistent and you can see progress as it develops. (Write down naps, crying times, sleep time, etc.) We didn’t do this, but it was mentioned a lot, so I wanted to share.
  • Have a bedtime routine to signal time for sleep. Whatever works for your family. I suggest longer for bedtime and shorter for naps. We did a diaper change, sleep sack, read a book, sang a few songs, hugged, and then went down for nighttime. For a nap, we did a quick book, song, sleep sack, hugged, and then went to sleep.
  • For the first night when you are going to do sleep training, talk to your baby. Tell them that the routine is going to change, and you are going to help them learn to sleep on their own. Tell them you know it might be hard, but you know they can do it. Try to internalize that message for yourself as well. Yes, it is hard to hear your baby cry, but learning to sleep on your own is a necessary life skill. You are giving your baby a lifelong gift!
  • For schedules, it can be tough since it is so different for everyone. We did the ‘eat, play, sleep’ routine that I read about online, but loosely. We mostly followed the baby, and we weren’t rigid. Basically, as soon as the baby wakes up, you feed them. Then, they play—for very young babies you hold them or lay them down to look around. Then, they nap. The most important thing is to keep them from getting overtired.
  • I don’t know what angel made this chart, but I can’t tell you how many times I used it. I’ve given it to every new mother I’ve ever met. This isn’t to tell you that you must follow this. I just really appreciated having this information as ‘averages,’ and I found it was right on to help me avoid an overtired baby if I generally followed this. I really started to pay attention to my baby’s sleep cues. She would pull her ear, rub her eyes, and yawn. Any of those means time to go down right away.
  • If you’re going to start sleep training around 4-6 months…you’d want to start about 2 hours after the last nap of the day, so they don’t get overtired. If they are overtired they will cry longer and have a harder time.
  • Methods…there are many. Basically, the two I used were ‘cry it out’ (CIO) and ‘middle of the road’ on cry it out. I haven’t ever heard of a method that doesn’t involve some crying, although I’ve seen a lot of people asking for that method online! I don’t think it exists…at least not for my kids. And I will also say – get used to crying. Much more is coming in the toddler years. I looked around and found no statistically significant research that showed any negative effects of sleep training or CIO. I just reminded myself how important it is for my children to learn to put themselves to sleep during the process.
  • Additionally, it is important to note there is a difference between sleep training and night weaning. Yes, I sleep trained at 4 months, but I still breastfed both my babies till they naturally weaned at 10 months and 8 months, respectively. The advice I received is most babies need to eat till around 9 months at night, and you should check with your doctor for your baby based on their weight, etc. By the time my kids were ready to night wean, they knew how to put themselves to sleep, so they just naturally kept sleeping longer and longer till they slept 12 hours straight.
  • For my first child, I wanted to start with the middle of the road since I had never done it before. We did ‘checks’ at 5, 10, 15 minutes when we started sleep training (went in and rubbed her belly and talked to her). Honestly, it made me feel better to go in there since I wanted to SO BADLY, but when I did…it just made the baby more upset. We eventually abandoned that and just did straight CIO, and went straight to CIO with the second kid. For me, both kids cried hard night one for a long time (over an hour). Night two both under an hour (45 min). Night 3 under 30 min…and both were mostly done by night 4.
  • My kids are SO DIFFERENT. My 5-year-old has cried anywhere from 30 seconds to 5 minutes almost every night of her life when she goes to bed (she still cries EVERY night when we leave). I read an article once that some kids just have a lot of steam from the day that they need to let off, and that is my first child.
  • We also had to ‘re-sleep train’ our first child at about 16 months. She got sick, and we went in a bunch to hug her. Once her illness healed she had gotten used to a new routine with us coming in a bunch, and we had to sleep train again to get back to just putting her to bed once. This was harder than the first time around since she was old enough to yell ‘Mamaaaaa’ and did for 30 minutes many nights in a row.
  • We sleep trained my second child once at 4 months, and he has literally never made a peep since while going to bed. I place him down, he smiles at me, grabs his bunny, and rolls over to sleep. For a while around 14 months, I’d tell him, ‘Night-night time,’ and he’d crawl over to his sleep sack, lie down in it and say, ‘Night night.’ SO CUTE.
  • As of now, both kids sleep 12 hours in the same room together from about 6:30 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. Yes, you did read that right, and it is amazing. The younger one also still takes a 2-hour nap every day, and the older one does ‘quiet time’ when not in school where she colors or listens to stories from around 12-2 p.m. So necessary for COVID times!
  • We have a clock that turns green at 6:30 a.m. so they know it is ‘okay to wake up’ (aka leave the room for our older child). Highly recommend it! I’ve been using it since the older was about 16 months, and by 2 years old, she really got it. Even if they wake up at 6 a.m. they stay quiet in their room and do not come and wake us up till 6:30 a.m.
  • A baby monitor was a must for me, so we could watch the babies during the process. Additionally, we still use ours to this day – it is SO cute to hear the kids adorable conversations each night before bed.
  • I know it is hard, BUT YOU CAN DO IT!!! We’re very happy with our adult time at night and for our own bed with no one kicking us. I also know some of my friends LOVE their snuggles and sleeping with their kids. I could totally see that, and more power to those families. There were a few times we daydreamed about cuddling all night with our adorable first child, so we let her come into bed with us…and each time we agreed that it was a TERRIBLE idea for us. We do family snuggles every morning AFTER 6:30 a.m. To each their own, and I hope you are able to figure out what works best for your family.

TODDLER YEARS

If you sleep train with a baby, things should be mostly all good until the time that your child is out of the crib and can open the door. Personally, I recommend delaying this as long as possible! But for the toddler years, I have to write about the hard times we experienced back when our second kid came.

Rewind to 2.5 years ago when I had a 3-year-old and a newborn. The 3-year-old had just transitioned to a toddler bed and learned to open her door. Very unfortunate timing! On that note, if you have a toddler and are having a baby and can keep the toddler in a crib for a bit, DO IT! Just put the new baby in a pack and play for a while. In fact, that advice is universal to any changes you’re planning to make when a new baby is coming…hold off on as many other changes as you can!

Anyway, each night we’d rock the baby from 7-10 p.m. while the toddler was getting up and coming out of her room 10+ times after we had put her to bed. So she wasn’t going to bed till 10-11 p.m.! The baby was crying a lot, and of course, our toddler was SO TIRED the next day. This made her test limits even more and exhibit REALLY annoying behaviors like peeing, trashing things, and hitting and kicking. Our toddler was VERY UPSET about the baby in general coming and ruining her life, but not able to understand or express that in any sort of appropriate way. (Janet Landsbury helped me SO much at understanding how hard this transition would be for my first child. I am forever grateful!) Even though I knew to expect this and that it was normal, I was SO TIRED and it was very hard to stay patient and be the calm leader our toddler needed

Finally, about 3 months post our second baby being born, we were at our WITS END! I found a Facebook chat about putting a doorknob on to help toddlers stay in their room (essentially locking the door). I have to shamefully admit…I had a very close friend who had done this with her older child about a year prior, and I remember I judged her when she told me. I remember thinking, ‘I could never do that to my child!’ Well, I was very wrong and didn’t know what I was talking about. It’s a great reminder for me to try hard not to judge others till you’ve walked in their shoes. That friend remains a saint and an amazing mother.

We ended up putting the door knob on our toddler’s door. We explained to her that we were going to help her stay safe and secure in her room so she could get the rest her body needed. We also told her that this would help us get the rest we needed too. She did not like this (of course). For many nights, she screamed and cried. She trashed her room. She was literally crazy and banging on the door. It was SO HARD. But honestly, this was a really hard time for us post baby. I knew this was what was needed after reading. She was begging for a limit to be set. She had too much power being able to come out of her room and make mommy and daddy mad. She did not want to make us mad, and I couldn’t be the calm, confident leader I wanted to be when she was waking me up in the middle of the night during the 1 hour of sleep I would get in between feeding the baby.

It took a few weeks, but she started to settle down and go to sleep within 5 minutes again. At this point, we also dropped her nap which helped. At some point a couple of months after putting the doorknob on, we suggested taking it off and she asked to keep it on! By that point, I think she was coming around and could see she needed help.

Finally around 3 years 8 months, I’d say we had stabilized again as a family post baby. Our daughter told us she was ready to take the doorknob off, and so we did. She has tested a few more times over the last couple of years and we talked about putting it back on, but we haven’t had to.

Right around when she turned 5 (and COVID hit), she started coming out again a lot and keeping our younger child up. She was too old for the doorknob, so we had a few conversations with her where we brainstormed how she could feel safe and stay in her bed. She had us order a dream catcher for her to catch the bad dreams, and she wanted us to do ‘checks.’ We’d come in every 20 min until she fell asleep and just give her a quick kiss and hug. We did this for a few weeks and then gradually dropped the number of checks till they were gone. Happy to report we are back now to 12 hours solid with both kids in the same room!

I think the most important thing during the hard new baby phase for me was that I needed to be able to set the limit on her behavior, and I needed to trust she could handle it (she could). Looking back, I waited WAY too long to set the limit with both this and putting her back in pull ups after she regressed on using the toilet—she went from fully potty trained to So. Much. Pee. In. My. Life. She was just feeling so out of control after the baby came, and we were so tired it was hard to always see what she needed…but of course, now looking back I can see it.

For me, I cannot possibly be the good mom I want to be if I am not sleeping. I’m so grateful for those that shared this information to help me make the best choices for my family to restore our harmony.”

This story was submitted to Love What Matters by youareagoodmom. You can follow her journey on Instagram or contact her at youaregoodmom@gmail.com. Submit your own story here and be sure to subscribeto our free email newsletter for our best stories, and YouTube for our best videos.

Read more stories from youareagoodmom:

‘Uh, excuse me? What are you doing?’ I noticed my husband taking an empty milk cup out of the dishwasher. It sparked a fight that resulted in days of angry feelings.’: Woman urges ‘never stop trying to understand your partner, the kids are watching’

Do you know someone who could benefit from reading this? SHARE this story on Facebook with friends and family.

 Share  Tweet