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MrsH
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Topic: Feeding to sleep and Dreamfeed Posted: 27 October 2009 at 12:26pm |
Right, it's time to stop feeding my almost 5 month old to sleep. Because I know there is a wealth of knowledge here in OHbaby! land (yes, starting with flattery) I thought I would ask here before I look at other options.
My son (the case study) is 4 months and 3 weeks old (thanks for the reminder OHbaby!). I currently watch for tired signs although sometimes I get to them too late. When he looks like he needs a sleep, I take him to his bedroom, read him a story (Angel Baby if you're interested), shut the curtains, swaddle him, then turn on the white noise and feed him until he is pretty much asleep (which is about 5 - 10 minutes of sucking). Once I feel comfortable that he is asleep, I move forward on my nursing chair, wait, then stand up and put him in his cot ninja styles (think Indiana Jones putting swapping the bag of sand for the gold idol). If he wakes and starts grizzling, I will wait and see if it's just a quick grizzle. If not, I'll try putting the dummy in his mouth which will send him off to sleep again as soon as it's in his mouth (Note: He doesn't take it any other time as he keeps spitting it out). I've also tried comforting him while he's in his cot - he'll be fine until I leave the room.
Now, the time he starts squawking is usually when I am swaddling him. He doesn't hate being swaddled and seems to know that it is one of his sleep cues otherwise he just thinks it's feeding time (plus he scratches if not swaddled).
It's a very rare occasion when he doesn't grizzle whilst being swaddled; and also when I put him in his cot awake and goes to sleep.
This is our sleep routine for all sleeps.
Does anyone have any sure fire ways that they used to break the habit of feeding to sleep? I would love to hear them, especially if your baby is/was like mine. I won't be using the CC or CIO FYI.
I've had a look at the sleepstore website and other sites. I'll possibly be looking at buying/borrowing the No Cry Sleep Solution but just wanted to hear from others who have had this problem and how they solved it.
Also, he's never had a dreamfeed before and has not previously needed it as he was sleeping through. He's stopped sleeping through and I think it's because of this cold he's had. If, once he's shaken this cold, he is still waking in the night, would you recommend introducing a dreamfeed? He's not on solids yet.
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myfullhouse
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Joined: 29 July 2007
Location: West Auckland
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Posted: 27 October 2009 at 12:36pm |
I stopped feeding Jack to sleep at about 8mths, byt that stage he was no longer swaddled. I would feed him till drowsy then take him off the breast, he would usually wake and I would rock him, if he cried or grizzled then I would repeat until he was asleep. This way though I did swap feeding to sleep with rocking to sleep. We then slowly swapped rocking to sleep with settling him in the cot.
I have the No Cry Sleep Solution in pdf so pm your email address if you want me to email it to you. I also found (and still do) "Sleeping like a baby" by Pinky McKay very good as well
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HoneybunsMa
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Posted: 27 October 2009 at 3:41pm |
Instead of feeding to sleep you could try holding him with the dummy in his mouth swaddled and take the dummy off him just as he is getting sleepy. DD is only three months old and I have never fed her to sleep as I didn't want to get caught in that trap. I would be crap at trying to change routines and all that sort of thing.
For our day sleeps I wrap her and put the dummy in and leave it as she generally only sleeps for 40mins as she's a cat napper. The wrapping for her is a way to settle her and the dummy sends her off to sleep with the sucking motion. At night with her last sleep I do a feed change her into a new nappy regardless of when she last got changed and if I need to change clothes we do it then also then we cuddle, or she cuddles with DP while we watch tv with the dummy, when she is drowsy its good night dad and kisses, good night mum love you have a good sleep in your bed while standing by her cot I have already taken the dummy off her by now she does wake up and become a little bit more alert but she knows its sleep time so she goes down on her tummy tuck her in and she settles herself right down. We have all the lights dimmed when we are doing bedtime routine.
ETA that my SIL's grandmother was a karitane nurse in her day and she was at mum and dads yesterday when I put DD down and she was surprised that she went down to sleep as quickly as she did! As long as she isn't stressed out the dummy wrapping and covered so she can't see out of the cot/bassinet and she goes to sleep easy.
Edited by oOElleOo
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Bizzy
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Posted: 27 October 2009 at 3:41pm |
with my last baby (i'll use that as an example cause i cant remember the others LOL) i didnt wait for tired signs, just made sure that she was never up for more than an hour regardless.... then she would get wrapped and put in her bassinette. sometimes she would go waah waah then drop off, others she would be awake for a while just looking around then drop off. i know that isnt advice but thought i would share what i did.
my suggestion would be to maybe try not feeding him, just wrapping him and cudling him then popping him down and seeing what happens. i dont dio CC or CIO and think he is too young anyway but i did let them waah waah for a couple of mins before they dropped off to sleep. i think there is a big difference between letting a baby grizzle in their cot for a few mins and letting them scream till they fall asleep.
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HippyMama
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Posted: 27 October 2009 at 10:04pm |
Can I ask why you feel the need to break the "habit" of feeding to sleep?
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Mama to two earth walkers & two angels.
Remember, you are not managing an inconvenience; You are raising a human being. ~ Kittie Franz
Next Slingbabies! Meet - Friday 4th May !!
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MrsH
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Posted: 28 October 2009 at 10:02am |
Not at all. It's for my own sanity really; and also the sanity of any future babysitters and DH when he's taking care of DS.
In short, I'm tired of being the be-all and end-all when it comes to settling.
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myfullhouse
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Posted: 28 October 2009 at 10:21am |
I know what you mean MrsH, that's why I stopped bf Jack to sleep when he was 8mths. I am trying not to bf Ben to sleep, but will do it if it's the best way at the time which generally means bedtime and night time at the moment
Good luck with the changes
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kiwisj
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Posted: 28 October 2009 at 4:39pm |
C was a bit younger than your wee one when I stopped feeding him to sleep just because of the way his feeds worked out IYGWIM. But I was still cuddling him to sleep sometimes around that age.
What I tried to do was put him down drowsy but awake in the day if possible (sometimes it didn't happen lol). At night I would wrap, put the dummy in then rock and shush till he was asleep. Over the course of about a month the time he needed to be rocked for decreased and we progressed to putting him down drowsy but awake at night too.
It sounds like you have a great routine going. I would try reducing the time you BF him each time and see if he will still go down.
Good luck
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bun_in_the_oven
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Posted: 28 October 2009 at 5:13pm |
sheesh i could have written your post word for word !! just the other day i was asking for strategies and ideas on this very thing.
I too feel like the only one who can settle our 11 week old boy to sleep.. and yup its usually by him falling asleep on the breast
we share a bedroom and DH works night shift so i have to find something that works for everyone.. i cant let him cry and shoosh him for too long while DH is sleeping in the mornings.. (yes he has ear plugs and a mask Haha)
I think im going to get tough after our week long holiday next week..
I would like DH to be able to settle him and put him to sleep so i can have time to myself.. or to cook dinner at a reasonable hour and eat it while its hot !!!
ill be keeping an eye out on this post for more ideas
thanks in advance
PS what is CIO - CC is contolled crying right .. which im really not soo much into to be honest
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skp
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Posted: 28 October 2009 at 5:25pm |
CIO = cry it out
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mumtooboys
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Posted: 29 October 2009 at 12:43pm |
Well I found he eventually grew out of it. LOL Well needing to be fed to sleep ALL the time, he was probably around 6 months old.
For those who feel like they can't get anything done because they have a baby attached to them all the time.......one word, okay a couple. LOL Sling/front pack! If you've got either of those you can do ANYTHING, okay almost anything, that you could do before you had a baby. So things like make dinner, play with a toddler, go for a walk etc.
I know how hard it is to feel like YOU are doing everything, but it's been biologically engineered that way, and in the giant scheme of things its for such a short time. We've been conditioned to believe that behaviour that they exhibit when they are young, if not 'nipped in the bud' will carry on forever, which when you think about it rationally is just silly; I mean who is feeding their teenager to sleep? I had days/weeks/months when I felt that I was going to go out of my mind, but anytime I left DS2 with dad he just found other ways to settle and the baby works that out, that there is a difference in how mum settles over say how dad/grandma/DCP etc does it. I HATED night feeds when I was doing them, but when they were over I missed them something awful. I didn't mind having him in our bed either, but once he stopped being happy to be there night time parenting got so much harder. LOL
So if you are looking for tips though, I second Elizabeth Pantley's No Cry Sleep Solution. There is a massive growth spurt at around 4 months as well so it could be that; a 'dream feed' did nothing for either of mine, they still wanted feeding in the night for ages. LOL
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MrsH
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Posted: 29 October 2009 at 2:50pm |
Thanks for the input folks.
As of yesterday morning, I have stopped feeding to sleep (with the exception of a 3am waking which was hunger). I have topped him up before hand in the lounge so that I know that he's not hungry. Then I do the bedtime routine and instead of putting him on the boob, I have rocked him a bit with a dummy in his mouth. After a few minutes he's got his head turned into my arm and is trying to go to sleep at which stage I will put him in the cot. Because he has the dummy in his mouth, he doesn't wake back up again as soon as I put him in down which is fantastic!! A few minutes after I put him down, I take the dummy out.
Twice so far he's not looked tired when I've first put the dummy in his mouth so I just put him to bed awake and he's dropped off. This is a great result for me cos it means that he's learning that he doesn't need me to fall asleep.
Long may it continue!!
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kiwisj
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Posted: 29 October 2009 at 2:57pm |
 Yay that's awesome! Keep it up little man!
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