I can’t bear to leave my baby crying, so I am never
going to manage controlled crying. What other options are
there?
It is not impossible to teach a baby to sleep without controlled
crying. It just takes a long time and can be completely
exhausting for the parents. Still, its probably less exhausting
than a baby who is not a good sleeper!
Before you embark on it, think carefully about anything
that may be unsettling your baby or causing her to wake
up. Set up a nice bedtime routine, and stick to it rigidly.
Make sure it is a gentle and happy time, so that baby is
calm and content when she goes to bed. Make sure she is
warm enough, but not too warm. Make sure her room is dark
and quiet. Give her a good feed before bedtime, and experiment
with nappies until you find a night time arrangement that
suits her. Even if you are in favour of cloth nappies, it
may be worth investigating the superabsorbent night time
disposables, to see if having her dry for longer aids her
sleep.
Make sure that baby is sleepy before you put her in her
cot. Try not to wait too long, as she may get grumpy from
tiredness, and that will make the task of getting her to
sleep that much harder. What this means is that you will
have to keep a close eye on her during the bedtime routine
to make sure that you catch her as she gets sleepy, and
put her down then. When she cries, go back in, pick her
up, cuddle her and make a shushing noise. Do not talk to
baby or make eye contact. Just some gentle cuddling and
rocking until she is calm. Then put baby down again. Do
not let baby go to sleep in your arms. You are trying to
teach her to fall asleep herself. You will have to keep
going back in when she cries, picking her up and shushing
her, and putting her down again. Your poor back is probably
going to take strain! But this is a gentle way of teaching
baby that she must go to sleep. Eventually she will associate
the shushing noise with bed time and it will make her sleepy.
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