Your privacy is a PRIMARY consideration of AskDrSears.com. Your
e-mail address is used ONLY by AskDrSears.com for the purpose of
announcing news, events and special offers available only
AskDrSears.com registered users.
Baby Sling Closeout Special! Extended through May until sold out!
Buy a baby sling for a friend and get one free for yourself or get just one at 50% off.
Buy one get one free Discount code: freesling
Or 50% off your babysling Discount code: halfoff expires: 05/30/08
*Not valid in conjuction with any other offers.
Your privacy is a PRIMARY consideration of AskDrSears.com. Your
e-mail address is used ONLY by AskDrSears.com for the purpose of
announcing news, events and special offers available only
AskDrSears.com registered users.
SLEEP-TRAINING – NOT FOR BREASTFEEDING MOTHERS
Ever since parenting books found their way into
bedrooms, authors have touted magical formulas promising to get babies to sleep
through the night and follow a more convenient schedule. While babies have a lot
of wonderful attributes, convenience is not one of them. Beware of using someone
else's training method to get your baby to sleep or get your baby on a
predictable schedule. Most of these methods are variations of the tired old
theme of letting baby cry it out. Before trying anyone else's method, run it
through your intuitive wisdom. Does this advice sound sensible? Does it fit your
baby's temperament? Does it feel right to you?
With most of these baby-training regimens you run the risk of becoming
desensitized to the cues of your infant, especially when it comes to letting
baby cry it out. Instead of helping you to figure out what baby's signals mean,
these training methods tell you to ignore them. Neither you nor your baby learn
anything good from this.
If your current daytime or nighttime routine is not working for you, think
about what changes you can make in yourself and your lifestyle that will make it
easier for you to meet your baby's needs. This is a better approach than
immediately trying to change your baby. After all, you can control your own
reactions to a situation. You can't control how your baby reacts. Use
discernment about advice that promises a sleep-through-the-night more convenient
baby, as these programs involve the risk of creating a distance between you and
your baby and undermining the mutual trust between parent and child. On the
surface, baby training sounds so liberating, but it's a short-term gain for a
long-term loss. You lose the opportunity to know and become an expert in your
baby. Baby loses the opportunity to build trust in his caregiving environment.
You cease to value your own biological cues and judgment and follow the advice
of someone who has no biological attachment, nor investment, in your infant.
Clicking into the cry-it-out method also keeps you from continuing to search
for medical or physical causes of nightwaking, such as GER and food allergies.
Nightfeedings is normal; frequent nightwaking is not.
Stay flexible. No single approach will work with all babies all the time, or
even all the time with the same baby. Don't persist with a failing experiment.
If the "sleep program" isn't working for your family, drop it.
Follow your heart rather than some stranger's sleep-training advice, and you
and your baby will eventually work out the right nighttime parenting style for
your family.
AskDrSears.com is intended to help parents become better informed consumers
of health care. The information presented in this site gives general advice
on parenting and health care. Always consult your doctor for your individual
needs.