ugh.

So, tell me when this gets better.

In my apparent ongoing efforts to live-blog sleep training, an update.

Not only is this difficult, it’s embarrassing. Embarrassing to admit that I let my baby cry, because part of me thinks that is SO WRONG.

How did I get this far?

For one thing, he’d worn us down. In all his efforts to resist sleep over the last several months, there were many tears. I’d become numb. Numb enough to contemplate a non-attachment type solution.

And then, there was the immediate results: the improved sleep duration. Seems like an argument FOR.

But, here’s the thing. The books promised 3 days of hell, and then, no more protests.

Apparently I need to write my own book.

Day 5, and today he cried for 45 minutes of his midday naptime, and never actually fell asleep. At first, he’d been asleep in the car seat. But I wanted to bring him home and put him down in the crib because isn’t that better for him? The crying started as soon as he hit the mattress. And didn’t let up.

However, with the increased sleep I’ve had the last few nights, my numbness has worn off.

Figuring that 15 minutes in car and 45 in crib equalled one hour (per Weissbluth — keep them in the crib the whole naptime, even if they’re not napping), I pulled him out.

I was tired. He was hot, sweaty, pissed off.

And it was one of those afternoons where my brain just wouldn’t function.

Should I put him in the car and go run some errands? Should I put him in the stroller and go for a walk? Either option sounded impossible in my low-energy state.

I put him in the exersaucer and sat next to him. He hit the lights and animals thing the requisite number of times and music began to play. He looked at me and laughed.

You still like me? You still like me.

I started to cry. Stopped. Deep breath.

Eventually he wanted out of the thing, and I tried vainly to get him to nap with me, rock in the glider, anything that didn’t require energy from me — which led to us rolling around on the bed.

He now rolls over, and over. He lifts his hind quarters in an approximation of dolphin pose. He scooches.

Mini the scoocher.

And then the eye rubbing started.

Oh no you didn’t.

Don’t make me fight you to put you to sleep again.

But, at 4:30 down he went, and within about 10 minutes, he was out. And then, so was I.

He woke up an hour later. Now it’s 5:30 p.m. His bedtime is 6:30 p.m. How is THAT going to work?

Welllll. We pushed bedtime to 7. And then he cried for half an hour. Screamed. Shrilly. It was the worst crying so far. I felt sick. I wanted it to stop. I wanted to go get him. But I kept hearing my pediatrician’s voice in my head, warning me. Once you start, don’t waffle. That makes it much worse.

Can’t waffle. Hold on. He just hates going to bed. We’re not hurting him. This has to be okay…

And then, suddenly, quiet.

I peek through the crack in the door. He’s on his side. His shoulders heave up, settle. A sigh.

This is so hard.

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5 comments for “ugh.

  1. June 27, 2008 at 7:01 am

    Cry it out just wasn’t for us; we found driving our son around in the car at bedtime helped tremendously. It wasn’t exactly fun, but it put him to sleep with minimal hysteria.

    My unasked-for-advice: trust yourself and parent him the way that feels best for you. I’ve pretty much had it with parenting books. The last straw was when I was unable to find an entry for or “dirt eating toddler” or any combination in the index of these “bibles.” Who writes these things anyway?

    Jane Huber’s last blog post..Jacksitting

  2. June 27, 2008 at 7:43 am

    Ugh, I know this must be awful for you! Do you think maybe he’s ready to cut back to fewer naps now that he’s getting older? I don’t really have any good tips for you because I don’t have any children, but hang in there… you’re doing great!
    :) Becky
    http://www.stinkylemsky.typepad.com/

  3. June 29, 2008 at 6:33 pm

    What Jane said. :) Also, what Becky said. Might be time to cut down the naps.

    I’ll tell you that I swore I would never CIO and I did it with Mare, swore I never would again, it was that awful, three years later did it with Ren. I figured out with both my kids that they did not feel abandoned, they felt mad. They felt perfectly safe, not at all afraid, just super pissed-off. I decided I could live with that. Whatever you can live with is right. My guess is in retrospect, the real mistakes we make will be the ones we did without thinking, you know?

    DaMomma’s last blog post..It wasn’t the booger thing

  4. Leanne
    June 30, 2008 at 7:26 am

    Ditto the ladies above! Also, with my son nightime CIO was “easier” than naptime CIO. Some days my little guy just didn’t want (or perhaps need?) that nap. Took him quite a long time to go down easily for naps — far longer than 3 days.

  5. June 30, 2008 at 8:14 pm

    You don’t want advice from me on this topic at all — I’m one of those crunchy AP moms. But you get my full support for doing whatever gets you through the night.

    I don’t even know how I stumbled upon your blog, but I love your voice. I’m the head editor of the Pregnancy, Birth & Adoption channel of Blog Nosh Magazine (www.blognosh.com), and I’m wondering if you’d be interested in running something on our site. If so, drop me an email: missivesfromsuburbia at gmail.com.

    Great writing. Keep it up.

    Deb (Missives From Suburbia)’s last blog post..Comcast Sucks

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