Dear Daughter,

You are three weeks old. You nursed pretty much straight through the night last night, as I sort of drifted in and out of being fully awake.

You’re going through a growth spurt.

When you switch sides I feel the sting of letdown. Sometimes you nurse eagerly and gulp down the milk. Sometimes you become upset because you don’t want milk. Or you don’t want the fast flow of my over-active letdown. Sometimes you just want to lay in the semi-dark and nurse peacefully while your little dark blue eyes stare at my face and your little feet kick the still-soft skin of my belly which was your former home. Sometimes you want to comfort nurse. When this happens I kiss your forehead and switch you back to the “empty” side and let you lay close. You are a wise little creature that understands what it is that you need.

I am not a human pacifier.

Usually when a mom says that, it’s an expression of frustration that their infant insists on suckling for comfort. This is not what I mean when I say this.

I am not a warm human substitute for a cold silicone and plastic doohickey.

Your father may sometimes be a human pacifier. You suckle on his pinky finger during diaper changes or when I desperately need to wash my milk-stained body in the shower and remember for a few moments that I have two arms with two hands and that the dimensions of my body do not include an oddly independent nine pound female child that is frequently suspended from my body in a wrap of lightweight gauze.  Your grandfather may be a human pacifier, as he holds you lovingly while I get your big brothers ready for bed or eat a hot meal without waiting for it to cool first- a luxury of not being afraid of hot bits of soup falling on you while I eat. Your  brothers may briefly be human pacifiers when they offer up their pinky fingers for you to suck on, always imitating their daddy.Your grandma may be a human pacifier when she offers you her pinky finger to suck on and sings you Russian songs from her childhood.

But my breasts are not pacifiers. Comfort sucking is not time wasted. It’s part of the job that my body and you have. It is how we evolved. We are the product of a long process of evolution that causes you to seek out my arms and my breasts, to suckle for comfort, to communicate with my immune system, to stay close and warm and protected, to stimulate the supply of your food, your antibodies, the components of breastmilk that scientists can see but cannot identify the function of.

Maybe you want the comfort of non-nutritive suckling because there is something that has you stressed out. Maybe you want a slow flow of high fat hindmilk that comes from comfort nursing. Maybe your body has some bacteria in it and you need the closeness so that your immune system can communicate with my immune system and it all can be taken care of without either of us ever knowing and without you ever becoming sick from the foreign invaders that your body cannot cope with but that my adult immune system attacks with the ferocity of a mama bear defending her cub.

Independence will come at your pace. “I DO IT MYSELF!” will become the phrase of the moment soon enough. The need to peel off and be independent is as natural a need as the need to breathe, to sleep and to eat. It comes from within the child when the child has the ability. It has come from within your brothers as they get older. It will come from within you as well. I can see it already as you bob your head against my chest in the wrap and peek over the side eager to strengthen your muscles and look at the world.

I choose to neither hold you past when you wish to be held, nor deny you comfort while it is something that you seek. I push you gently to be independent, recognizing that your world naturally expands within your comfort zone without me needing to push you past it into tears.

I am not a “human pacifier”. I am what you have a biological and evolutionary need for. I will not devalue your needs by implying that you lack the wisdom and understanding of what those needs are. I will not devalue your needs by becoming frustrated by your refusal to accept something that does not meet those needs. I want you to listen to your body from the beginning, to understand the difference between a healthy need of yours and a pacifying object. To have an understanding that dates back to the beginnings of your time on this planet.. That comfort comes from having your needs met, not from distracting yourself with something pink, pretty and plastic.

No manufacturer makes what you need for happiness, little one. I want you to understand this from the beginning of your life. Happiness comes from love, from closeness, and from deep inside of you. Seek this happiness, and never be distracted by things that simply pacify you rather than satisfying your needs.

 

❤ Mama.

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124 responses to “I Am Not a Human Pacifier”

  1. Natalie Avatar
    Natalie

    This was the most beautiful explanation of nursing I have ever heard. I have 5 children my youngest being 12 weeks old, and I have nursed all of them for years, and I mean years until they become 2 or 3. It is so touching to hear someone talk about nursing like this. I feel the same way about the comfort nursing, and I don’t mind at all. My oldest is 13 years old, and believe me, before you know it they are breaking away from you little by little until they are independent. Which, is ultimately what you want as a parent, but is heart breaking never-the-less. So, for me I appreciate and hold dear the closeness of nursing, because I know it will not last forever. Besides, it gives me an excuse for sitting and holding her for hours. Not that I need an excuse, but you know. I am going to be posting this for my sister in law. She is having her first child, and she has gotten some bad reviews on nursing. Some reviews from girls who haven’t even had children yet. And, now she is not sure if she can, or how it will go, and it sort of breaks my heart. I am hoping this will encourage her to give it a shot, and not give up.

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  2. Tina Avatar
    Tina

    Beautifully written. Thanks for sharing.

    Like

  3. angela Avatar
    angela

    Love this. Had me in tears. My 6 month old still nurses alllll night long and I think I am comforted by it as much as he is. Beautifully written.

    Like

  4. Nicolle Avatar
    Nicolle

    So beautiful to read. My daughter is 20 months and still nursing. We had a rough go of it at the beginning with thrush and painful nursing for months, but I never considered giving up. I attended a breast feeding support group and worked through it with a LC and a wonderful group of mothers. I am so happy that there is support for breastfeeding and wonderful online resources like yours. Now she nurses less and sometimes I already miss it – but I am so proud of us for learning about this beautiful part of life together.

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  5. Mimi Avatar
    Mimi

    Made me tear up, beautiful!

    Like

  6. Barbara Avatar
    Barbara

    Beautiful!

    Like

  7. Katie Avatar
    Katie

    This is beautiful and especially timely for me as a first time mother. It brings much-needed perspective and wisdom that I needed to hear after spending a lot of time with my daughter on my breast, sucking for comfort.

    Thanks for sharing this lovely and wise insight.

    Like

  8. Sarah W Avatar
    Sarah W

    This was amazing. As a FTM at 44 by surprise, breastfeeding has been an eye-opener. The changes that a baby brings were difficult in the beginning. Now I can appreciate in our 5th week together. Thankfully not “too late” to enjoy the moments we have and to cherish them. (I write this as LO snoozes on my breast)

    Like

  9. Linda Avatar
    Linda

    What a moving description of the nursing experience. 67 yo La leche leader and Mom of 3 brestfed children, loving grandma to 6, all breastfedmost to natural weaning. Loving, secure, healthy people who value the important things in life–themselves and other people before things. Love this essay.

    Like

  10. Kristina Avatar
    Kristina

    Thank you!!! This is perfectly written and I truly enjoyed every word.

    Like

  11. Zoe Avatar
    Zoe

    Thank you for posting this. My son is 5 1/2 weeks old and we have had a go of it. He has heart issues and my milk didn’t come in for a few days because he was in the NICU and I couldn’t immediately nurse. Now he seems to be allergic to someting in my diet so we are having to formula feed for a few days and this makes me realize that I have to push on and pump so that I can get back to breastfeeding. I miss the closeness and I know he does too. Thank you. This renewed my purpose.

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Hi Zoe,

      I’m glad to hear that this post renewed your purpose. 🙂

      Out of curiosity, what are the allergy symptoms? I only ask because usually lactation consultants don’t recommend using formula for a few days due to allergies. It can take up to 6 weeks for some allergens to clear from mom’s milk and baby’s diet, so the “couple of days” thing sounds like a potential piece of outdated information.

      -Sarah

      Like

  12. Nette Avatar
    Nette

    This found me at just the right time. I am a sexual abuse survivor who struggles with post-traumatic stress disorder. I made it through a high-risk, difficult pregnancy and a grueling unmedicated vaginal birth. I am committed to breastfeeding my daughter particularly for the benefit of helping her learn to listen to and trust her body. However, it is a truly difficult process for me given my history. This post was a gentle reminder of all that nursing can do for us both. Thank you!

    Like

  13. […] love being a ‘human pacifier’. I also really hate it. I’m also not a human pacifier and lack these amazing writing […]

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  14. Deepie Avatar
    Deepie

    Here here! Coming from a mother of an 8 year old boy (who I’m still gently pushing towards independence), 7 year old twin boys (who I nursed briefly) and a sweet little 6 week old baby boy that quite enjoys his human pacifier like his brothers did! Thanks!

    Like

  15. mam Avatar
    mam

    I love this!!! I am exclusively breastfeeding my 4 month old son and came across your writing while searching online to see if I was doing a detriment to my son my nursing him on demand and by continuing to hold off on solids until 6+ months.He loves it and I love it and the closeness it provides but the negative feedback from outsiders was and is really discouraging! The look on people’s faces when I tell them I plan to allow my baby to self wean! Thank you for making me more confident than ever in my decision to meet my baby’s needs as I instinctively see fit and as we were biologically designed. Kudos!!

    Like

  16. Nursing On Demand or Nursing By Desire? « Another Day – Another Mom Avatar

    […] love this recent blog post from Nurshable. It resonates so very deeply. As I move toward nursing my third child (while still nursing my […]

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  17. Chapel Avatar

    I really love this post. It is one of those things that I frequently hear that just gets so under my skin. In the UK they call pacifiers “dummies” which I think is such a better name. It more clearly captures the fact that pacifiers a meant to imitate breasts, not the other way around. Thank you, bookmarking this one!

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  18. […] I Am Not a Human Pacifier on Nurshable: A sweet letter from a mama to her three week old from an attachment parenting blog I […]

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  19. Laura Avatar
    Laura

    Beautifully written but do you really believe this process came about by evolution do you really believe that you and your child are a product of evolution? Do you not think that the miracle of life and the way your body provides for your child is a gift from our creator. When I look down into my baby boys eyes as I nurse him I thank Jehovah god for this gift x

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Laura,

      Regardless of where it comes from, it’s a process that works perfectly and that keeps both mama and baby healthy. If it was designed by evolution, it was designed to keep our species healthy and thriving. And if it was designed by our creator it was designed to keep his children healthy and thriving.

      Either way, at the start of humankind we did not exist in a world that looks like the one that exists today, so our perfectly working bodies and babies are suddenly confronted with a world that misunderstands the most natural rhythms for new little humans.

      -Sarah

      Like

  20. Nicola Avatar

    I am reading this with happy tears in my eyes while my little nursling lies sleeping on me in her wrap. Utterly beautiful and captures the sublime emotions that accompany nursing our young perfectly. Thank you for this and I will be sharing.

    Like

  21. Becky Avatar
    Becky

    This fantastic post makes me miss nursing. I had to stop nursing my daughter at 14 months due to an infection and surgery I had, where she wouldn’t have been able to be on my lap for a month. (At a younger age, I would’ve pumped, but we’d been considering weaning anyway.) The night before I went to the hospital she nursed a ton and I even got frustrated that I wasn’t getting to sleep. Seems like I got what I wanted in a crazy way. But a few months after her sudden weaning she decided it was comfort to hold my breast (Her term became “snoop.”) She will do this anytime she wants closeness or needs comfort. I’m glad I still have a tie with her like that. I’d much rather, just as breastfeeding, be able to comfort her with something natural than store bought. She will even snoop my husband and my mother. I know a few other post-breastfed babies that snoop. Who else has a “snooping” child? It seems right. I never knew about it before she started. But it definitely is even less accepted in society than breastfeeding.

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      I think it’s common in children that are weaned before they are fully ready– my middle child weaned himself due to my pregnancy with his little sister. He does that sometimes to me and his grandma.

      Like

      1. Louise Avatar
        Louise

        My brother self weaned early, probably because our mother had long days at school at the time, and he really loved other food. He did the same thing for a long time after he weaned.

        Like

  22. I Am Not a Human Pacifier | Nurshable | Building a Humble Home Avatar

    […] https://nurshable.com/2012/05/04/i-am-not-a-human-pacifier/ Share this:ShareFacebookPrintTwitterEmailPinterestGoogle +1Like this:Like Loading… […]

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  23. HRM Avatar
    HRM

    I stumbled upon your blog and reading it here in the dark as my 6 month old, first-born son nurses for the umpteenth time tonight has made me cry the tears of a lost child who finally finds a familiar and friendly face. EVERYONE (including my husband) chastises me for “indulging” and “spoiling” my baby by continuing to nurse/rock him to sleep and go to him at the first whimper. Even my pediatrician spouts the programmed and droning, “he needs to learn to self-sooth” (not helping my case with my husband). Why does he need to learn to self-sooth? Am I going somewhere? If I don’t teach him that, will he wake up in college and drive home to nurse so he can fall back asleep? My GUT tells me to do these things and when I have tried not to (under outside but very close pressure) it feels the very DEFINITION of wrong. I am the weird one amongst the mommies I know. My husband accuses me of “taking the easy way out” and warns that I am creating a “wuss”. I’m having a hard time bearing the opinions of others for what I KNOW I need to do and I come very close to second-guessing myself A LOT. Thank you for being here with me in the lonely night and shining the light of comraderie that strengthens my resolve and gives me the courage to fight another day for my son.

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      hug You’re so very far from being alone.

      Like

    2. Jen Avatar
      Jen

      Dear HRM,

      You have found your tribe. My son is six months old too and I was very likely awake and nursing him at the same time as you were. Isn’t it a joy and a relief to find this place? ❤

      What a lucky boy to have a mama like you. There are more of us out here who know how hard it is to follow this path even when we have support, never mind when those close to us may not be on the same page.

      Enjoy Sarah's gift to us here and hold on. It's all going to be okay. Hugs.

      Like

      1. HRM Avatar
        HRM

        Jen and Sarah,

        Your warm words first made me cry and then made me feel stronger. Thank you so very much for caring enough to reply. It’s amazing to me how humanity can work and the true emotional connection we can make without faces, voices or any other personal info other than being sisters in this tribe. Just that statement, “you have foud your tribe”, had an incredible bolstering effect on me. Thank you Jen. And thank you Sarah for letting us all in on your personal journey and creating this place to come for support. You nurture us all as you nurture your daughter.

        Like

      2. sarah Avatar
        sarah

        HRM-

        I’m glad that you feel nurtured and that you’ve found support in my journey and words. 🙂

        There’s a few groups on Facebook that you can join if you’re a Facebook user. Your “tribe” is a lot bigger than you might think. In the thousands, actually. 🙂

        https://www.facebook.com/groups/waititoutmethod/ (Wait It Out Method of Sleep Training – WIO)
        https://www.facebook.com/groups/joyingentleparenting/ (Joy in Gentle Parenting)
        https://www.facebook.com/groups/BreastfeedingAndGentleParenting/

        They’re part of a “Gentle Parenting Community” that has sprung up. Many of the women in the groups are Nurshable readers although they’ve exploded to have many other mums whose babies don’t sleep, nurse all the time, and mums who are learning more about gentle and instinctive parenting. 🙂 We follow a “toolkit” approach that says we talk about tools, offer tools, but understand if someone’s tool doesn’t fit in our toolkit or ours doesn’t fit in their toolkit. It’s fun and supportive. 🙂

        Like

  24. shauna Avatar
    shauna

    beautiful. i am still nursing my 2-year-old. he greets me when I get home from work with a “hello boobies”. I miss him all day long – but I know when I get home we will reconnect through nursing. I have no desire to give it up until he is ready.

    Like

  25. jenna Avatar
    jenna

    Thank you for sharing this! I am not a mother yet, but I am the youngest of six children in my family, all of whom are now married and have children, and I am always learning from the examples of my siblings and in-laws and trying to decide how I will do things when I am a mother. Perhaps because of experiences my oldest sister has shared and/or possibly other factors, I have thought that there was a point in the child’s life that nursing should end, like when they started to grow teeth or when they were old enough to depend on other food for nutrients. I had never fully considered the child’s need for closeness and connection with the mother. Your shared thoughts help me realize the deeper meaning and need for breastfeeding. Thank you so much! I hope I can keep this in mind when I have children of my own. 🙂

    Like

  26. Desiree Avatar
    Desiree

    I just read this for the first time and I love it. 🙂 When someone once told me that my daughter was using me as a pacifier I told them that as least I didn’t have to worry about losing these two and laughed.

    Like

  27. Beautiful Article | TTC & Pregnancy Avatar

    […] you have a moment, I came across this amazing article this morning. It’s worth the read. 38.890128 -121.107439 Share this:TwitterFacebookLike […]

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  28. […] probably like that.” Blink blink. Jaw dropped. Shock Parenting, meet Shocked Friend.”I Am Not a Human Pacifier —> Nurshablewhat I love about this: ”Usually when a mom says that, it’s an […]

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  29. […] I am not a human pacifier- Nurshable […]

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  30. […] Will Not Nurse You Forever and I Am Not A Human Pacifier, from […]

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  31. […] I Am Not A Human Pacifier | Nurshable “I am not a “human pacifier”. I am what you have a biological and evolutionary need for. I will not devalue your needs by implying that you lack the wisdom and understanding of what those needs are. I will not devalue your needs by becoming frustrated by your refusal to accept something that does not meet those needs. I want you to listen to your body from the beginning, to understand the difference between a healthy need of yours and a pacifying object. To have an understanding that dates back to the beginnings of your time on this planet.. That comfort comes from having your needs met, not from distracting yourself with something pink, pretty and plastic.” […]

    Like

  32. Clarissa Avatar
    Clarissa

    A couple friends linked this article to me – our daughters look just alike! It’s scary haha. Mine had the same hair and the blue eyes. 🙂 I think we have some long lost cousins here.

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      aww 🙂 Love to see a picture of your daughter! I bet she is adorable. 🙂

      Like

  33. Christina Avatar
    Christina

    Lovely. I read this while nursing DD2 to sleep. Your words describe how I feel about my nursing relationship.

    Like

  34. Ruth Avatar
    Ruth

    Thank you a million times from the bottom of my 21-years-a-LaLecheLeagueLeader heart!!! Absolutely spot-on and beautiful. Hugs!

    Like

  35. […] I'd share this, as its a nice little read I Am Not a Human Pacifier | Nurshable (although in sure it will rattle someone's cage!) Sent from my Nexus 4 using Netmums mobile app […]

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  36. Grammy Avatar
    Grammy

    I am 65, and I still mourn over my inability to breastfeed. I had a lot of liquid, but it was not nourishing. My son nursed constantly but lost weight. He wouldn’t sleep, cried all the time. My pediatrician told me to get him some formula, so I reluctantly did that. He sucked down a bottle, then slept for 6 hours straight! Poor little guy was starving, and I didn’t even know it. When I told my mother about it, she said all the women in her family had that problem but she hoped I wouldn’t. Well, I did. I just wish I had known from the outset so we wouldn’t have had to go through all that. I definitely believe it has negatively impacted his health and his emotions. So sad.

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Grammy,

      My middle child experienced that, and for him it was related to an undiagnosed tongue tie. He was drinking a LOT of liquid but he wasn’t able to get what he needed. Once his tongue tie was resolved he was able to gain weight. I don’t know if your experience was anything similar, but I remember how upsetting it was for me at the time.

      I am sorry that you went through that. You DID breastfeed,though. Your son nursed constantly. You tried the best you could. ❤

      -Sarah

      Like

  37. Rudy Bee Avatar
    Rudy Bee

    Wow! Beautiful! My oldest is 29 and my youngest of 4 is 22. I absolutely loved nursing. This article expressed so many of my feelings. It was a beautiful time in my life. Thank you so very much for putting into words my feelings.

    Like

  38. […] I Am Not a Human Pacifier – This beautiful post about how breastfeeding is so much more than nutrition and how ludicrous it is to compare that to being a human pacifier. […]

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  39. […] had her baby and was told by the night nurse that she shouldn’t let her baby use her as a pacifier. She was told to time her nursing sessions per side to 10 minutes even though adults don’t time […]

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  40. Jennifer Avatar
    Jennifer

    Thank you for this! I am currently nursing twin 3 month olds and they both comfort nurse. There are definitely times that I feel like a paci when one of them stays latched on all night or wakes frequently to nurse. This gives me a new perspective and appreciation for those moments. I have a 2 yr old son that I was only able to breast feed for a few weeks bc of tongue tie, so I am thankful that these babies are able to nurse without any problems. By the way, neither of them really like pacifiers. 🙂

    Like

  41. […] “human pacifier” idea. Many mothers are concerned that they will become a “human pacifier” (this is a great piece on the problems with that term) and that it’s important for them to disconnect […]

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  42. MaggieFirstMom Avatar
    MaggieFirstMom

    Thank you for this article, Sarah! It gives me such hope and encouragement as I fight to continue breastfeeding my now three month old daughter (with dark blue eyes!). It hasn’t been easy for us- not enough milk from day 1 and had to supplement with formula since day 9. I was devastated and depressed thinking I would not be able to breastfeed, spoke with a lot of moms who had the same problem, most of which told me “don’t worry, she’ll be just fine on formula, don’t beat yourself up”. But I didn’t want to give up and sought out a LC, kept my daughter on the breast as much as I could, even when just sleeping, pumping every 2 hours the first month (despite only very little milk coming out), while continuing on demand breastfeeding, taking all the supplements you can imagine, and some medication. No matter all these, I feel like I was able to increase my breastmilk supply MOSTLY by nursing at night – all night through. Just being AVAILABLE at night when my daughter needs me. I feel like her constant nightly sucking “made the things going!” as my production more than doubled. Now I’m back at work and pumping, running home mid-day to nurse, back to pump again..This article just gives me the sense of purpose and importance of all of this I’m doing! Thank you for that.

    Like

  43. Andrea Vincent Avatar
    Andrea Vincent

    I hope you don’t mind, I was so touched by this post I wanted to share it with my community, so I translated it to Portuguese and posted it to Facebook (giving you full credit and linking back to this page, of course). It’s at https://www.facebook.com/andreavncvincent/posts/10153400950935140

    Thank you so much for writing it.

    Like

  44. AlwaysForevrer Avatar
    AlwaysForevrer

    I was sitting here frustrated with my eight month old daughter because she insists on nursing to sleep, even though my milk has dried up(not intentionally) and she has to take a bottle now she always wants to nurse to sleep. And in my annoyance I was looking to see how to get her to quit and someone posted a link to this page and I read it and I cried by the time I was done. I feel like such a failure as a mom for thinking this tiny little girl should be able to change her whole routine because I want to. I’m so selfish. But this reminded why I wanted so badly to breastfeed in the first place.

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      You are not a failure, mama. Feeling touched out is normal! I hope that you and your daughter are able to find some happiness and peace in your routine. ❤

      Like

  45. Welcome to Breastfeeding | It's Only Reality Avatar

    […] misconception on the “human pacifier” […]

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  46. Daniela Avatar
    Daniela

    Thank you! Thank you! THANK YOU!!! I really needed this ❤

    Like

  47. Dave Avatar
    Dave

    What if the baby won’t sleep ever, and i mean EVER, unless attached to the breast? And the second you move him off the breast he screams bloody murder, and I mean hurt your ears, people on the other side of the globe can hear him screaming. And he won’t stop, no matter what, unless we put him back on the breast. It’s not like he falls asleep on the breast and then we set him in the bassinet and he’s fine for a spell. He wakes right back up, not 30 minutes later, not 15 minutes later, 15 seconds. and he’s angry, and screaming. My wife is so sleep deprived she’s afraid she’s going to drop him. Nothing I do soothes him. Shushing, swaddling, rocking, pacifier….nothing but my wife’s breast. She’s had maybe 2 hours sleep the last 36 hours, and this type of thing has become ‘routine.’ The baby is sleeping about 4-12 hours a day. We just can’t get him to sleep on his own except on rare occasion(maybe 2-4 hours a week he’ll sleep when not attached to the breast).

    Like

    1. DeTania Avatar
      DeTania

      I had a week like this. I was EXHAUSTED!! I moved to the corner of our L-shaped couch (so he would have no where to fall) and developed a pillow contraption with the Boppy so he wouldn’t slide and put pillows all around us and I SLEPT!! Then one day he just stopped. Now he will sleep alone but only on his stomach. So It’s been 3 months… How is your so nsleeping now? Better? Is your wife still nursing?

      Like

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