(Please read this first: I Am Not A Better Mother Than You.)

Dear Daughter,

You are three months old, almost everyone agrees that you are too young for “sleep training”, “cry it out”, “Ferberization” and all those other methods of sleep training that the parenting circles buzz about. Others say that three months is plenty old enough. Everyone has their rules, their ages, their advice, their books, their suggestions.

With your oldest brother I became anxious and felt like I was doing “nothing” to help him learn to sleep. With you, I smile peacefully when offered advice about getting you to sleep. I know that I’m not doing “nothing”, I’m laying the foundation slowly and gently.

Chances are pretty good that you’re reading this as an adult and thinking “I love to sleep! Sleep feels awesome.” and snuggling under your covers hitting the snooze button repeatedly.

You’re at the infant stage where to be held is comfort. When I put you down and you cry I don’t k now why it is that you’re crying. I’m told that you “want to be held” and that you are “spoiled” and that “you need to learn to self soothe”.

The thing is.. Sometimes we want comfort because something bothers us. Sometimes we’re rocked by the waves of life and battered by stresses. Sometimes we cling to those we love because we seek solace in comfort. Sometimes we cry because of pain or discomfort but find peace and calm in the arms of someone that we are close to. This applies to adults who have all the words in the world to communicate their needs and to understand them. To adults who have had years to fine-tune their ability to self comfort.

Since you have no words, I do not know the meaning behind your cries. And since you are an infant, I do not choose to attribute malice or aforethought to your cries that soothe as soon as I pick you up. I do not view you as a cunning little creature that wishes to interfere with my life by insisting on being near me.

Maybe you have reflux that makes laying down painful. Maybe you have a belly ache. Maybe you are anxious because of a noise, or afraid of the dark. Maybe you simply do wish to be held because my arms are the safest and warmest place in your world. Maybe your instincts speak loudly to you in ways that you do not understand and you simply know that right now you need to be held in order to be calm.

I cannot think of any reason why I should feel okay letting you lay there screaming. Yes, I need sleep. Of course I need sleep. And I snatch that sleep where I can. Yes, I like sleep. I love sleep. I’ve acquired that taste for lazy days of lounging around in bed. Lazy days that I can’t remember the last of. I have words to vocalize these needs of mine. I have people that I can speak with, and I can even make a stab at Β saying it eloquently. “I need sleep.” Sometimes I’m so tired that I could cry with that need for sleep.

I am grown. I am strong. I understand the passage of time and that THIS will pass. You will sleep. Your infancy is the briefest part of the brief time that you are a child in need of my arms.

I can wait it out so that you don’t have to cry it out.

I can wait until you have the words to explain your needs and until I can use my words to help you understand the deliciousness and safety of the dark warm place that is your bed in the night in your room in your home with mommy and daddy just a door away. I can rock with you in the dark and let my thoughts and dreams wander and savor the stinky sweet baby smell of your hair and feel the wakings spacing out and coming together as you grow through growth spurts and phases.

I put you down and smile at you in your bed as you stare up at the ceiling fan and smile. You learn that your bed is a safe place to be while awake. When you fuss or cry I pick you up and tell you “I know, you want to be held right now.” You learn that your bed is not a place where you are abandoned, but rather a place that you can happily be while awake.

I nurse you when you need to nurse, trusting you to know your needs and your hunger.

I smile at you and talk to you about how snuggly and warm your pajamas are. How sleepy and relaxed you look. I stroke your cheek and let you savor the sleepiness as you drift off feeling safe.

As you get older like your brothers have, I will do these same things. I will stretch things out and treat bedtime with no urgency or anxiety. I will talk to you as I have to them about relaxing every bit of your body and how your bed is so safe and warm and snuggly and how you can feel the sleepiness in your feet, your legs, your belly, your arms.. How you sink into your mattress and your pillow and how finally your eyes are heavy and sleepy and they barely stay awake because you are so tired that you just… fall… asleep.

Then I can simply remind you “You need to close your eyes and relax.” And I can start telling you that I will be back to check on you as I need to do my bedtime chores.

I’m more worried about how I will convince you to get out of bed when you’re a teenager than I am about the idea that you will never self soothe or that you will never sleep in your own bed. I want you to truly enjoy going to sleep at the end of your long and eventful days, I don’t want you to simply lay there with your eyes awake waiting for sleep while counting sheep as I do the same thing one room over. I want to teach you all the things that I’ve learned about falling asleep, rather than leaving you as an infant to somehow figure it out on your own.

I can savor bedtime and wait it out, because this will not last forever. You are a little creature that is bent on independence. All I need to do is help you see sleep for what it is. Safe, comfortable, and lovely.

❀ Mama

Follow up: “Learning to Self Soothe (WIO)

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282 responses to “The WIO (Wait It Out) Method of Sleep Training”

  1. Alison Avatar
    Alison

    This is beautiful. I found your blog recently and the posts are a really lovely way to begin thinking about my mothering choices with my first child, also three months. Thank you.

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      (Thank you. πŸ™‚ Writing these letters helps soothe ME when I’m passing through these times. I read gentle happy things to remind myself that I can do all of this in the gentle happy ways that I want to do things in. It is nice to know that others see my writings in the same ways, and it makes me happy that I will be passing these on to my daughter and to my sons.)

      Like

      1. Sarah Avatar
        Sarah

        I really enjoyed this! I have a two year old who sleeps fine now and crawls into our bed at some point in the night and a nine month old, who hardly sleeps at all at night. In his crib and even when he is with us in bed. I’m exhausted, my husband definitely doesn’t understand even though he thinks he does. I want to cry some nights. but this reminded me that it won’t last forever and I need to actually cherish these moments!

        Like

    2. Jessica Avatar
      Jessica

      I decided to WIO and we waited 5yrs, and my son is still a horrible sleeper. I definitely took a different approach with my daughter. I got a gentle sleep consultant to help, and she helped set up good sleep habits for my baby. She was sleeping through the night by 3months, she is an amazing sleeper, I feel so bad that I did this to my son by not setting up such horrible sleep habits and “waiting it out”. I highly recommend my consultant she’s amazing http://violet-sleepbabysleep.blogspot.com/2013/08/personal-sleep-consulting-packages.html

      Like

      1. sarah Avatar
        sarah

        If we’re recommending gentle sleep consultants, I’d like to chime in about an awesome doula that I know who runs a Baby Sleep Club. Her name is Devon Clement. http://mamasbestfriend.com/sleepgroup/

        WIO doesn’t make awful sleepers, though. It’s not a passive approach. It’s an active one that makes changes at different points along the way. If you’re passively waiting it out then it can take a lot longer.

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      2. Sarah Avatar
        Sarah

        I don’t recommend Violet AT ALL! She upselled me a more expensive package and I only got one email from her and she was somewhat mean too (not supportive at all). And that was it. No follow up. Never heard from her again. Biggest mistake I ever made was not believing in myself and hiring someone to just send me a long email of what to do.

        Like

      3. sarah Avatar
        sarah

        I’m sorry you had that experience. I’m a huge believer in trusting in yourself and your child. I’ve never been fond of sleep consultants.

        I hope that sleep is going better for you and your child now. ❀

        Like

  2. Month 5: Rollin’ Rollin’ Rollin’ – Day 146 | Pottytunities for Two Avatar

    […] 7/18 Day 146 W:Β Β Β  This morning the first thing I observed was Itty Bitty’s face and though the bruise is darker it’s not as bad as I thought it would be.Β  Check out the photo of Ms. Egghead — the swelling was much more prominent last night.Β  It looked like she was smuggling a ping pong ball in her forehead or about to sprout a horn.Β Β Β Β Β Β  Mini Moose was a bit wakeful last night having to pee a ton and nursing like it was going out of style.Β Β Β Β  Some people must wonder why I don’t “do something and teach the baby to self soothe,” but I don’t think that in the absence of a medical problem that children need to be taught to sleep.Β Β Β  I try to do what I think my mitochondrial mother did.Β  I follow my instincts.Β  Though I live in the modern world and that sometime needs a bit of tweaking, I always remember that my baby thinks it is primitive times and is adapted to that life–babies are all instinct.Β  They have the luxury of not knowing what all this other “static-y stuff” (how they are supposed to be) is all about.Β Β Β  This Wait It Out method is beautifully stated here. […]

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  3. krazelle Avatar

    AWWW! sooo cute! And very well written too.. I can definitely relate to this post coz I feel the same thing.

    Like

  4. Jennifer Avatar
    Jennifer

    Ah, Sarah, your posts are perfectly timed these days! Spent an hour doing the nurse, sing, rock, nurse, rock, nurse, sing my boy to sleep this evening, all the while thinking “this too shall pass.”
    Thanks, as ever, for sharing your beautiful writing.

    Like

  5. Jess Avatar
    Jess

    Just lovely xx

    Like

  6. Carrie R Avatar

    This. is. beautiful. This is what I have been trying so desperately to explain to my husband and my well-meaning family members. Thank you for posting this. I will be sharing this with others… ❀

    Like

  7. Stephanie Sprenger Avatar

    What an lovely pick-me-up as I sit here nursing my sleeping nine month old, wondering if she will ever learn to sleep on her own. Thank you for the reminder to be patient!

    Like

  8. msbinks Avatar
    msbinks

    Thank you for writing this! I have a son slightly younger than your daughter, and I am a first time parent. This spoke to me, as I have been reading a lot lately on how I am supposed to “train” him to sleep, before he gets overtired/spoiled/all other casualties of not knowing how to “self soothe.” Since I have no idea what I am doing (FTM ;), I have been following their advice, even though it feels so contrary to what I feel is right. Like the advice that when he wakes up at night to feed and change him, but don’t interact or look at him… how hard is that when you have a smiley baby grinning at you hoping to get a grin back?

    It’s hard to trust your instincts when you feel like you have no experience or knowledge to back them up. Your blogs help to fortify my desire to parent in gentle ways, even when bombarded with messages to the contrary.

    Thanks again πŸ™‚

    Like

    1. lyndamotvos2013 Avatar

      Msbinks, I cannot imagine getting up in the night with my baby and not interacting with the wee tot. What a sad way to spend the precious quiet night hours with your loved one.

      Like

  9. Heidi Avatar

    This was beautiful – thank you for sharing and describing so eloquently this challenging but fleeting stage. My first baby, the one I thought would never sleep alone, now has to be roused from bed in the morning. My sixth baby snuggles close in our bed right now and I treasure these moments, knowing I’ll blink and she’ll be grown. I’ve spent the last decade sleep deprived due to my little ones’ needs and I do not regret a moment I spent rocking and soothing and cuddling them to sleep. I’m raising them to love sleep as much as their momma and someday I’ll get a nap!

    Thank you. πŸ™‚

    Like

  10. Lisa C Avatar

    So well-written! Thank you for sharing this. It’s all about trust, isn’t it? I trust that my baby (well, toddler now–he’s almost 2) really does need me when he cries or asks to be held. I hope that when he’s 5, 10, 15 years old, because of that trust, he will trust me enough to keep asking for what he needs.

    Like

  11. Cassie Bailey-Harig Avatar
    Cassie Bailey-Harig

    Thank you, I needed this tonight. πŸ™‚

    Like

  12. Marina Avatar
    Marina

    Thank you. Tonight of all nights was a tough one as I am struggle with my 15 month old. Who wants to stay up until 10pm!Hopefully she will snuggle until late tomorrow morning.

    Like

  13. Kate @ TOBB Avatar

    Your post is a thoughtful and beautiful reminder of the crucial role mothers play in developing trust and security in their child. This is so refreshing after all of the blogs and books pushing CIO as the answer to all problems (which we know, is most definitely not, and perhaps a major problem in itself.)

    Thank you for reminding mothers everywhere that it is not only “ok” to hold and soothe your baby, but that they will grow into children who are not scared to go to bed and know that mama is always there when needed.

    Like

  14. Heather Avatar
    Heather

    Thanks for the gentle, soothing support for a method I’ve been supporting (in spite of helpful advice from those offering quick fixes) for the past 17 months with my daughter. I wish she slept until dawn; I wish we all did. But I’d much rather enjoy a calm, quiet bedtime routine, even though I’m still up with her once or twice a night. All the best to you and your children.

    Like

  15. Eli's Mommy Avatar
    Eli’s Mommy

    beautiful and you are so right. the moments go so quick, enjoy the snuggle while you ca.

    Like

  16. brandy Avatar
    brandy

    Thank you so much…this couldn’t be more perfectly timed as I am online trying to figure out if I should be doing something differently to help get my 9 month old to go to sleep and then stay asleep! This article made me cry…why am I being selfish? I will miss this…thank you for the wake up call! No pun intended…lol

    Like

  17. Christa Avatar
    Christa

    I have been fine with “waiting it out” up until recently (my daughter is 7.5 months). Getting her to sleep is not an issue, But I’ve started to feel anxious about the night wakings and wanting her to “self soothe”, as “they” put it. They tell me she should be sleeping through the night (and should have been by 5 or 6 months apparently). They tell me she doesn’t need to nurse at night (she’s not hungry & she won’t starve apparently). They tell me to let her cry it out, or to let her cry while I rock, pat, shhhh (I’d be teaching her to self soothe apparently).Β 
    But majority of the time (sometimes 4 or 5 times a night) she just wants to nurse – whether it’s for food or comfort or both – i don’t know… She can’t tell me with words.
    Β All I know is that when she cries at night and nothing works but to put her to my breast (which obviously works instantly), Β it doesn’t make sense to me to instead let her cry and scream for minutes (which seem like hours) in the hopes that she will figure out that mom is teaching her to “self soothe”. That just makes me feel like I am not listening, not responding properly, not helping.
    Β I have tried again and again to soothe her during night wakings in different ways to “wean” her from night nursings/comfortings, but it just results in her frustration, screams and tears. So I “cave” and give her the breast which calms her in seconds and only takes a few minutes before she falls back asleep.Β 
    So maybe she keeps waking because I “cave” – maybe I’ve created the habit?Β 
    Or maybe, just maybe, she’s waking because she is a little thirsty, or a little hungry, or a little chilly, or a little scared…. And maybe being cuddled up next to me, doing what she knows best, is the only thing she needs, wants, deserves from me… And isn’t it my responsibility, My role, My honor, My privilege, My joy, to provide those things- no matter what time of the day or night?Β 
    Maybe, just maybe, allowing her the comfort of nursing when she wakes at night really isn’t that evil, awful, bad habit that “they” make it out to be.
    Β And maybe, just maybe, I AM doing the right thing for my child.

    Like

    1. Kendra Avatar
      Kendra

      Christa, I just wanted to say that you are not alone and that I agree with your sentiments. At 12mos, it was typical for my daughter to be up every two hours or more per night to nurse. It was difficult, but I understood that she needed the comfort. I’m sure had I let her CIO, she would have eventually stopped crying for me at night, but at what cost? She has always had a need for nearly constant physical contact, right from day one, much different from her older brother. Those needs did not pause just because the sun went down. It took two years and I am happy to say that she sleeps through almost every night now (at 2 1/2). πŸ™‚ She is a happy, funny, confident child. Sometimes a little too confident, like when she walked to the park by herself and it took me nearly a half hour to find her! And she still loves to snuggle. A lot. I truly believe that had I refused to meet her needs and forced her to give up on the idea that “mommy will come to help when I need her,” she would not be the confident, carefree little being that she is. Your child will probably never thank you in words for choosing to parent her at night, but she will thank you by filling all around her with the joy that radiates from a child who knows she always has a safe place to go when she needs it.

      Like

    2. Mandie Avatar
      Mandie

      Christa, I had the exact same experience with my son just a few short months ago. Up until he was almost 10 months old he woke every 1.5-3 hours and nursing was the only way to get him to stop crying. I was over-stressed because I was sleep-deprived and we moved across country when he was 8 months old. Finally, I stopped going to him right away (only letting him cry for a few minutes), and one night, he decided that rocking was okay and he didn’t need to nurse to get back to sleep. After that he started sleeping for longer periods, and he is now 11 months old and only waking once or twice most nights. I firmly believe that he did still need to nurse at night, as he weaned himself from it. He has always nursed himself to sleep, which I was told was a big no-no if I wanted him to be able to sleep through the night, but there are times like today when he went down still awake for both his nap and bedtime and talked to his stuffed animals til he fell asleep. I am just counting these little baby steps as blessings along our journey and hope that you keep up the good work with your little one, trust those instincts. Its a gradual thing, but it really does get better, and once they are gone, you almost start to miss those quiet mid-night nursing sessions. (Although I am really enjoying the longer sleeps at night!)

      Like

    3. bethany raymer Avatar
      bethany raymer

      Yay mama!! I love reading this!

      Like

    4. Kianna Avatar
      Kianna

      Sarah and Christa, thank you for sharing and putting all of my thoughts and sentiments into such heartfelt and elegant words….you spoke the words of my heart. πŸ™‚

      Like

  18. Elana Avatar
    Elana

    You put into words how my husband and I feel. Thank you.

    Like

  19. Jessica Avatar
    Jessica

    LOVE. Good for you. Thanks for sharing.

    Like

  20. Megan Avatar
    Megan

    These are such wonderul words… and so true. I love it. It is what I wish more poeple would realize and it is so awesome that you have basically put my feelings into words.

    Like

  21. meg Avatar
    meg

    Beautifully written and just what I needed to read at 330am as I am up with my boy. Thank you!

    Like

  22. Rebecca Avatar
    Rebecca

    Thank you for this. It is beautiful and a lovely reminder that the lack of sleep phase will pass!

    Like

  23. Jen Avatar
    Jen

    This speaks to my heart!! My 13 month old has been up 4 times or more tonight..I just go in and nurse her, and put her back down. Not every night is like this, but this week it has been. Thank you for this piece!! ❀
    (I have done this sort of thing with the other three too) πŸ™‚

    Like

  24. Sarah Avatar
    Sarah

    Nice post and very applicable as my baby is just turning 3. As a FTM is is a good reminder to chill out. πŸ™‚

    Like

  25. Jenny Avatar
    Jenny

    Oh Sarah, this is so beautiful and true and real. It brought tears to my eyes. Thank you for being able to express it so much better than I could.

    Like

  26. Kim @ The Bird's Nest Avatar

    I needed to read this today as much as you commented above that you needed to write it. I think I’m gonna take a deep breath and just treasure all the quiet night feedings as best I can.

    Like

  27. Ani Avatar
    Ani

    Thank you so much for sharing this, it’s the encouragement I need tonight as my 11 month old again decides sleep isn’t possible unless he’s snuggled my hand into his chest & curled around it.
    I’ve forwarded this to my husband as you’ve articulated beautifully what i’ve been trying to explain for months.

    Like

  28. Jenny Avatar
    Jenny

    You put beautiful words to the “method” I instinctively chose with my now-16 month old son. He hasn’t yet “slept through the night,” but I’m okay with that. I look forward to seeing how things change as he grows older.

    Like

  29. jul Avatar
    jul

    this are my sentiments except we bed-share…I have 6 sons and we always WIO and 4 of them- the teens- sleep just fine alone, through the night πŸ™‚

    Like

  30. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    Beautiful. Well written. You have captured exactly what I have always felt with my now 2 1/2 year old son and now my newborn daughter. Brilliant and so sweet.

    Like

  31. Lindsay Avatar

    What an awesome perspective! I think reading this has effectively inoculated me against the well-meaning tough love advice I am sure to be reading at 4am after my baby arrives this fall. I should print this out and hang it in his room. Thanks a lot for sharing.

    Like

  32. Katie Avatar

    I love this! It’s like you articulated the thoughts I had in my heart but couldn’t quite explain. My daughter is almost 14 months now and is waking less and cuddling less at bedtime… I wish I could go back in time a year and tell myself how much I would miss those middle of the night snuggles!

    Like

  33. Melissa Avatar
    Melissa

    Perfectly written. I have Little Bit’s crib next to our bed in side car fashion. For the longest time she needed to feel me in order to sleep, maybe just a foot on my leg, but she needed to feel some part of me. And now, at 8 months, she has started rolling away from me and sleeping in her own bed. All on her own. I can literally count the sleepless nights we have had in 8 months on one hand.

    Like

  34. meredith Avatar
    meredith

    Loved this! Beautifully written and I feel exactly the same way with my 2 month old. So lovely to see it put like this.

    Like

  35. Lydia G Avatar
    Lydia G

    This is so lovely. An incredible parenting affirmation of what I’ve been doing with my almost 9 month old. Thank you for writing this.

    Like

  36. Rachel Avatar
    Rachel

    Thank you for this. This captures my heart and elaborates a feeling I’ve had for 7 months now…that’s how long I’ve been nursing and rocking my firstborn to sleep each night and for every nap. Sometimes I feel like my husband and I are the only ones who think this way and when that happens I’ll return to read this. In the last two weeks my baby has shown definite signs of progressing towards sleep maturity and all I can do is smile knowing we did the right thing.

    Like

  37. Amber Avatar
    Amber

    This is exactly where I am in my life. We are up 10 or so times a night for a comfort nurse back to sleep. Thank goodness for cosleeping and the warmth of mom’s breast.

    Like

  38. KimR Avatar
    KimR

    What perfect timing! I had a long night with my twins who seem to be taking turns needing to be held while the other sleeps. I get frustrated when the second I put one sleeping baby down the other cries to be held. I keep telling myself that they are not trying to make mommy insane, but that they need me and I am determined to be there for them.

    Like

  39. Tired Avatar
    Tired

    Ya, but what about when you have a baby who wakes up every 45 minutes if you rock them to sleep because they go ino light sleep and realize you aren’t there anymore?
    I’m exhausted when I get sleep in 45 minute chunks, how must my baby be feeling? I really don’t know what to do in this situation, but rocking my baby for 10 minutes til he falls asleep, tryin to sneak him into his crib, starting over if he wakes up, and praying he can make it through at least one sleep cycle doesn’t seem to work.
    What do I do?

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      That was my first child. And when I would get him to sleep my husband at the time would wake him up.

      I don’t blame people for choosing sleep training. This post is about how you don’t have to do it for the baby’s sake. I know that sometimes parents feel that they have to do it for their sake.

      The “No Cry Sleep Solution” is a really good book, but I didn’t find anything in it that helped with my first, because of the situation at the time.

      I’ve discovered some things that help, like waiting 20 minutes after baby falls asleep before putting baby down, and making sure to hold baby’s hands by her side when I lay her in her bed. Swaddling helps. I do a loose swaddle around her legs and a tighter swaddle around her top. She wakes because she startles. I don’t know your baby or your situation, so I can’t make any helpful comments. I’m sorry. You must be exhausted.

      Like

      1. Cyndi Avatar
        Cyndi

        Thanks for the reply!! I do really struggle with sleep with my five month-old. He needs to wake up in the exact same situation as he went to sleep. If he wakes up and the air is running where it wasn’t when he fell asleep, he wakes up!
        It is frustrating. We’ve done a mild version of CIO with five minutes of crying (where I constantly check on him or camp by his crib), five minutes of comfort. It works okay in the day. At night, the little guy goes right back to sleep after nursing (which I do on demand), but he just wakes up REALLY frequently!
        I guess I also am in the WIO camp because as frustrated as I am, I do realize it’ll only be a year or two while he’s still nursing. And eventually I won’t get those midnight cuddles with my little man.
        I just wondered if you had any suggestions.
        It is a short time in my life, I know that. I just wish the two of us could get better rest during it!! πŸ™‚

        Like

      2. sarah Avatar
        sarah

        I’ve found that certain “comforts” help my children sleep longer. My oldest likes to have his feet bare and likes to be covered by a blanket. No matter how cold it is he wants his feet sticking out bare, and no matter how hot it is he likes to be covered by a blanket. My middle child likes to wear 100% cotton footed pajamas and will wake up if he is wearing anything else. He hates blankets and will wake up to uncover himself if you try to cover him while he is sleeping. My daughter has benefited from this knowledge as I now recognize that she likes to be naked in a diaper with bare feet while sleeping.

        Point being.. Maybe there is something that will help him feel like “it is bedtime” or to be more comfortable sleeping.

        My middle child started sleeping better once he could roll himself onto his belly, and better still once he was old enough to sleep with a pillow. My daughter sleeps best swaddled for the first part of the night, but sleeps best unswaddled on her back for the second part of the night after she’s woken for a diaper change and a nursing.

        Some kids like white noise machines which keep things consistent.

        As my kids get older their preferences become more “preferences” and they become a bit more malleable. (Which is good because even though I giggle at the thought of my middle child attempting to explain to his college room mate why he is wearing adult sized footie pajamas… Yeah…)

        A change in diaper might also help. My kids have all been sensitive to diapers that contain chlorine so going with a brand that has less chlorine helped. My middle child was able to sleep through the night really well with cloth diapers when he was a bit younger.

        Look for the things that your child finds comforting, and see how you can integrate them into his sleeping area (when they are safe for his age range). If a change in noise bothers him, look for a white noise machine to keep the noise more consistent. If a change in air flow bothers him, look into a ceiling fan. With my oldest he needed room darkening drapes and a nightlight. Together. For about a year. Now he’s very flexible. He just had a period of need for a certain thing to help him through a phase.

        I wish I had the magic answer for you, but every child truly is different. All I can really say is “Don’t be afraid to listen to your heart”. Even if an idea seems odd it might be helpful.

        Like

    2. Marina Avatar
      Marina

      Please try the pick up/put down method – worked for us… The book is called The Secrets of the Baby Whisperer (The Baby Whisperer Solves All Your Problems). You show your child how to sleep in the crib, you need to stay there with them for the first few times, but then they know and can do it themselves. Please refer to the book on HOW.

      Like

    3. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      When you move baby immediately after baby falls asleep then baby will wake up pretty quickly. Wait an extra 15-20 minutes before moving baby.

      Do you swaddle? How old is baby? My middle child started sleeping through the night when he figured out how to roll onto his belly to sleep. Most babies start sleeping better once they outgrow the startle reflex or are able to contain it. I swaddle my daughter to contain her arms.

      Like

  40. Charise @ I Thought I Knew Mama Avatar

    Beautifully written! I feel the same way!

    Like

  41. Jillian Avatar
    Jillian

    I can’t tell you how much I needed to read these words today. Thank you.

    Like

  42. Beach Mom Avatar

    I absolutely love this! I was the same way with my first (now almost 3) as you with your first – worried she’d never sleep on her own but doing what I felt right – and now am exhaustedly delighting in snuggling my almost 1 year old, so grateful for the chance to help her think pleasantly about sleep. I love this reminder of why we’re doing what we are and wish I’d read it 3 years ago! Thanks for the beautiful reminder πŸ™‚

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  43. Brianne Avatar
    Brianne

    Yes, in theory this is a great idea. Lets all just wait it out and hope that our baby gets better at sleeping. My daughter had sleep issues from day one. She never slept more than 1 hour straight from the moment she was born. Being a new mom and not believing in CIO, I just waited. I rocked her, I sang to her, and I cuddled her. At one month old it wasn’t any better. At two, still not better. Surely, it will eventually get better I thought. At nearly 11 months old, it still wasn’t any better. She doesn’t do any better co-sleeping and she was a chronically over tired baby. It seemed that in my desires to meet all her ‘needs’ by not letting her cry at all that I failed to meet the most important one for her…sleep.

    My husband and I had become so sleep deprived that we couldn’t function at work or at home. Our marriage was suffering as a result. We tried everything, we took shifts, we traded nights. Nothing worked and our daughter never got any better at sleeping.

    Everyone is so afraid to let their baby cry it out. At 3 months old, yes, suck it up and hold that baby. But after nearly a year of never sleeping more than one hour at a time…something needs to happen.

    So we did CIO and I don’t regret it one bit. It was the best decision we ever made. After only 4 nights of crying (and we regularly checked on her) my daughter slept 12.5 hours straight through the night. She is no longer chronically over tired and my husband and I can finally get some sleep.

    CIO is not bad. Not meeting all of your babies needs (sleep included) can be much worse.

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      You made the choices that you made out of necessity and love. Only you and your husband have the child that you have, and only you know what you tried, did not try, and the choice that you made at the point in time that you made the choice. You know at what point that choice became necessary for your family. I’m glad.

      If you feel in your heart that it was the right choice made out of concern and love for your child and your family, then it was the right choice for you. I have not reached that point with my three children, and it would not be the right choice for me.

      Like

  44. anon Avatar
    anon

    I agree to a certain extent.

    I do not believe CIO should be a first line option for dealing with sleep issues, but I do believe there is a time and place for it.

    I think that suggesting WIO to a Mom that has already tried no-cry options and has an older infant 7+ months sometimes can be quite harmful. Why? Imagine you are a stressed out Mother desperately trying to get her infant to sleep after months and months of waking hourly. You have tried all options except CIO. You are at your wits end and starting to feel depressed, anxious etc. Why is it horrible of that mother to try and teach her child to fall asleep and stay asleep on their own using CIO? There are too many proponents of the ‘WIO’ method who suggest this to stressed out mothers who are about to go over the edge with stress etc and then prolong it even more, further risking depression etc because of the guilt that other Mom’s are trying to place on her?

    In any case, we did it. After many many months of my child waking every 45 minutes. After all no-cry solutions had been attempted. After I had to stop myself from driving and cooking at home bc I was so sleep deprived it was dangerous. It took 2 nights of crying – attended crying at that. You know what? He cried about the same amount in his crib for those two nights as he did in my arms every single night for 10-11 months straight. After that, he learned how to fall asleep on his own. Not only that, we discovered that my previously MISERABLE son must ahve been utterly sleep deprived just like his Mom as he turned into a happy baby as soon as he started sleeping longer than an hour at a time.

    I regret allowing articles like this and Mom’s in forums to allow me to feel so much guilt that I prolonged this much longer than I should have. Fantastic if you can take endless sleepless nights with no sight in end. Gold star if you are still doing it at 15, 16, 17 months. Please though, don’t project that onto others re: what they should be doing with their children.

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  45. TulipGirl Avatar

    Beautiful. . . Read it while holding my sleeping 3mo.

    I’ve btdt with CIO and it is oh-so-not-worth it.

    This article is one for the mommy-inspiration files. . .

    Like

  46. Amelia Avatar
    Amelia

    What she doesn’t consider is that her baby needs sleep just as much as she does. She isn’t doing her daughter any favors by not training her to get the rest she needs.

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      She gets sleep. A lot of it, actually. When she’s awake she’s happy, otherwise she’s zonked out.

      Don’t confuse a lack of training for a lack of teaching. πŸ™‚

      Like

      1. Kate Avatar
        Kate

        I really appreciate this because I have decided to “WIO”. There’s no pressure anymore, that why this isn’t harmful. It builds my confidence that I’m a good mom. That this is normal , or at least okay. Whenever I did try to “train” my child to sleep, that’s when we all got way less sleep, thats when I hated my abnormal needy child, I hated myself for “failing” but when I allowed myself to co-sleep and even sleep rocking on the recliner, we all got sleep. I loved my precious baby, I had confidence in myself. Now it may not work for everyone but I am and this author is not being selfish for “WIO”.

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      2. Naomi Avatar
        Naomi

        I just don’t understand all the to and fro ‘arguments’. They might not be all out wars, but it’s still arguing for and against. Why do us women need to do this to each other and say ‘I’m not telling you what to do’ when we put ourselves out there to help each other and teach each other in blogs and articles all the time? I would have loved to have someone tell me what to do and just be plain truthful about all the options. I listened on the sidelines and picked a balance of self-settling, comforting and avoided the ‘controlled crying’ thing where you leave your baby in the room. I listened to Mums that said it’s not a bad thing to walk out the door when they are partially awake so that babies can learn that being ‘away’ from Mum doesn’t equal neglect. I sang to my babies from another room. I vacuumed around them so they’d get used to noises. I loved it when Mum’s of my mother’s generation said to me… “this cry isn’t a ‘I need to sleep cry’.. it’s more of a ‘I’m sick’ cry or hurting. Check out for reflux or this or that… try this.” Why are we so down on each other for teaching and helping and saving another Mum hours of heartache? Why don’t we get it that not all studies are unbiased or truthful.. and go suggesting that another technique is not the best? We can do better.. and there is a part of us that loves to be told what to do that is gentle and well meaning, honest and not projecting a moral judgment. I have to agree with ‘Anon’. I mean.. gold stars if you want to be a hero and wait till who-knows-when for sleep to happen for both parties. Sticking to your guns just to prove something works isn’t being a hero though.. it’s just being stubborn.. and many mums are paying the cost with a damaged mental, emotional and physical health just to their own detriment… I know I did and I didn’t even know what CIO or WIO was then.. I was just neglecting my own sleep and not asking for help. Please be good to each other… us Mum’s have the power to help and encourage.. and also to tear down so easily with thinly veiled judgments? ❀

        Like

      3. Maggie Avatar
        Maggie

        Perfect response. Loved this post and it was beautifully written.

        Like

  47. Jaclyn Avatar
    Jaclyn

    It really was a lovely and well-written article. Sadly, I’ve known plenty of moms who adopt the same strategy and end up with 2 and 3 year olds who will not/cannot sleep through the night. That is dreadful for both parent and child. We used CIO (within reason) combined with a feeding schedule with both of ours, and could not be more thrilled with the results. They both slept for at least 7 hours per night by 7 weeks old. That meant I was sleeping 7 hours per night, which meant I was an infinitely better mom during the day. They both also eat what they’re served, including vegetables, with no wars at the table.
    I’m glad this method worked for the author, I’m just convinced it is not always the best plan for baby or mama.

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Doing nothing about sleep is not a great idea. I gently encourage my kids without leaving them to CIO. Bedtime takes a half hour for all three with just me.

      Like

    2. Susan T Avatar
      Susan T

      Please just be very, very thankful that you have been given two infants who like to sleep and who may have easier temperaments. Please refrain from believing that this is a perfect parenting formula for America or for the rest of the world. Research simply does NOT bear this out and logically, if it did- Β it would work for almost everyone and it clearly doesn’t, given the number of supportive comments here and around the web. Nor does Sarah’s chosen method work for everyone and she isn’t saying that it will. She is just writing it down for her daughter and sharing it for those who would find it helpful. Β And that is very thoughtful, to encourage some of the moms out there who don’t fit into the general society infant care”box” because, in America, the majority of media/experts/magazines/education system/ culture prefer the adult controlled feeding & sleeping schedules and the notion of early independence of children. (this is not the norm around the world) I had three very different infants- middle child was the “textbook” model as you have described and she slept well(and lots- about 22 hrs a day) and I parented her the same as her older sister who ate every 1-2 hrs around the clock and did not nap well or sleep thru the night until she walked at 13 mo. Third child was a mix of the first two. Β So it is ironic that in a country Β  Β where early independence is so lauded, that instead of children being allowed to truly be independent and be whoever they are, many parents &leaders & experts really expect them all to be just the same in terms of eating & sleeping, beginning in infancy…

      Like

      1. bethany raymer Avatar
        bethany raymer

        I couldn’t agree with you more

        Like

    3. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Feeding schedules are linked with failure to thrive in breastfed babies unless they are schedules of frequency rather than schedules of spacing out.

      If your baby falls into a schedule there is nothing wrong with it. But most women and babies will not do well with watching the clock while breastfeeding. Unless it is to wake up a baby for feeds when the baby is doing poorly.

      I just wanted to point that out, as “schedule” is often discussed and for breastfeeding babies it can be bad news. Moms looking to schedule breastfeeding babies need to be aware of the possible pitfalls so that if they start having problems they know how to fix them rather than just assuming that they aren’t making enough milk and weaning.

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  48. Anne Avatar
    Anne

    “I do not view you as a cunning little creature that wishes to interfere with my life by insisting on being near me.”

    Stoking the flames of the mommy wars, I see. Lumping everyone who does CIO into this bucket? Come on.

    Like

    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      May I refer you back to the first few words of this post? πŸ™‚

      This is a letter to my daughter, which I have also shared on this website. It is not a letter to a mom who does CIO.

      The “cunning little creature” line comes from discussions I have seen on CIO where people have talked about “manipulation” and cries being manipulation. Not all moms who do CIO see cries as being manipulation. Some do. The bucket above contains exactly the people who view babies as cunning little creatures or manipulators. If you are a CIO mom who does not view babies as cunning little creatures or manipulators, it is not your bucket. And if you are a CIO mom who does view babies as cunning little creatures or manipulators, then it is your bucket but if that’s your view then I don’t see what the issue is with lumping you into that particular category.

      I quite simply don’t view my baby that way. And if you do, maybe your baby IS that way. I don’t know. I’m not raising your child, I never met your child, I have only really spent significant time with my own kids.

      My primary reasons for not letting my kids cry it out is that I believe that cries are language, comfort is free, and sleep is a natural need for all humans. So far my three kids have proven that children need help learning how to go to sleep on their own, and that if I wait for verbal skills to develop that is easier to achieve. And that in the meantime establishing a routine that contains plenty of sleep for everyone means that the kid is hooked on a certain amount of sleep already and isn’t accustomed to screaming and fighting about that sleep.

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      1. Anne Avatar
        Anne

        It may be a “letter to your daughter”, but its more a swipe at people who do CIO. I read similar judgement on your twitter feed between yourself and a group of moms. You’ve “made peace with what other parents do”? Why is what other parents do any concern of yours at all?

        (And for the record, I didn’t do CIO with my kid because he didn’t need it. I’m just sick of attachment parents who are continuously trying to tell the rest of the world how uncaring and awful they are.)

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      2. sarah Avatar
        sarah

        I’m not swiping at anything. No, I do not like CIO, do not understand it personally, etc. But I don’t care what others do with their children.

        I also do not understand why/how someone could like the taste of liver, but understand that people do. Even though attempting to eat it nakes my stomach turn.

        “Made peace” just means that when I wonder why people chose a different method/food I find icky, I just say “different people are different”. NOT that I see myself as the savior of the world.

        My tweets are about not understanding how people think that CIO is the ONLY way that a child can learn to sleep. I do not understand how people can think that the options are CIO or a child who can never sleep and who is not getting any sleep/is miserable and unhealthy. Those comments were brought on by someone in this thread saying I am not doing my daughter any favors by not training her to sleep.

        I personally do not care much what other parents do. My letters to my daughter come from being constantly exposed to non-AP parents telling me “your child will never sleep”, “you are making your child clingy”. In other words, from the exact same place that your grouchiness with me comes from.

        Only I am NOT speaking to the parents that do things differently than I do. I am not saying “You let your child cry, that is abuse!”

        I am talking about what I do, and my personal reasons for it, and why I do not feel that a different method is necessary for me.

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      3. Naomi Avatar
        Naomi

        I have to agree with Anne and the other Mums here that have logically and truthfully objected to the subtle attack that is hidden behind the veneer of this ‘letter’. I love it that you care for your children Sarah.. I don’t think anyone can reasonably doubt that. I love it that you promote the nurturing part of mothering. However, you do imply that there is something morally wrong with settling techniques that allow a baby to cry.. and your writing does suggest that a mum can’t communicate to their baby love, care and security whilst using some settling techniques that are different to your style. There wasn’t any information that acknowledged the difference between emotionally traumatised crying and communicative crying…and there is a big difference.

        I’m sorry to say that the ‘do what’s best for you and I’ll do what’s best for me’ answers really do contradict this subtle self-righteousness… and that’s what it is. I can’t wait for there to be blogs and articles written that actually give both baby and mum some dignity in their intelligence and stop playing the emotional drawcard of victimising a baby and painting the woman as a slave to her baby’s every ‘need’. All this talk about CIO and WIO confusion is really not going to help a Mum out there who is beyond the point of no return when it comes to her own sleep… when she becomes so sleep deprived that she herself becomes VERY sick.. well.. these kinds of articles are just going to play on her mind in the worst way. CIO.. WIO just equal WHOKNOWSWHAT at these times…how about some BALANCE in and true compassion to other mums who don’t need a guilt trip.. but need some tips, education and help. Sarah.. you have the power to provide encouragement… can you please do this without the hidden swipes. Thanks.

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      4. sarah Avatar
        sarah

        Could you tell me which parts of my letter to my daughter harshly judge what others do with their children as opposed to harshly judging the way that certain advice applies to my children?

        The way I wrote this letter is this: I was told that you are blue. But I look at you and you are green. I do not know how anyone who has never met you, never seen you, could tell me that you are blue. I look at you. I love you. I see that you are green.

        Not “Anyone who says that babies are ever blue is clearly a jerk who kicks puppies for fun.”

        I am told that babies are manipulative. I do not look at my daughter and see someone who is trying to manipulate me. I am told that I should let her scream. I do not see the value in MY letting HER scream.

        My letter is my filtering process. “I am told this. I do not see this applying to you.”

        Other parents that choose to read my site should do the exact same thing. They should think about all the things that they have been told, and they should love their children enough to see their child and not the things that others say. Me included. Only ever take my advice if it speaks true to you.

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      5. Naomi Avatar
        Naomi

        Sarah… the title of your ‘letter’ and the emotive way you have written can be read by someone who is at risk of post-natal depression or in the middle of it or some other kind of sickness where they are vulnerable as grouping your views as being the right way and the best way as opposed to their ‘I don’t have a clue’ way I’m just trying to survive. A lot of mums out there don’t even know what these defining terms are or mean “ie..self settling, CIO.. WIO, attachment parenting, controlled crying or any other of the other terms {that sometimes can become misnomers}). When a vulnerable person reads comments like “You’re at the infant stage where to be held is comfort”… this says to them… “If I can’t hold my baby like this woman does… whenever, wherever… I’m not comforting my child like I should.”

        You’ve described psychology 101 very well. This is psychology 108… a few bumps up so I’m sure you get it. So when you say “I cannot think of any reason why I should feel okay letting you lay there screaming.”.. . this can suggest to a parent who is emotionally vulnerable (hey lets face it.. MANY nursing and/or mothers are with hormones, tiredness, sickness are) that they are not using reason if they need to let their baby ‘scream’ to care for their own needs… for a small amount of time.

        This is not ‘harshly’ judging.. but it is subtly judging as you have labelled this ‘letter’ with a type of parenting.. and so those that don’t solely agree with this WIO or attachment parenting.. are going to see you say, (especially those vulnerable), allowing your baby to cry,scream,whimper,fuss is not nurturing and caring and loving your baby as you yourself do. You’ve mentioned all these ways of crying in your writing.. and in the middle of that you’ve said…

        “Since you have no words, I do not know the meaning behind your cries.” This is a statement that confirms what you believe… that follows later with “When you fuss or cry I pick you up and tell you β€œI know, you want to be held right now.” So this says that somehow a parent that is nurturing and caring and loves their child shouldn’t presume to know what their child is crying for.. but should instinctively know that a baby needs to be held whenever he/she cries.

        I and others who don’t necessarily disagree with comforting your baby this way.. but don’t want to limit parenting to the ‘one size fits all’ attitude when it comes to sleep, feeding or teaching your baby find these emotive comments disillusioning. They compel people to ask questions of themselves about whether or not they competently care for their children instead of educating and helping. (ie..There ARE different kinds of crying that can be addressed effectively in different ways at different times of the day…. without even labelling it with a style so to encourage others to feel outside the caring realm so to speak. A single caring parent that has reflux to deal with might need to go have a shower whilst her baby does actually scream on his/her own… but does this mean he/she is being less of a parent in terms of comfort or care?)

        Without defining ideas better as parents who find pleasure in helping others as I’m sure you do Sarah can mean a lot of confusion, open ended questions that suggest judgment. That is what I’m saying.. I don’t think I can make myself any more clearer…. and so you are going to have people like Anne and others disconcerted when you don’t make it clear about what you mean. People are going to feel you are saying that those that CIO or MIO or XYZ are somehow on a different side and therefore judged because of the psychology 108 described above.

        I’m sorry you’ve had people judge you and say to you that you should let your child scream. I’m encouraging you to help others to differentiate between communicative crying and screaming so they don’t put themselves in the ‘scream/cry’ blanket kind of grouping and therefore see you as judging…. I mean it’s obvious you think this is wrong… (there is only so far you can go with the what’s right for me is ok for you.. humans are varied but not THAT different when it comes to basic needs) and people who have babies that scream blue murder whenever cold air hit’s their babies bottoms are going to see your judgment and not your love when their baby is pooing and wees more than five times a day… as dumb as that sounds. πŸ˜›

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      6. sarah Avatar
        sarah

        Naomi,

        Please consider that many moms suffer from PPD for many reasons. Personally, with my first the cause of my depression was being pressured to do everything against my instinct. What kept me out of it was putting my son in the center and making my response to his needs the most meaningful part of my existence.

        Why do you think that this letter has been shared as often as it has? Because it speaks to others who are being told to go against their instincts. What impact do you think it has on a woman who truly feels deep in her heart that CIO is wrong, who is pressured into it by everyone telling her that it is the only way that her baby will ever sleep, and who sits outside of her baby’s door going against every instinct in her body and with a hurting heart as her baby screams for hours and will not console? She feels like a failure. And a failure who has gone against her wishes, her instincts, the core of her being. She has absolutely nothing left inside that is hers. She is gutted.

        If a mother truly needs to use CIO, and truly feels that it is the RIGHT thing to do and the loving choice to make, then my words will come across as utter indulgent nonsense. It is the mother who is being pressured to CIO, who is CIOing against her will, that my words will either soothe or hurt.

        For those that they might hurt I say this: No informed decision made out of necessity and with love is ever the wrong decision. No one will ever live your life but you. No one knows your need for sleep other than you. If your sleep deprivation is so bad that you might fall asleep and drop your baby or get into a car crash and no one can watch the baby while you sleep then CIO IS the loving choice because it is what keeps everyone safe.

        For those like me, taking that happiness, that necessity, seeing it as a positive and loving thing, and giving that sleep deprivation a meaning.. IS necessary for our mental health. It lets us understand that this is the choice that we have made, that our babies are not manipulating us, that this will pass, that sleep will come. It allows us to relax into motherhood and it allows our babies to relax. Life becomes more happy.

        Many women are using this letter to share with their family and friends who are pressuring them to use CIO. Many women that feel as I felt- torn between their heart and the words of others- find this letter helpful.

        The part about “I know, you just want to be held right now” does not mean that I instinctively know what my child needs. It means I have no freaking clue but if they soothe in my arms, it is where they soothe. My daughter has screamed her head off on a few occasions, soothed when I picked her up, and I later realized that she was screaming because she had gas. The gas did not go away when I picked her up, but it helped her deal with the pain of the gas. She didn’t need to be held, she needed to fart, but being held eased the pain of the need to fart.

        “I don’t know what’s wrong, but I can hold you” relieves feelings of helplessness for many women when they simply cannot figure out what is wrong with their child.

        Do you believe that it would help at all for me to add a paragraph at the top of this letter where I say what I said above about informed decisions made out of necessity and love?

        I do not wish to cause anyone pain or doubt over the choices that they make that are necessary and that their hearts say are the right one for their situation. But at the same time, this is a letter that I desperately needed to read as a new mother. One that could have saved me a lot of pain, and one that I have been thanked for many times.

        What do you believe the right course of action is here?

        Edit: I have just written this: https://nurshable.com/2012/07/26/i-am-not-a-better-mother-than-you/ and placed a link to it at the top of the “WIO” post.

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  49. Darlene Jones Avatar

    I never let my children “cry it out” and now that they’re grown with babies of their own, I’m so glad that I always held them. PS They don’t “let their babies cry it out” either.

    Like

  50. Desiree Avatar
    Desiree

    We are in the midst of a 9 month sleep regression, and I so needed to read this. Thank you! I plan to print it out and put it in my daughter’s baby book as a reminder on those nights when sleep seems to elude us once again.

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