(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  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. Audrey Avatar
    Audrey

    As the mother of a 14-year-old and a grown daughter and now a grandma, I must say this was beautiful! I could never do cry-it-out…just felt so wrong to me. I’ve read tons of articles about it, but nothing so special as this. 🙂

    Like

  2. […] on a happier topic, this blog post validated my whole approach to parenting and sleeping–nurturing my kids and responding to […]

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  3. Jennifer Bowyer Avatar
    Jennifer Bowyer

    Absolutely beautiful! Thank you for the sweet reminder that this too shall pass, and that while our babies are just babies, they NEED us in a way they don’t even understand. Until they are old enough to hear our words, like you said, it is our job to soothe them and teach them safety and comfort. I’m in awe and complete appreciation of your words right now! Thanks again 🙂

    Like

  4. Rahime Avatar
    Rahime

    Beautiful post. I have always struggled with insomnia, and was a little terrified that my daughter would not learn healthy sleep habits. She’s 9 months old now, and we already have struggled with sleep for several months…she fights it. I’m not open to doing CIO and mostly have waited it out, but sometimes it’s so hard to see her so fussy and sleepy and fighting so strongly not to sleep. I can almost see her already as a sleep-deprived 10-year old, teenager and adult like I was.

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Talk to her gently about sleep and teach her what you have learned. How to relax from your toes up through your body, and how to let your mind wander on peaceful quiet things. Talk about sinking into your mattress and all of the safeness around you and how bedtime is the snuggliest sleepiest warmest safest place and time ever. 🙂

      Like

    2. Vacationland Mom Avatar

      Mine sleeps like that and I have NO problem with insomnia, if anything I’ve always been an oversleeper.

      Like

  5. […] irritable, fussy three month olds, and sow the seeds for more serious problems. My mom forwarded this lovely post on “Wait It Out” which is an excellent answer to this […]

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  6. keri Avatar
    keri

    I have rocked my kids to sleep until they are ready to go to sleep on their own. For my oldest that was around 15 months old. My second was much more of a challenge and didn’t go to sleep on his own until he was almost 4. My baby is now three and a half. Some nights she will curl up in my recliner and fall asleep on her own, but most nights I still rock her to sleep soothing her as she drifts off. I enjoy our curdles and I know all too soon she won’t need me anymore to help her fall asleep.

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  7. Maite Avatar
    Maite

    Dear Sarah, a friend of mine sent me the link to this blog post because I was feeling completely lost on how to teach my nearly 1-year old son how to fall asleep on his own and sleep through the night. I felt like I wasn’t being a good enough mom because I just couldn’t figure it out like the other moms who let their babies cry it out. Then I read your letter and I cried. I cried because it’s beautiful and because that is exactly how I feel. So thank you, from the bottom of my heart. I no longer feel like a failed mom in the sleep department, but empowered. I want to teach my son how to self soothe by learning to relax through breathing and meditation. It’s been a long year, but I know it will improve as we are able to communicate better. Thank you!

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      hug You’re not a failure in the slightest. Every child learns at a different rate. My children all learn to sleep through the night before they learn to “self soothe”, and then they learn how to “self soothe” during those sleep regressions when they wake up in the middle of the night a bit more again. And they learn this in a supported loving fashion that doesn’t involve crying in a crib as an infant.

      Yours will too, if that is how you want to approach it.

      Do not feel like a failure. You’re taking it slow and gentle.

      Like

  8. a. Avatar
    a.

    Babies are growing.They do most of this at night when the body repairs and creates new cells. Bone growth and development HURTS.
    If you ever had shin splints or cramps while running or “growing pains” as a teen- you barely glimpse the pain babies go through. Of course they want to be held at night and can not sleep.If you were going to grow 2 times your weight and height in less than a year it would hurt. Growing pains cause wakefulness in babies and young children.
    Also sleeping alone is lame. Every one knows this. 🙂 And there are some things we can not know until they have words. Even then.Babies cry because they need some thing.

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  9. a. Avatar
    a.

    so much to say. Cry it out is wrong. And waking up to care for them is right.

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  10. kris Avatar
    kris

    I found this post to be incredibly touching and refreshing. I am weary of hearing that a baby needs to cry it out because for one, the mom NEEDS to get her sleep so she can be her best for the baby and that it must be trained to learn how to sleep to prevent future problems. The baby doesn’t care if his mom is tired, he cares that he is crying of hunger or pain and no one us coming. By nobody responding that baby will eventually become out of touch with his needs, and the mother is choosing to “lose” that bonded relationship with the baby. I feel like its important to start that relationship when their newborns.. I had my first baby a month ago ( baby girl) and I never want to lose the bond we have all in the agenda of training her. Thank you for putting a voice to my thoughts and for giving me courage tao raise her how I feel rather than how those around me are doing it..CIO is the norm now days- a majority of mothers around me are doing it- and I feel renewed again to trust my instincts as a mother confidently. You’re my hero!!!

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Kudos on the babygirl! Listen to those instincts, they are important in filtering out baby training advice. 🙂 Teach, don’t train. Our children are eager learners with independent minds and souls.

      Like

  11. […] is a moving piece another blogger has composed on the “Wait it Out” method, which involves gently supporting the […]

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  12. […] who have all the words in the world to communicate their needs and to understand them.” – http://nurshable.com Share this:TwitterFacebookPinterestTumblrLike this:LikeBe the first to like […]

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  13. […] kitchen-be still my heart!). *6 food preservation methods. *Mason jar lid tarts=genius! *The “wait it out” method; it’s what we do with Huxley. *Dark Rye’s profile of Meg Paska has my […]

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  14. Sarah Rose Avatar

    This so beautiful and well written! ❤

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Thank you! And I made the mistake of visiting your site. Now I want a greek yogurt breakfast taco. Now. Must visit your site more in the morning, I have a feeling I’ll like it there.

      Like

  15. mommyv Avatar
    mommyv

    I was always a mom who thought baby would go.in their own bes, no room sharing and no way I would ever hold hold hold, my baby would self soothe and there was.nothing else, but you know, when I actually had him, I spent 11 months room sharing and never let him cry it out. Now I realize, this post put it in perfect words. I always said this too shall pass, and my now 15 month old is perfectly adjusted, these days he does.sometimes fuss before.bed, but I go in, I talk I soothe , I don’t pick up now only because he thinks it is play time… How perfect this post is. Thanks

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  16. Jamie Avatar
    Jamie

    Thank you. I was fine to do what I felt was right with my child, but its always comforting to see someone else come to the same conclusions, and your post echoes my thought process.
    My son loves to sleep now but it was a long 14 months of waking up at night. I waited it out and am so happy that I did.

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  17. Deborah Avatar
    Deborah

    This is lovely! Sums up how i feel but you have put it more eloquently. My boy is 3 weeks old tomorrow and although i do feel exhausted at points i could never leave him crying and i love the fact that he needs his mummy and daddy and we will always be there for him. Im glad i found this blog!

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  18. […] Today, 19:43 PM   #1   document.write(fpads); I know that there are many different ideas/threads about sleeping issues and to be honest we are still finding our feet with our own little man so i dont have much advice to give. However i have just come across this blog through a friend on facebook and this entry sums up beautifully how i feel about my little one sleeping. Im know its not everyones cup of tea but if it helps just one person i thought it was worth sharing! https://nurshable.com/2012/07/19/the-…/#comment-6373 […]

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  19. […] Sleep Posted on November 5, 2012 by shelbyzy Sometimes I’m so tired that I could cry with that need for sleep. […]

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  20. Jenny Avatar
    Jenny

    Thanks so much for posting this. I’ve loved sleeping with my babies and could never let them cry it out. I like to read this every once in a while to remind myself why I do it. I wish more women would trust their instincts before they trust a book.

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  21. Rosie prior Avatar
    Rosie prior

    Thank you for sharing this. It makes me feel less guilty about doing the right thing for me and my baby which is comforting my 10 month old when she needs me. I have been criticized for spoiling, feeding on demand and running when she cries in the night. I hope that the little layers of comfort, kisses and cuddles, and love build up over time, so that the little knocks later in life don’t knock them down. Wise words you write. Thanks

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  22. Beth Avatar
    Beth

    My twins are 21 months old. She has been sleeping through the night for over a year. He has been sleeping through the night for almost a month. Different babies have different needs. I treated each of them exactly the same. She would sleep and he wouldn’t. As I told people who would tell me what to do to get him to sleep “very few 18 year olds need to sleep with their mommy. He’ll figure it out on his own. But until he does, I will be there to help him”

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Love this. 🙂

      Like

  23. Katrina Avatar
    Katrina

    I am surprised that you don’t see the hidden attacks to other mothers when you use words like abandonemnt. With that being said, I am an “attached mother” and am glad that my children are responsive to these “methods” almost all of the time.
    Aside from how you comare yourself to other mothers I think the article is sweet.
    To the mother’s who worry that they aren’t good enough or dwell on their decisions as a mom… No mother is perfect.

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      It depends on how you look at it. If you look at it like an attack, I guess I can see any of my reasons for wanting to do any of the things that I do as an “attack”. But you can look at any reason that way.

      I choose to wait it out because I want to respond to you when you cry. (this can be read- OTHER MOTHERS DON’T RESPOND TO THEIR BABIES WHEN THEY CRY! BAD MOM!)

      I choose to wait it out because I enjoy spending time with you… (this can be read- OTHER MOTHERS DON’T ENJOY SPENDING TIME WITH THEIR BABIES! BAD MOM! UNGRATEFUL MOM!)

      I choose to use CIO so that you will be able to sleep independently and self soothe. (This can be read- OTHER MOTHERS DON’T CARE IF THEIR BABIES CAN SLEEP INDEPENDENTLY OR SELF SOOTHE! THEY WANT THEIR CHILDREN TO BE DEPENDENT ON THEM FOREVER!)

      I spend $300 on a car seat that can rear face longer because if my child were ever to get hurt I would feel SO guilty. (This can be read- MOMS WITHOUT $300 TO SPEND ON A CAR SEAT DON’T CARE IF THEIR CHILD GETS HURT! BAD MOM!)

      Right down to the choice of detergent. “I want my baby to smell good!” (So moms who use hypoallergenic scent free detergent don’t want their baby to smell good. They want their baby to smell like poo.) Or “I use hypoallergenic detergent because I don’t want my baby to get exposed to chemicals. (So moms who use anything else are wantonly exposing their kids to cancer laden chemicals.)

      If I chose to use CIO, I would feel that I was abandoning my child. And none of the articles about it “being okay” would make that feeling go away. It doesn’t mean that I see other mothers as “abandoning their children”. It means that all the suggestions that I have gotten to try CIO and that it would “be okay”… Do not work for me.

      The reason that this post goes semi viral here and there is because a LOT of moms that DO NOT want to CIO because it DOES feel like abandonment.. Are told over and over and over and over and over and over that they should. That they should ignore what they feel. That they are hurting their babies.. That their babies will never sleep… etc. Not because everyone wants to jump around and be all like “I’M A GOOD MOM AND EVERYONE ELSE IS A BAD MOM! IN FACT YOU, THE WRITER OF THE POST IS A BAD MOM TOO BECAUSE YOU DON’T DO 100% OF EVERYTHING THE WAY I DOOOO! WHOOOO!”

      Go read the post I linked to at the top of this post. 🙂 I’m not a better mom than anyone. I’m the mother that I choose to be for the reasons applicable to my life and my children. Other mothers are different because they’re different and have different children.

      Like

  24. […] tonight as Matt and I swap Rocking duty, I found this beautiful letter written from mother to child.  I could not have written it better. I’m thankful for that Mother tonight. Tonight, I can […]

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  25. Cynthia Avatar
    Cynthia

    So does this mean you never have a night / naptime off? You never go out for a nice evening with your husband and/or friends until the baby can go to sleep on her own? We have used this same approach – my daughter is 2 1/2 now and it’s getting rather old. I love my child with everything that I am but also need to nurture myself – and that includes interactions occasionally with adults over a mature dinner. It would be nice to have the option for someone else to get her to sleep so I could have a tiny break every now and then. I’m not criticizing. I think to each their own, but I truly am asking what you do about the evenings and middle of the day naps? Do you really never take this time off? All my best!

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      The baby needing help to go to sleep does not always mean baby needing MOM to go to sleep. Unfortunately my daughter really only accepts me for sleep right now, but is starting to accept dad as well, and will likely accept gramma/grampa after that since she has a very close relationship with each of them.

      When she was 3 months old her dad and I went to see Avengers in the theater, she came along in the wrap and nursed/slept through it. He and I watch movies together and spend time together while she sleeps.

      With our middle child he accepted a variety of ways to fall asleep and eat. So we were able to go and do more things. It was nice. To be honest, I do miss it. But it will pass. Right now the “can’t take a bottle” is a much greater hurdle than anything else.

      With Anne Marie we will likely be able to go do something for several hours in the afternoon after she is about 10 months old.

      In the grand scheme of things it’s short. Intense, but short.

      When I HAVE to be somewhere she is not allowed, I arrange childcare to be with her nearby.

      Like

    2. Liseanne Avatar
      Liseanne

      DH and I have had date nights since dd was 6 weeks old. 🙂 She falls asleep for others in other ways (daddy cuddles her to sleep, grandpa bounces her, grandma rocks or carries her). And now, at 3, she can put herself to sleep. She prefers to nurse to sleep, but if I tell her to roll over and go to sleep on her own, she does.

      Like

  26. ashleyanne Avatar
    ashleyanne

    I can’t thank you enough for writing and sharing this. My son is just over 4 months old and I feel like I’m being bullied into sleep training and various parenting methods. 4 months isn’t some magical time that I should just stop tending to his needs and/or only tending to them on my time. This isn’t my time- it’s his.

    Thank you for putting my feelings into words and validating the choices my little family is making!

    Like

  27. Meagan Avatar
    Meagan

    Thank you!!! I,too, am of the WIO club with getting my 11 1/2 month old son to sleep. In fact, we even take it a bit further and nurse to sleep for every nap that he’s not in daycare for and for bed. I have to stay in bed with him for the entire time he sleeps. Thing is,he falls asleep beautifully with out much fuss (once in a while,he has his moments),and he stays asleep.
    I’m able to “deal” with this because I’m always reminding myself that this time,with him in my arms,cuddled up against me, is so limited. I can’t imagine not having him near me for almost all of his sleep. All summer long,when my husband was also on paternity leave (we live in Europe where we get year-long maternity leaves and the father can also have about 12 weeks) and we “had” to carry our son around in the Mei Tai baby carrier for every single nap,if we wanted to be out in the sun.Was this convenient? Not especially,but it works and we got to be there for him.
    So many people,including mother in-law,has been against us holding our son so much. We keep being told to put him down,make him sleep on his own,etc. Thankfully,I’m pretty opinionated myself and stick to what I know in my heart and gut to be right for me,so no one can persuade me otherwise. Still,it’s so wonderful to hear from like-minded mothers just to add a bit of the fire of support under me. Even this strong mamma,it helps. Thank you for this article!!

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  28. […] children need to be attended to, both day and night, until they outgrow that need. Here’s a lovely little essay about what one mother call the “wait it out” approach to baby […]

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  29. Sara Avatar

    LOVE LOVE LOVE this article!! SUCH good words and SO how I truly feel about babies. Thanks for writing this.

    Like

  30. Linda Avatar
    Linda

    Thank you for this article. I’ve never sleep trained my son who is now 18m. We co-sleep for many different reasons and I’ve always felt like I was wrong for doing it (even though I didn’t/don’t care) but this article made me feel 100x better. Thank you again!

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  31. Can you spoil a baby?…

    You cannot spoil a baby. They don’t yet have the intellectual capability to manipulate you. They just know what’s good and safe for them, and that’s all they ask of you. Don’t let your baby cry for long. Their crying is their only means of communic…

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  32. What’s good advice for sleep training a 4-month-old?…

    Please don’t let your baby cry it out. Especially if you see he is getting hysterical. I don’t believe in it and it breaks my heart to think what baby must feel. How would you feel, if someone you loved unconditionally abandoned you and would not pic…

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  33. jenny Avatar
    jenny

    thx for this. i’m sitting here crying (i was crying before i found your post) as my 6 mo son cries himself to sleep for his nap. he cried 28 minutes. we’ve been doing sleep training for 2 months. it is killing me and he is not learning anything (as far as i can tell). all i can find online are sleep training boards where they tell u how it worked for them or to keep trying. and i really am at teh point that i thikn my baby doesn’t take to sleep training (CIO) like other moms’ babies have. i’m going with Wait It Out. thanks for this. i really needed it. as did my little boy.

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Jenny-

      Hug There’s a great group of mamas over here: http://www.facebook.com/groups/waititoutmethod/ We talk about ways to help make waiting it out easier. Ways to gently encourage our children to sleep more/sleep better, etc. It’s a great group of non-judgemental moms. Many of them have tried CIO and have had similar experiences to yours. I hope to see you there!

      ❤ – Sarah

      Like

    2. Gail Avatar
      Gail

      Jenny, Sarah mentioned your comment – and would love to see you in our WIO group on FB. We have been in your shoes and feel the pressure to “get our babies to sleep”. But thankfully we have each other to turn to for support. Its a great group – its so helpful and has made those difficult days a bit easier when you know you are not alone in your journey! Hugs to you! Glad you found Sarah’s amazing letter!

      Like

  34. […] The WIO (Wait it Out) Method of Sleep Training […]

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  35. Jeremy Avatar
    Jeremy

    I don’t remember when it was that my wife first showed me Nurshable, but I love it. Our son will be 14 weeks tomorrow, so I find myself reading and rereading this post a lot. Thank you so much, really. This papa loves what you’re doing here.

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Jeremy- I love hearing from Papa’s in this mom-heavy world of mine. 🙂

      Like

  36. […] we’ve tried all the methods and read all the books and sort of read along about Nurshable’s Wait It Out club. I tried pumping and asking my husband to do a night time bottle every now and then, but my little […]

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  37. […] Wait it Out Just love this: https://nurshable.com/2012/07/19/the-…leep-training/ […]

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  38. […] from a moms perspective. My DH couldn't understand why I didn't want to do CIO until he read this. https://nurshable.com/2012/07/19/the-…leep-training/ CIO and CC works for some people and may be something to try much later just not […]

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  39. […] I love this article. Someone posted it in natural parenting last week. They grow so fast that I cherish every nap LO has on me and cuddling her every night. Once my LOs are bigger I probably won't get that chance until I'm a grandma. https://nurshable.com/2012/07/19/the-…leep-training/ […]

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  40. Nursing Mommy Avatar

    I have a 2 month old, born at 36 weeks and with IUGR. I’m exhausted. Thanks for the post. I don’t think my brain is working well enough to process all of those thoughts.
    🙂

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  41. […] I don't suggest this'd this is for everyone but I think it's a great article. https://nurshable.com/2012/07/19/the-…leep-training/ […]

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  42. Emily Avatar
    Emily

    I loved reading this. While I did use CIO for two of my kids (the other was a naturally easy sleeper)I appreciated the reminder of bedtime being a time of comfort and relaxation.

    Too often I am in a rush to get my kids to bed (to “important” things) and forget to enjoy the time with them.

    Thanks for the reminder!

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  43. […] my big thoughts – but in the meantime, these two are covering quite a lot of it: Nurshable (Wait It Out Method of Sleep Training) and Parenting from Scratch (When does Discipline Begin? and Don’t Take Your Child’s […]

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  44. […] I'd ask on the natural parenting section. Lots of ladies there will be able to offer advice. I'd say you've come this far why ruin the hard work? She's close to an age where you can gently encourage her to sleep. I'd def try gentle methods before CIO. She just won't understand. Toddlers to learn to self sooth, she will one day sleep on her own. Maybe get a toddler bed and mane it a nice relaxing place to be. Gently encourage her to start using it and take it from there. I'm guessing you've read this? https://nurshable.com/2012/07/19/the-…leep-training/ […]

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  45. […] not failing at all. I think these are both great articles. https://nurshable.com/2012/07/19/the-…leep-training/ […]

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  46. Allison Avatar

    This is absolutely beautiful. I was told to let my daughter cry-it-out at her 4 month appointment and it just didn’t sit right because she always seemed hungry when she woke every 3 hours at night. We just found out she has both a tongue + lip tie meaning she’s had difficulty nursing since she was born and she really was hungry. I’m so glad I trusted myself and continued to feed her throughout the night. She needed me and while I’m looking forward to the days I’ll get more than 3 hours of sleep in a stretch I can wait because she’s worth it!

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  47. mary mary Avatar
    mary mary

    I loved this post…read some of the comments, was surprised at some of the negativity in the comments, particularly from moms who have tried CIO and in some way felt judged for doing so and consequently insulted, and judged those moms who chose to WIO instead. Relax, people! This is an open letter from the writer to her daughter, and perhaps can be helpful for those moms who, like me, have felt undue pressure to let their babies CIO and feel like bad moms for not being able to do so.

    If you have done CIO, and found success, great for you! But for the rest of us sleep deprived but unable to do CIO moms out there, let us find solace in this, stop pissing all over our parade with your nasty comments that clearly come from that part of yourselves that might feel, dare I say it, guilty for doing CIO…how else to explain all these moms’ derisive comments?

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    1. Lisa Avatar
      Lisa

      Why do you assume CIO mothers who feel the letter is insulting feel guilty for doing CIO? I will be doing CIO with my daughter as soon as she hits three months old and I don’t feel the least bit guilty about it. Yet I can still see how this letter can come across as judgmental. For you to assume that these women feel guilty is just for you to press your own judgments on them.

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