(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. […] has been through rough patches of sleeping when she was little this blog has helped me every time https://nurshable.com/2012/07/19/the-…leep-training/ well worth a read to help you feel better about the sleepless nights. I've never tried CIO or CC […]

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  2. Lindsey Avatar
    Lindsey

    I instinctively did this with my baby and ignored all the “you’re spoiling him”, “he’s manipulating you/got you wrapped around his finger”, “you need to let him cry/it’s horrible but it works and you need your sleep”s. I didn’t sleep for 10 months, but your body gets you through. I co-slept first. Then as he got up less, I let him fall asleep in bed then moved him to his crib, then brought him back in when he woke up in the middle of the night. By a year old, we could snuggle him to sleep in our bed and then put him in his crib, and he slept soundly through the night, and woke up calling for us. Isn’t that nicer than listening to your own baby scream for you and sob alone in their crib?

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  3. Lindsey Avatar
    Lindsey

    There’s a plethora of research that confirms CIO/excess amounts of stress hormones are harmful to baby’s developing brain and can result in decreased intellectual, emotional and social development.

    Like

    1. Veronica Avatar
      Veronica

      It is so true!! It’s shocking how many women don’t even realize how much harm they do to their child, thinking that they “actuallyare doing the ‘right’ thing” with CIO :/ Apart from being a cruel method of telling your child that you don’t care, “cry it out you creature”, CIO so bad for their development…In every regard… How can they sleep peacefully, those mothers proudly announcing using CIO?? Poor babies:( They don’t know what awaits them and they don’t realize how emotionally cold/disturbed their mothers are…

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    2. Gabby Avatar
      Gabby

      http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/the_kids/2013/07/clinical_lactation_jumps_on_the_dr_sears_bandwagon_to_say_sleep_training.html

      No there is not!! Please parents read this article that gives an overview of the SCIENTIFIC research on CIO.

      Like

  4. Anjali Avatar
    Anjali

    Wow..are simply the words I uttered after reading this..you speak the heart out..so beautifully portrayed & I just hope everybody understands that..I am a mother of a 13 month old darling boy who has been co sleeping & breastfed..and I am always in a constant pressure from everybody to sleep train him & that I am “spoiling ” him..have been doing a lot of reads but couldn’t convince myself..your words bring so much relief:)
    Regards,
    Anji

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  5. Lovely | Thinking Out Loud Avatar

    […] friend of mine posted this link on Facebook tonight and it brought tears to my eyes and I wanted to share it. So lovely. Share […]

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  6. […] should never sleep train butit helped me with bad nights. Although be warned it's a tear jerker. https://nurshable.com/2012/07/19/the-…leep-training/ https://nurshable.com/2013/05/25/the-…ndent-sleeper/ Also at 7mths, the babies I know who were […]

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  7. n Avatar
    n

    Aw man, I wish I’d found this in the spring, when my girl was going through those early infant (3-6 month)exhausting times in sleep and parenting. As soon as that phase passed I thought that there should be an “It Gets Better” campaign for exhausted parents.

    She’s 9 months now, and naps well but wakes every 1-3 hours at night. Some nights she’s up every 45 minutes!! Why can she sleep 2.5 hours during some naps, but at night she must wake more often than that?

    And even now that things are infinitely better than at 4 months, it is very lonely parenting this way. But when I calm her at night I’m certain it’s the right thing to do. It is the stuff that makes a mother and I wouldn’t give it up for anything

    …Unless my daughter just miraculously decided to sleep straight through without me. I’d take her up on that offer!

    My worry is that she has nights where it’s difficult to get her back to sleep. When she wakes, she doesn’t want the breast, or to be patted, or picked up, or NOT picked up because the fussing will escalate to bawling. I’m concerned she just wants to sleep but can’t get there. Eventually we do get there but I’d hate for her to be uncomfortable because I haven’t taught her how to sleep right.

    Ahhh, anyway I guess this too shall pass. Wonderful group idea and name!!

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  8. Just Write: My Tribe | summerplayshouse Avatar

    […] all of this. I stumbled upon it one sleepy night while nursing Ellie back to sleep. A blog about “waiting it out”. A blog about accepting that some babies just don’t sleep through the night and that was […]

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  9. Katie Avatar

    Sniff!! Beautiful! Says it perfectly. 🙂

    Like

  10. […] The WIO (Wait It Out) Method of Sleep Training Nurshable 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. […]

    Like

  11. […] I believe, is one of the fruits of waiting it out. Sleep has (almost) never been a source of fear, loneliness, stress, or crying. She isn’t […]

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  12. […] read the full version of Sarah’s original letter go HERE. Share this:TwitterFacebookGoogleLike this:Like Loading… Posted in Audrey 6 Months, […]

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  13. […] The Wait-It-Out Method- Nurshable […]

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  14. […] read the most inspirational blog post about being able to wait until my daughter was developmentally ready to sleep and found an online […]

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  15. […] losing their child’s trust or causing brain damage.  They instead choose a method they call “wait-it-out,” sacrificing their own sleep and well-being every day until (they hope) their child eventually […]

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      (Please note- I have a policy of openly allowing trackbacks as long as they are not spam. That said, I do not believe that the article linked to by the trackback above shows a good understanding of what the “Wait It Out” method is about. )

      Like

  16. […] getting the hang of sleeping now (we use the Wait It Out method, which works for all of us) but I still use the time just after she’s nodded off to read or […]

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  17. […] The WIO (Wait It Out) Method of Sleep Training – Nurshable “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.” […]

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  18. […] But, through it all, despite it all, because of it all … I have decided to wait it out. […]

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  19. Brenda Avatar
    Brenda

    I felt the same way you do when I raised my four children. My sister let her three children cry and self-soothe. The kids are grown now, and all seven of them turned out great. The only difference is that mine were demanding, difficult, and self-centered during their childhood years (which was very difficult to overcome). Hers are actually more respectful to her and appear to be more emotionally attached to her. Now I babysit my seventeen month-old granddaughter, and when she’s very sleepy, we lay her down for her nap. Sometimes she cries for one or two minutes, then self-soothes herself to sleep.

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  20. […] Recently, a mom on our Facebook group posted a link to a blog post called The WIO (Wait It Out) Method of Sleep Training. […]

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  21. Happy Mother’s Day | the self-styled life Avatar

    […] a dose of patience, check out this one on Nurshable. Even if you’re going with a different method for dealing with the ever-argued […]

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  22. […] a blog entry on the “wait it out method of sleep training” – is wait it out really a method? –  and a list of more posts on “wait it out” from the same blog […]

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  23. Veronica Avatar
    Veronica

    I’ve just read the letter and I cried a bit… It touched my heart, as I always felt sorry for those abandoned children… crying…asking for a hug…for the comforting warmth of their mother’s skin… not being responded to… 😦

    Sarah, thank you SO MUCH for the letter. I love your words and your attitude… This is exactly how I felt when my baby (now 14 months old) was an infant and I was not that comfortable constantly holding him, rocking to sleep, being sleep-deprived myself, but ! I knew I was right doing what I was doing… Simply being there for him… Knowing and ACCEPTING ( <– the key word) the fact that "this shall pass"… Hugging…Comforting giving him my breasts = the closest and the nicest "thing" he had at that time 'at hand'.. Not thinking: "No more breast, because it will spoil him"… I didn't care what the books said.. What other people said.. Although YES, it was so difficult hearing what bad mother I am holding my baby 'all the time' and spoiling him by that… Who could stand that pressure you get everyday from the people around you… But I knew I had to follow my heart, my thought, my instincts… Most importantly, I knew I had to follow my baby and what he was saying to me (or I should say: "trying to say")- this was the only person that mattered…Not the 'talkers', 'unwanted advice-givers', not the authors of those freaking CIO-style books…

    Dear Mothers, please don't do the CIO… I beg you.. This little baby has only you… If the baby cries, this must mean something. This means there is a reason..Maybe it is gas, maybe the stomach aches.. maybe it's this painful teething period that makes your baby wake up and cry, maybe it was a nightmare (yes, babies actually have them), maybe it's reflux that makes laying down uncomfortable… maybe something scared them.. maybe your baby doesn't get this darkness, this quietness in the room…Whatever the reason, the baby is calling you to tell you something… And you, the mother, the closest person to him/her, is leaving the baby to cry (because "they say you should be doing this" or because "now is the training time") and not reacting to your baby's asks.. Do you even realize how heartless it is??
    No matter how tired or frustrated you are.. Your baby is even more vulnerable..is even more miserable right now…

    Your baby was just born to the big world where everything is so "new", strange, potentially scary, unknown… He/she knows only you, your voice, your skin, your breast… This is where he/she can find peace and joy… He/she has years to learn everything, but now… being x months old, it is still to early to train him/her anything.. Now is the time to show your baby that the world he has just been born to is safe, predictable. that you are there for him/her… that when he/she calls you (cries), you will respond…

    Think for a second.. Imagine yourself being ill… not being able to walk or get off the bed… you are calling your husband who is in the room just next door.. you desperately need something (a painkiller or a glass of water) and you are calling him and calling and calling.. and nothing happens.. No reaction… no helping hand.. and now think of your baby how he/she must feel.. How cruel is that… It's hard for adults not to be listened to… Imagine the same for such a little baby… That is million times even more unfair… But -they say- you are doing it for the child' sake… No… it's not for his sake… It is hurting him/her.. Until he/she realizes he/she cannot really count on you in this whole new big world..

    And to make things clear, I am not going to apologize for criticizing CIO method.

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  24. scott Avatar
    scott

    I can’t remember how it was when I was an infant, probably no one can, however, sometime after infancy, I do remember crawling in bed with my parents whenever I had a hard time sleeping. All I know is, they never turned me away and I turned out ok. Everyone has a theory on how to handle a baby at bed time or any other time one puts their baby down to sleep. I had 6 children and they were all different when it came to sleeping. All I can say is follow your heart and trust your instincts. Just remember that they will grow up before you know it.

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  25. Kelly Avatar

    Am I the only one sad reading the comments? So many mothers commenting are at the end of their rope and this article is telling them to keep going. If you are miserable change it, you don’t have to sacrifice your health and your sleep so your baby can thrive or be attached. Sleep problems are real, not getting enough sleep is not healthy for your baby and if he’s waking several times a night he’s not getting good sleep. Mothers its OK to take care of yourselves! Please, you don’t have to sacrifice your whole identity, your health and your happiness to be a good mother. If WIO is making you miserable please look somewhere else. There are so many forms of sleep learning that are respectful, kind and gentle. See this article by my friend Sydney on why you don’t have to be a martyr.
    http://sydneysteiner.com/2013/09/10/dear-moms-you-matter-too-enough-of-martyr-hood-mothering-already/

    and here are some resources to get you happy and healthy again if you aren’t now.
    http://respectfulparent.com/4-things-you-may-not-know-about-sleep-training/
    http://respectfulparent.com/the-real-danger-of-cio/

    a story of how intense AP pressure hurt one mother
    http://sydneysteiner.com/2013/02/11/attachment-parenting-deconstructed-how-i-transformed-my-fear-of-ap-into-love/

    and another
    http://www.mamaeve.com/personal-stories/why-i-no-longer-practice-attachment-parenting/

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Kelly,

      When I hear “don’t be a martyr” I don’t feel relief, I feel like I am being called silly and ridiculous, and that by talking about the things that I choose I am being harmful.

      I do become sad when I read comments that are forceful or that are mean.

      I am not sad when I read comments from people looking for support and that are having a hard time.

      Hard isnt bad when you believe in something, because going against your beliefs would be worse.

      If a person is doing somrthing that they don’t believe in, then yeah.. hard is bad.

      But I also become sad when I read comments like yours, because they are hurtful too. They presume that AP is damaging both the parent and the child and that mothers are sacrificing themselves.

      None of that is true, but your comment made me tired and upset and made things harder for me.

      Everyone says I am important and that I should not sacrifice myself. But I have made the choices that I have made because those choices are important.

      If I am a martyr then my choices are ridiculous and stupid and I am following someone blindly and making unnecessary sacrifices.

      But I am not. I am following what I believe and am usually able to find joy and meaning in it. I would find no joy in my personal things because I would be sacrificing something that is more important to me than the books I want to read and the sleep that I didn’t get.

      I share my writing for the mothers like me. So many women reading my blog are like-minded.

      I see it like a marathon, so your comment feels a lot like someone standing on the sidelines with a big sign proclaiming that runners need not martyr themselves and that a 5k is good enough and that rest is important, too.

      I am sure that there are some runners that don’t want to be in the race, but considering the circumstances and location the message does more to demotivate the people running for good reasons than it does to help those that don’t want to be running.

      You are sad because you have made a different choice and feel my choice is the wrong one.

      I am not sad because I have made my choice and know my reasons. I assume that people making the same choice also have good reasons.

      When someone contacts me personally I let them know that they need to shut out the noise and listen to themselves. WIO is too hard and pointless if you don’t believe in it. CIO and sleep training is also too hard if you don’t believe it is the right option.

      But that doesn’t mean that everyone having a hard time is a martyr. Parenting is hard.

      Follow what you believe. My choice would not fit you. I would never tell you that it was ridiculous of that you were martyring your child for your own cause. I would say you found a different balance, and I would be happy for you.

      Like

      1. Kelly Avatar

        I do not feel like your choice is the wrong one, it is clear you are a loving mother. I think your choice is not the only way and I feel badly for the mothers that are not enjoying themselves in motherhood. If waiting makes you happy and your baby happy, great I have no issue with those situations. I feel badly for the people that think there is no other way to be respectful and meet babies needs at the same t ime, because there are many. Babies are capable of sleep if you allow them a chance.

        I don’t think your way is the wrong way for you. I don’t think my way is the right way for anyone but me. I certainly didn’t CIO, I allowed my babies many opportunities to sleep on their own so slowly over time they got it. I don’t think its WIO or CIO there are MANY MANY options in the middle that are very gentle and respectful if people want to do that. Balance can be achieved for the whole family.
        I’m not saying that to you personally, its clear that you love what you are doing. I’m saying it to many of the commenters who sound tired and defeated, just in case its not working for them. It’s ok to reach out if its not working for you. There are ways to allow your baby to sleep without getting up 10 times a night and get the sleep you both need.

        I also did not call you a martyr, nor did I call you riduculous. I linked an article about doing what’s right for you and not subscribing to something that isn’t working for you, I summarized it in a brief sentence. That was not intended to be personal. I know both Suchada and Sydney personally and they both bravely shared their struggles with guilt of leaving something they thought they believed in but ultimately did not work for them. These are real stories and some women get stuck in them for years.

        I’m not here to make anyone feel bad. I’m here to present an alternative and possibly let someone suffering know that they are ok, they don’t have to do it if it’s not working. They can let go of it if it doesn’t feel balanced. I’m presenting the other side of the coin.
        Kelly

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      2. Kelly Avatar

        Ok, so I’ll be honest here and admit I made a mistake. A friend of mine who I know through our local RIE Moms group shared this article two days ago (July 19) on the exact same day it was published….two years ago. I saw the date and assumed it was a new post. Apparently the year didn’t make it through my advanced filtering system 🙂
        Anyway, she shared it and I read it because I’ve seen you in the RIE group on Face Book. Clearly we have different methods. Like you, I was hoping to help out a few of the commenters who seemed at their wits end. However, now that I know they likely are not going to read it…well I feel a bit silly! This was not really directed at YOU personally at all.
        I can tell other peoples words affect you deeply and this is somewhat of a safe space for you so I will keep my opinions to my own blog and trust other peoples journeys in that if what they are doing isn’t working for them then they will find one that does when it is their time. Best of luck,
        Kelly

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      3. sarah Avatar
        sarah

        Kelly,

        I think you are picking up on some annoyance that I am noticing in myself and that I am trying to pinpoint the cause of. Sorry about that.

        The word martyr is a hot button one for me because in my experience the women that I interact with WANT to wio and are harassed by their pediatricians and family and friends. So for me the “it is okay to WIO” message is the balance.

        I need to think more about what is making me grouchy. 🙂

        -Sarah

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      4. Kelly Avatar

        Sarah,
        Interesting insight. Do you mean today, or in general? To me the word martyr is simpler than that and only means someone who makes great sacrifices or suffers much in order to further a belief, cause, or principle. Those are the people I was trying to speak to the people that stick it out for the cause when really the cause is hurting them. That’s not everyone, but I know quite a few, for whom it was shameful to think otherwise and so they stayed…

        Yes pediatricians and any outsiders really can think they know better than you, on any topic really, but we weed that out and listen to the circumstance, consider the feedback and use our own good jugement and timing for all involved. It’s not easy no matter what you believe.
        I did notice that you commented that I was making you feel tired, upset and sad. I spoke my own truth, I on my own, didn’t make you feel those things. I took care with my words and can not be responsible for the way another person reacts to my beliefs just as you can not be responsible for how I react to yours. It seems to me it might be hard for you to hear other points of view as you only want what you deem as supportive comments (to you) on your blog. Why can other perspectives not be supportive? People learn a lot about hearing many sides. Anyhow, I don’t know why this triggered you so much either, but I hope you can figure it out.
        I still don’t get how its the same as a marathon, commenting on your blog is not analogous to going to a marathon race, because it is an open forum. Second of all, people aren’t shamed in this culture and made to fear that they are terrible people if they don’t run a marathon. If people were shamed for not being marathon runners, then it would make a lot more sense to go up to someone training for a marathon and say, psst, you know you don’t have to do this if you don’t WANT to, but nevermind that. I think it is fair to say that RIE and AP will probably never align, but that’s ok. Sleep was a huge issue in our house and for many of my friends, sleep deprivatrion causing families to unravel, so for people like that, that’s why I offered help, just in case they are too scared to allow it to be ok to see something else. It can still be gentle. I’m sorry if I caused you to be unsettled. I seem to have a knack for that… good night Sarah,
        Kelly

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      5. sarah Avatar
        sarah

        Kelly,

        Just this week. (The annoyance). My daughter started sleeping through the night in March and so now that I have about 10-12 hours at night where I can get sleep I have become a bit too relaxed about making sure that I actually get the sleep that I need, and my sleep is more erratic than it was during the 23 months of WIO. I also neglected to re-order the vitamins that I usually take. Apparently I’m a bit better at the self care stuff when I’m WIO. Gotta get back into better habits again. 🙂

        We’re coming from two different places and we each have a particular mindset that we are accustomed to interacting with. I generally have a good idea for reads my blog, as I interact a lot with the readers and I am a former member of my own target audience.

        We’re not hardcore AP parents that are immersed in a culture that supports us by default. Many of us are first generation AP parents or we are living among friends and family that have a very different approach and that treat us like we’re a little bit off-kilter in the head. So when we say that we want to eat all organic for the duration of our pregnancy we’re told “Don’t be a martyr, eat the ice cream!” Then we are going to give birth and we want to try for a natural birth. Don’t be a martyr! Breastfeeding and having trouble in the early weeks? Don’t be a martyr! Sleep issues? Don’t be a martyr!

        I compare it to a marathon because a lot of women when they announce that they want to do Couch to 5K and then train for a marathon people aren’t supportive. They’re skeptical. They let you know every step of the way that you don’t have to follow through. That you can give up and be proud of what you’ve accomplished. That no one in your family was ever athletic. That maybe walking is more your speed. You injure your foot and “I guess you have to give up running now.”

        It takes a LOT of effort to move past that, especially when you’re having a hard time and are needing encouragement.

        Suggestions to move to a different path should come at the end of a conversation.

        Friend just got here for a fun and rejuvinating playdate. Will finish responding later. 🙂

        -Sarah

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      6. Kelly Avatar

        Ok, thanks for responding. It seems that you take issue with the word choice of the article I posted. I did not call anyone a martyr, I just posted what I thought was a supportive article that empowered people to not get stuck in something they don’t like. I get it, that word is weighted more heavily to you than it is to me. I don’t feel like people use that to describe things lightly. I meant it like you don’t have to be miserable if you don’t think its working. I think some people get stuck and don’t know what else to do and become resentful and that’s the part that I’m talking about. It seems we both want to support mothers, we just do it differently, and that’s ok. There’s always room for another point of view! Enjoy your visit and get some sleep! I did that too when my kids started sleeping. Its crazy, right?! My husband would get so mad! It must part of the adjustment.
        Kelly

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      7. sarah Avatar
        sarah

        Kelly,

        Makes sense. 🙂 I’ve been sent that article several times, actually. It’s often used in a way that makes my particular group of people upset and it makes them feel crazy. So I have a built up annoyance towards the article itself as well. Honestly, there are probably a lot of people that find my WIO article annoying for the same reason- they’ve been sent it at a moment where it was the last thing in the world that they wanted to deal with. I would probably have very different feelings towards the article if I had come across it on my own rather than having it sent to me by friends who were asking help with defending their choices to their friends and family members. I think that we have a tendency to respond to things that are out of context. Like a person on a forum for Apple products being told that they should switch to Linux or the Mac when they’re looking for help installing a computer program on the computer that they have.

        It’s one of the reasons that I stopped replying to posts on the RIE forums that I’m part of, because even when I feel that I might have an answer that would be helpful my answers are not part of RIE and I assume that they are not what a person is looking for. So I’m a part of the groups to read and learn, not to interact or respond. Same with the AP groups, actually. A lot of my tools aren’t in line with AP philosophies so they’re out of place. So coming across the recommendation to consider sleep training that involves crying.. Was out of context.

        The adjustment to getting more sleep is so strange. I used to be able to sleep 12 hour stretches and now I keep waking up between sleep cycles. Nuttiness, all of it. 🙂

        -Sarah

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      8. Kelly Avatar

        Sarah,
        Thanks for that. It sounds like you are in what I call “sleep purgatory” you’re cathcing up, but nor really yet! It’s kind of miserable!
        I think you are basically telling me that my responding to this post as a shout out to any other mothers who may be stuck was out of context. Perhaps maybe as out of context as when the RIE forum gets AP avdvice on sleep and rapidly goes south. Maybe so, and maybe I was naive commenting here. I still see the difference being that this is not a closed forum like that is, yes this is dedicated to WIO, I get that, t his is where people come to read about that. It is a public page though, but I’m willing to let it go. I really did think someone might see it that might benefit and as I suggested crying is not the only way to get a baby to sleep, but that is where RIE parts ways is that crying is not seen as always bad, its accepted as communication in order to tell us what is wrong and believing that babies are capable of that, you know the argument, I know so I won’t go into it more than that.
        My line of thinking should you use the marathon one (I’m a runner so I relate!) is it’s not like holding a sign discouraging someone to stop at mile 5. It’s telling them its OK to stop if they are injured as sometimes pride can make us continue on when really its hurting our bodies or minds. If its a cramp the by all means get some potassium and some salt, hydrate and get back in there! If you’re hurt though, do yourself a favor and stop.
        In my case sleep deprivation took a big toll on my body and mind, as did running eventually. I was told I would get arthritis by 40 if I didn’t stop, so I stopped, I grieved it and finally accepted it. The sleep deprivation did not pass, it carried on, I stopped eating, my hair was falling out I was basically a mess. Someone had to tell me STOP this is not helping anyone the whole family is working around YOU, its ok to stop. So really let’s figure this out so we all survive.I now understand sleep is a basic human need and have accepted that and supported healthy sleep habits for the whole family.
        Thanks again,
        Kelly

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      9. Tiffany Avatar
        Tiffany

        Being a martyr doesn’t mean that you are following someone blindly or making stupid decisions. It does mean that you are unilaterally placing someone else’s needs entirely ahead of your own when you could be looking for balance. My mom was (and still is) a martyr. She feels sad about the way things are going for her at times, but doesn’t feel it is in her power to change, or doesn’t know she has a choice to change it. She places everyone’s needs and wants ahead of her own, even when it comes to her own space and time. I reminded her today that she should consider who is most affected by a situation to decide whose wants and needs should be prioritized. When it comes to her body, space, and time, it should be her needs. When it comes to my body, space, and time, it should be my needs. This is not a sacrifice, it is healthy boundaries. When it comes to the grey area in between, both people should be considered equally to find a balanced solution.

        Your statement assumes that the baby’s need for attachment is primary to all other family needs at all times and that it requires a 24-hr constant effort (my understanding of AP is not this… additionally, this strays from Attachment Theory). It also assumes that WIO and CIO (I assume you mean full extinction?) are the only options. As Kelly pointed out, parents do not need to sacrifice their and their babies’ physiological needs for healthy sleep in order to fulfill attachment needs. The fact is, more is not always better and I don’t know of a single academic study that shows that supporting a baby and family in developing healthy sleep habits from early on is damaging to attachment. There is a certain amount of contact and responsiveness and touch that babies need and it’s critical that we meet those needs, but more is not always better. We must look holistically at all the needs of a family, including every person’s need for restorative sleep, as well as nutritive and attachment needs of the baby.

        I have written about respectful sleep training and my concerns with using the term “CIO” here: http://respectfulparent.com/the-real-danger-of-cio/

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      10. sarah Avatar
        sarah

        Tiffany,

        If you are going to use the comments section on my blog to talk about your own particular method of sleep training and to link to it to promote it to the people that are reading along… I would suggest you attempt to understand what I’m actually talking about first. 🙂

        WIO isn’t “do nothing and cater to baby’s sleep until the child learns how to sleep.”

        “Martyr” is diminutive. It says that we make sacrifice mindlessly without thought for ourselves. I’m sacrificing things, sure. All parenthood comes with sacrifice. That is part of the balance involved. Even if you use full blown extinction training from day one there’s balance involved unless you’re handing your child to someone and just walking out. The WIO moms that I know aren’t martyrs. They find balance in all kinds of ways and the “sacrifice” is thoughtful and not martyrdom in the way that you describe.

        I’d suggest reading up a bit on WIO.

        -Sarah

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  26. Kelly Avatar

    PS – GOOD Grief! sorry for all the typos and run on sentences! I think that is my final sign to go!
    Kelly

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  27. […] I’ve heard of tons of different ways to train your infant to sleep, but none are as good as the one I read about: Wait It Out. […]

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  28. Lynn Avatar

    This is beautifully written. I love it. I so wish I had this support 28 years ago when I started parenting!

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  29. Holly Avatar
    Holly

    I also wanted to post to support other mom’s. I am there. I have been there and I am still there. When my DS was born he cried the whole time in the hospital. He wouldn’t even let us set him down for a second. He had to be right on top of me. It didn’t get better. When I got home I knew nothing about baby sleep and thought he would fall asleep on his own. Not. He was so alert and would stay awake and watch everything and get so overtired and then start to scream. The more he screamed the more cortisol is released into his system and the more alert he became. I will never forget when he was like 2 weeks old he cried for 9 hours without sleep! That is a long time for a 2 week old to be awake. When he did fall asleep and I set him down, he would wake as soon as I set him down. He had to sleep on me. Can I get much rest that way? No.
    He was one of those babies that needed movement and had to be bounced to sleep and as soon as the bouncing stopped, he woke. At six weeks I found “the happiest baby on the block and that worked”. Even though those methods worked to get him to sleep he would still get up every 40 minutes. At the end of his sleep cycle he would wake up. He never gets into deep sleep. I have read over 20 sleep books but they don’t know MY baby. Eventually he got to big for swaddles and we did wambees and too big for the swing and I would have to sleep by him for every nap. He was such a light sleeper, he would wake if you dropped a sock. It peaked at about 10 months when he was getting up about 12 times a night. Now he is 18 months and gets up about 6-8. I am still exhausted. I have chronic insomnia because my body doesn’t know how to calm down. I am so full of adrenaline. I have never had any help with any nights or feedings. I do them all as my LO wont take a bottle.
    So I have been there. I still am.
    One things I want to share:
    1) Around the time he was 1, I realized that all of it was a GIFT. I know that sounds weird but I have cried so much and prayed so much and held and rocked him so much and we have this amazing bond. I know everything he is going to do before he does it and I look at other parents with their kids and they seem so detached and their babies don’t even try to communicate to them as they play “by themselves”. I am not criticizing independent kids but just saying that my LO was good at communicating his need for comfort and our relationship is something I could never explain.
    When my son was like 4 months I found someone online who begged me to listen to my gut and WIO because they did CIO with their 3 oldest kids and they were fine but then they had a fourth kid and they did WIO and she said she was blown away by the difference in relationship and bond that she deeply regretted CIO -you cant go back. Hang in there. Believe me I get it. I think 3 hours of sleep TOTAL is great. That is where I am and it has been 2 years since I have slept more than a few hours at a time. I get it!!!! It is so worth it! Everywhere I go people comment about how insync my baby and I are. I am not bragging. I have nothing to brag about but I am just saying you wont regret WIO.

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  30. Why I decided against CIO (Cry it Out) | Family RED Avatar

    […] on I read an article on Nursable called, “The WIO (Wait it out) Method”. It had my name written all over it. I knew it was exactly how I would handle the sleep […]

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  31. […] 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”. https://nurshable.com/2012/07/19/the-wio-wait-it-out-method-of-sleep-training/ […]

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  32. […] My baby is currently sleeping right next to me as I type; I’m lying in bed with the laptop on my knee, she’s in her cot sidecarred to the bed, one hand reaching out to touch my leg. She’ll wake for milk about two or three or four times in the night; she might or might not stir and need a reassuring hand or a cuddle to get back to sleep, or she might stir and mumble to herself and put herself back to sleep. I feed her to sleep at night and for naps (she’ll sleep without it, if she’s rocked and held, but it works and I’m not about to play parenting on a harder difficulty level than I need to). I’ve never managed to put her down ‘drowsy but awake’ and have her go to sleep. And I have no plans to move her to her own room until she’s no longer waking multiple times at night, and no plans to get her to stop waking multiple times at night by anything other than waiting it out. […]

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  33. […] I found to WIO referred to a post on NURSHABLE.COM – “I can wait it out so that you don’t have to cry it […]

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  34. […] I found on WIO all intially referred to a post on NURSHABLE.COM – “I can wait it out so that you don’t have to cry it […]

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  35. Emily Avatar
    Emily

    Thank you so much for this post. I feel a little alone in a group of women who seem to prefer sleep training to anything else. I am so happy to see there is a term for it even “Wait it out” Yes! I am due with my first in 10 weeks and I am bookmarking this to read later when I am so sleepy 🙂

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  36. Ally Avatar

    Just the guide I needed for my very first foray into parenting. Wish me luck!

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  37. […] The wio (wait it out) method of sleep training | nurshable […]

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  38. Kim Avatar
    Kim

    This is so beautiful, thank you for writing it! I am blessed with two gorgeous kids but neither of them sleep well. It’s been 4 years of sleepless nights but I know in the end I know it will be worth it to have happy and well adjusted kids. It is never worth it to let kids cry alone in fear or distress so that you can get your beauty rest.

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  39. […]   Crу-It-Out: 10 Reasons Whу іt іѕ Nοt fοr Uѕ Thе WIO (Wait It Out) Method οf Sleep Training  Controlled Crуіng-Miracle Cure, Tough Lονе, οr […]

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  40. Tara Avatar
    Tara

    This brought tears to my eyes! my son is 18 months and from the beginning has always had a tough time sleeping. I felt so alone until I read this! I love all your posts and you really inspire me to strive to be a more patient mother. Thank you so much for sharing. I know all children are unique…but you should write a book. I’d buy it in a heartbeat!

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  41. […] The WIO (Wait It Out) Method of Sleep Training | Nurshable – 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 …… […]

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  42. Shimoné Avatar

    Exactly this: “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.”

    In the three months of my son’s life, I have learned more every day to trust him and what he is telling me.

    This is a truly beautifully written post. My own feelings about this exact topic inspired me to also write about it, just before coincidentally (or maybe not) coming across this post of yours. You took the words right out of my mouth, and I am so happy to see other mothers striving to be respectful of their little ones – it seems that people so easy to forget that babies are whole people too, however small they are. 🙂

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  43. […] but definitely not least, here is another post that may give you a little more insight on an alternative approach to sleep […]

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  44. StacyA (@stacya71) Avatar

    I am crying after reading this. Full on sobbing. Feeling like a failure because I didn’t sleep train my 17 month old. Not knowing what to do. Desperate for someone to tell me he will be ok. I tried CIO for 5 horrible nights, it ended up taking 10 nights to get back to a gentle (all be it longer than I would like bedtime) He wakes once per night, I give him a bottle and rock him and within an hour he is back down. I have tried rubbing his back, standing by his crib, sitting in his room, on his floor. He wants to be held. The Doctor told me he would always be a horrible sleeper that he will do poorly in school that this is all on me, I must leave him alone to cry even if it takes 4 hours. He has never fallen asleep with tears, I went to him after an hour on those 5 horrible nights. He won’t nap in his crib so I drive him around, another monster I created. Another thing to feel guilty about. I just want to know that my child will be ok, that we will figure this out together. I am so sad, scared and full of guilt. Can anyone reading this help me?

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Oh Stacy.. ❤

      My kids don’t sleep through the night until they’re closer to two. One needed to be closer to three. Some need more support to fall asleep. Some needed less support to fall asleep. But they all needed support until they were able to fall asleep independently. CIO is NOT necessary. My daughter was a horrid sleeper at 17 months. Then started sleeping through the night at 23 months.

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  45. […] of sleep ahead of you (one day, ‘they’ tell me) – in the words of the fabulous nurshable – you’ve just gotta ‘wait it […]

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  46. […] of sleep ahead of you (one day, ‘they’ tell me) – in the words of the fabulous nurshable – you’ve just gotta ‘wait it […]

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  47. […] enjoyed reading these articles on WIO (The Wait it Out Method) and Learning to Self Soothe approaches to nighttime sleep with infants and […]

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  48. Janine Avatar
    Janine

    I had two hard cases if we talk about sleeping problems (one daughter and one son). I needed help and step by step instructions on what to do and I’ve found it in Susan Urban’s guide (very short so I’ve read it in an hour). Really solved sleeping problems and believe me both cases were hard It was quite some time ago but I can see it is still available on the same website: http://www.parental-love.com
    When i needed help with sleeping problems I’ve read about this guide on some website and now I want to share becasue I know that it is really not easy to deal with sleeping problems

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