yippityyak said:
Thanks guys so much for your responses!
I do have one other question though, if I may!
I have heard people, as well as a few internet sites, say that if he wakes up in the middle of the night, i should just ignore him and wait until he falls asleep. It will take 3-4 nights for him to realise that his crying will not get any attention.
I dont know how i feel about this. I would HATE for him to think that i have abandoned him and dont care and love him! But if it is the only way, should i try it?
It's definitely effective in getting him to stop until he reaches another milestone, and then he might try again albeit not as insistent.
It's not the only way. We never let our kids cry it out, and they grew into the nighttime sleep patterns without that kind of method. I think it's entirely up to the parents, because if disruptive sleep is causing more problems during the day than it's worth, then that's when sleep-training becomes more attractive.
I've talked with parents who are ardent supports of "ferberizing" who did it and felt great about it, and I've talked with parents who regretted every moment of it. I don't agree with the militants of either sway, whether they say that babies and toddlers HAVE to go through it (they don't, my kids are perfect examples), and those who want to push the practice into being defined as abusive in childhood neglect.
For me, the answer was simple. I asked around to find out if the moms who didn't let their kids cry it out had children who never learned to sleep by themselves. 100% of the time, that isn't the case, so the sleep-trainers who say so are basing that statement on false assumptions. I never liked the idea, and so I never did it. But not everyone is like me, either.
We did the co-sleeping thing until the kids started showing interest in having their own sleeping space. That was when we began to introduce them into their beds slowly and surely.
I say, that if you are the least bit apprehensive about it, don't do it. Nothing in parenting is ever one-method-fits-all, so get creative.
And don't listen to any of the "experts" out there, especially if you run across any literature that says that if you don't do their method or a hybrid of it that your kid is going to self-destruct.
That's why at baby showers, when activities as part of the get-together include writing down your best advice, mine usually look like this:
Feed the baby
Don't throw the baby
Don't drive away without the baby
All else is commentary..........
Peace,
Mystic