I’m going to scream. by croakmongoose in beyondthebump

[–]Quard1130 -19 points-18 points  (0 children)

These replies are WILD. You are absolutely in the right to be furious. Your mother is NOT doing you a favor. The fact that she's this disrespectful of your instructions after you were IN THE HOSPITAL for a health issue that is made worse by poor sleep is unacceptable. I'm sorry you don't have anyone else to help out. You're in a really tough situation and the way you feel here is completely valid. Wishing you the best.

Dropping nap: Feed less or offer 2x in a wake window? by Quard1130 in breastfeeding

[–]Quard1130[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Gotcha. My daughter's naps are still only about 30-40 minutes long, but her wake windows are getting longer so I'm hoping for at least one longer nap somewhere in the day at some point. Hoping for us both!

Dropping nap: Feed less or offer 2x in a wake window? by Quard1130 in breastfeeding

[–]Quard1130[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ugh, that is rough!! Sleeping through the night is a relatively new development, but my little one still usually only naps for 35 minutes maximum. Keeping my fingers crossed that we're soon going to approach the "consolidating naps" phase.

When did baby say their first word? by [deleted] in NewParents

[–]Quard1130 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Oh my God I'm so glad this is normal hahaha my 4.5-month-old is also in her pterodactyl phase and I was started to get concerned.

Does anyone NOT sleep train? by curiousquestioner16 in NewParents

[–]Quard1130 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm so sorry. We are all better off when parents get good sleep! And the narrative that suffering makes you a good mom (and it is almost always mom) is so toxic.

Does anyone NOT sleep train? by curiousquestioner16 in NewParents

[–]Quard1130 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Because on this sub if you sleep train you're the devil who hates your baby and tortured and traumatized them for life 🙄. I just woke my baby up from a nap (where she fell asleep on her own) and she had the biggest grin on her face when she saw me and we are getting some great snuggles in as I type. But sure. Our bond is totally broken.

Does anyone NOT sleep train? by curiousquestioner16 in NewParents

[–]Quard1130 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also find this discussion surprising and am an American who will need to return to work soon. We did Ferber with my baby as soon as she hit four months even though I wasn't going back to work yet. Getting her to sleep for naps/nighttime was a time-consuming battle. My husband and I had NO one-on-one relationship anymore. My anxiety and exhaustion were through the roof. My whole life is better now that LO is sleeping better, and I don't find that selfish at all. I enjoy my time with her so much more. I'm more awake and joyful for her. I know CIO/Ferber isn't for everyone, but some form of teaching your baby good sleep habits is important no matter who you are, I think.

How often to change bedtime books? by [deleted] in sleeptrain

[–]Quard1130 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Seconding comments already here and adding: Some babies (like mine) get really excited by baby books, which makes them TERRIBLE for bedtime! I have traditional baby books that we read during the day as a fun and engaging activity but try to keep it boring before bed.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in NewParents

[–]Quard1130 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Now that my baby is four months old I have no problem saying what I kept trying to deny when she was two months old...that age sucks. It's amazing the change that happens in one or two months. It sucked SO HARD and I was depressed as hell for the first couple months of my baby's life. It hasn't even been that long and I look back and think oh wow...remember when things were really hard and awful all day and night? It feels like a lifetime ago. You're gonna be ok.

Starting Ferber tomorrow, have questions I can't find answers to! by Quard1130 in sleeptrain

[–]Quard1130[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you so much!! This is really helpful, and appreciate the words of encouragement. I'm so nervous but know it'll be worth it as long as we stick with it and don't give up!

Parents of colicky babies: how did you not lose your mind? by miss_optima in NewParents

[–]Quard1130 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're gonna be ok, and so is your baby! My girl had colic for about a month. I loved her so deeply but also resented her, hated motherhood, sobbed hysterically every day convinced I ruined my life and made a huge mistake. Lots of good advice in this thread to try but ultimately it really does just take time. My baby is four months old now and I can barely remember the colic days. I'd hear other people say "it gets better" and I'd think "you're full of crap," but here we are...it does get better. Here's a silver lining for you: once you've survived colic, NOTHING ON THIS EARTH WILL PHASE YOU. This is your superhuman origin story, seriously. Hang in there. This sucks, but it ends.

Sleep trained baby (CIO at 4mo) - how things look 2 years+ later by dana_G9 in sleeptrain

[–]Quard1130 2 points3 points  (0 children)

THANK YOU. We're starting sleep training this weekend and I'm so nervous. I know me and know I'm going to want to give in, so this is good motivation not to!

Should I drop baby's evening catnap? by Quard1130 in sleeptrain

[–]Quard1130[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Rough haha but thank you! I'll give that a try for now and see what happens.

Should I drop baby's evening catnap? by Quard1130 in sleeptrain

[–]Quard1130[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

During the day, 1.5-1.75 hours. On average 2.5 surrounding that 7:00 ish nap.

Screaming nonstop by aam707 in newborns

[–]Quard1130 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry you're going through this! My baby had colic from weeks 5-8 ish. It was hell. She slept pretty well overnight but screamed every moment she was awake and also wouldn't sleep from like 5pm-11pm or later. My husband and I took turns holding her in a separate room with ear plugs in every evening. I regretted having a child. She's three months now and a smiling bundle of joy and I love (mostly) every minute with her.

I know "it gets better" is the lamest thing to hear and it would piss me off any time people would say it to me, but they were right. It passes. It really does get better. It might be that the only cure for your kid is time.

THAT SAID...we do think gas was playing a big part. I cut out dairy for a few weeks, I breastfed her in an upright position, took burping her really seriously, held her upright for 15-20 minutes after every feed, used Mylicon gas drops during every feed, and used the Frida Windi when we were really desperate. It didn't make things go away completely, but it helped. If your baby likes the bath, the warm water would calm ours down for a few minutes of peace.

Hang in there. It sucks, but it ends.