12

thread: How much does your baby cry?

  1. #1
    Registered User

    Apr 2005
    1,814

    How much does your baby cry?

    Mine cries for 1-2 hrs each morning and 3-4 hrs each afternoon/evening. I am so over it Nothing I do makes any difference. I don't have any ability to 'read' what he wants. It's a total mystery to me what he wants when he cries.

    How long do your babies cry for? Maybe I'm just being unrealistic, but this amount of crying is not what I anticipated.

  2. #2
    Registered User
    Follow Pandora On Twitter

    Jan 2005
    cowtown
    8,276

    Thats how I felt with Milo - I could never have the magic ability to distinguish one cry from another.

    Is he crying non-stop for that amount of time, or just unsettled and crying in that period of time?

    Milo used to cry and feed pretty much every evening ofr 3 or more hours.
    He also got a lot of wind, so I used to hold him upright a lot.

    Sorry if this is no help at all, but just wanted you to know that your situation is not uncommon.

  3. #3
    Registered User

    May 2007
    3,341

    Cherie
    Ashley can cry up to 1 hour after each night time feed.
    Usually she stops during the day if picked up and held after say 10 minutes now.

  4. #4
    Annikas_Mamma Guest

    When Annika was that age, she used to cry pretty much from the moment she woke up until the moment she went to sleep. We had heaps of tests done on her, but all that was discovered was that she had severe reflux and colic. Only a few weeks ago, we took Annika to a chiropractor even though she was slowly getting better, but since then the visits have been working wonders. I would really recommend them. Hope things get better soon. I know it's hard work, so make sure you put your feet up and have some 'me' time too.

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Jan 2006
    Sydney
    2,212

    Cherie - Oscar is *usually* settled in the morning but the evenings he can cry for 1-5 hours depending on the day. He just seems to be unsettled with no real reason. I have fed (and fed, and fed, and fed) him, changed him, cuddled him etc but nothing much seems to work. He loves the bath and stops crying when he is in there but then cries when he is taken out because it is cold (even with a heater on). Occasionally he is blissed out after this but last night he just kept crying. The HAB helps immensely and I can usually get him to nap (plus make it dark and cozy for him) for a little while but even that isn't always successful

    Probably not much help but you aren't alone in having ho idea about what they want. I am waiting for the instruction booklet to come in the mail .......

  6. #6
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber

    Nov 2004
    Bonnie Doon
    4,566

    Hi!

    Cherie I would take him to the dr to get checked over...I would imagine he should be starting to settle now that he's getting a bit bigger...You definitely want to find out if he's crying in pain....Big hugs though - there's nothing worse than bubbas crying for ages and not being able to fix it!!!

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Feb 2004
    Melbourne
    11,171

    Cherie do you think it might be the reflux causing him pain? Zander was very similar, so I hear ya hun, it's dreadful.

  8. #8
    Platinum Subscriber. Love a friend xx

    Jun 2006
    Gold Coast, Australia
    1,618

    I thought I was the only one who couldn't really distinguish between cries. I've researched and listened to all the "words" and I still can't tell the difference. Blake was crying all day everyday until we changed him to Goat's milk formula (obviously not an option as you're breastfeeding).
    Sorry can't be of much help just wanted to let you know I know where you're coming from!!

  9. #9
    Administrator
    Add Rouge on Facebook

    Jun 2003
    Ubiquity
    9,922

    Both my kids were newborn criers. With Paris I thought it was all my fault. With Seth I realised it was his way of communicating how he feels and heck I talk alot so why shouldn't he. I could tell the difference between wind, pain, hungry and just letting it all out (which he'd do often). I think some babies are just more vocal than others and whilst it does our head in its ok.

    *hugs*
    Cailin

  10. #10
    Registered User

    Nov 2004
    Western Australia
    2,300

    Aww Sherie you poor thing, it must be awful. I could never really distinguish between cries either, just used to stick them on the boob lol. Id prob want to get him checked over like Kristie has suggested just to rule out any probs, Ive never had any criers so im sorry i cant really help. Hugs to you

    Jo

  11. #11
    Registered User

    Sep 2006
    659

    We get about 3 hours a night here, and he has a half hour morning cry just before his morning sleep. He gets hysterical in the mornings and I can't do a thing to settle him, and have just come to accept for whatever reason, it's something he must do before his only sleep of the day. Like clockwork he starts crying at 9:30am and falls asleep at 10am, then wakes at 11am. I just like next to him on my bed and pat him.

    In the evening he grizzles starting at 5pm (haha he's starting now as I type). Sometimes pacing with him helps, sometimes my HAB, sometimes the rocking chair, sometimes booby, but he settles eventually at around 8-9pm. My older kids both were very unsettled that time of day when they were babies as well, so I just always thought it was normal in a way. I think he's overtired due to only ever having a 1 hr sleep in the day and also over stimulated because kids and dad are home that time, and mum's running round cooking and cleaning and getting lunches for the next day and lots of action going on.

    One thing I know from experience, is that it does get better as they get older. Hang in there xo.

  12. #12
    Registered User

    Apr 2005
    1,814

    I'm so glad I'm not the only one who can't distinguish cries (or gets a few hours of crying a night!) ... I read people saying all the time that they can tell what their bubba wants. I can't! I just start with trying booby ... then changing nappy ... then cuddles/burps ... then tear my hair because I've got no idea what else could be wrong.

    I do think his reflux gets worse in the afternoon - he definitely vomits more and arches his back more, but I'm not sure why it would be worse (maybe the meds I give him in the morning wear off by then). We are seeing a paed regularly, and seeing her again on 3rd August ... she does know about his crying and if things haven't improved by next appt she is going to look into food intolerances.

  13. #13
    Registered User

    Feb 2004
    Melbourne
    11,171

    You'll get there hun, it's something we all go through as mummies & then one day you suddenly realise he's nearly one & you somehow muddled through for an entire year!

  14. #14
    Administrator
    Add Rouge on Facebook

    Jun 2003
    Ubiquity
    9,922

    I just want to explain myself hun I could distinguish enough to know when it was crying over a certain period of time and I'd checked everything off the list I knew he was just having some cry time LOL! I hope I didn't sound bad...

    *mwa*
    Cailin

  15. #15
    Registered User

    Jul 2007
    Over the rainbow
    1,509

    I am jumping in here. so please don't axe me about the following - just my opinion - it made sense to me
    I read (internet?!? - I'll try and find it again and post it later) that there were studies done on babies cries - heck how do I explain it - there is not a difference between crying (Pain I think is the exception on the rule. That any idiot can tell) But apparently babies cry the same for everything else. Say example that she has wind, she wil cry at the same tone(?) than she would cry if she were overstimulated, if her diper was wet, if she was teething ect. So in other words, you are not really suppose to make out a difference in cries. Its just that the longer you have your child, the better you can guess what is wrong. So if she has not had something to drink in four hours and she starts crying, you will guess that she's hungry. If she drinks/eat someting and she stops, your right, but if she keeps on crying you guess diper. You change diper, she keeps crying, you try something different.
    This sounds horrible - I do not explain things well. But any-hoo, it help me, because I aslo did not instictivly know what she was crying about and everybody told me that later I would learn what her differnt cries means. (WHAT!?!) I still don't know most of the time, I am always guessing what's wrong or what is bothering her.
    I think that mothers that distinguish between "different" cries are - like me - good guessers

  16. #16
    Registered User
    Add Keira on Facebook

    Mar 2007
    Darwin, NT
    369

    Hi Cherie,

    Sorry you're having a hard time with Jambin's crying... i'm not sure if i'm way off, as i don't have my girl yet and don't know what it's really like to have a poor little crying bub, but have u taken him to an osteopath?

  17. #17
    Registered User

    Jul 2007
    Over the rainbow
    1,509

    Ok I understood the half truth
    http://www.npr.org/templates/story/s...toryId=5716366
    "The other cry in the newborn cryfolio, the basic cry, is used for everything else. It is most typically heard when the baby is hungry, which is why it is often called the hunger cry. It is the same cry the baby uses when his diaper is dirty or for any other nonemergency issue. The basic cry has a more gradual buildup and a lower pitch. It does not have the long periods of breath-holding or the frantic, emergency quality of the pain cry. That's why mothers hearing that cry will often say "Oh, she's just hungry," or "She just wants to be picked up." They are fairly nonchalant about it, and that's fine."

  18. #18
    paradise lost Guest

    DD was usually ok in the mornings but cried for 2 hours every evening no matter what i did, sometimes longer. I figured, as Cailin did, that she was chatty like me, and also like me she found the days too exciting and winding down really hard. She grew out of it by about 4 1/2 months i think.

    I still have no idea what she wants half the time and she can TALK! Well, gabble, but still... She knows i'm trying, i know she's trying, we do our best

12