thread: Waking through the night still at 9 months!

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  1. #1
    Registered User

    Jan 2006
    8,369

    Porridge before bed works for us. Well, I say works for us, I mean if he doesn't have porridge he won't sleep, if he does he might.

    But we have teething and seperation issues going on too atm, coupled with a baby who doesn't sleep that we'll be seeing a doctor about soon.

  2. #2
    Registered User

    Oct 2007
    Inner West Sydney
    186

    I would cut out the feeds altogether at night.
    When she wakes up. No lights, no talking, don't pick her up and just settle her by patting her to sleep.
    My bub went through the same thing. Once they realise that you aren't going to talk, play or feed them when they wake up, they work out that there isn't much point waking up. I have this great book that I used and had my bub back to sleeping through in five nights. If you want a copy, just send me a private message with your email.

  3. #3
    Registered User

    Jun 2007
    ...not far enough away :)
    1,413

    I was going to start a similar thread myslef.

    Cutting out the feed could work, if you are up for crying...but I myself am not.

    Charlie is 10months & still feeds once at night. When teething it may be twice as he is sooo very unsettled. Could bubs be teething. We always offer water & a cuddle & that can sometimes work - but I still feed approx 3am....it takes 10mins & he then sleeps til 8am. So it works for us.

    I might start a thread to see who feeds & who doesn't etc. I find that the feed is easier than listening to him cry & it doesn't take long & we both get sleep.

  4. #4
    Registered User

    Feb 2007
    Queensland
    565

    We have the same problem, and to be honest he has prob slept through a total of 5-7 nights his whole life!!! He normally wakes anywhere from 1-6 times, and I try the dummy first and sometimes that will be enough, but if he really wants to BF I feed him. Much easier for us, less crying all round!! But, everyone has different ideas, and it is best to do what works for you. I just feed him in bed and we both nod off together (most often he will just help himself again later on!!)

    Good Luck!!

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Aug 2007
    Werribee
    151

    I would say it perfectly normal for this to be happening.SOme babies will sleep through not wanting a feed ad some wont.Both my kiddies (dd nearly 4 now and ds is 9.5 mths) were and are the kind that want that feed.DO what works for you sweetie.DS wakes about midnight,has boobie feed then back off again till 4 or 5am sometimes earlier, at such time i offer boobie and we usually snuggle in bed and he does the self help bar thing aswell lol. There are lots of ways to curb the crying and night feeds and power to the mothers who can tolerate it because i wasnt strong enough to go through with it with dd.I found it was aphase that passed before she was 1.I hope it will for you too.Good luck.

  6. #6
    Life Subscriber

    Jul 2006
    Brisbane
    6,683

    I agree that this is totally normal, and she will settle down to one feed again, and then none. I would persist with the dream feed, sometimes it takes a few days for a pattern to establish. I used the dream feed with DS2 until he was nearly 12 months and this way he was only waking once in the night instead of twice. Then around 12 months he stopped waking.

    If she is waking for a feed you are really lucky in some ways. My second DS only ever woke for a feed and then went straight back to sleep (except for the VERY odd occasion if he was sick or teething). Much better to be awake for 10 or 15 minutes while you bf, then back to sleep (which happens really easily thanks to those sleepy hormones released while you bf). My first DS went through a phase of waking and not going back to sleep for hours. This is far worse IMO. I'll take the feeding in the night any day. I would think you are very close to her sleeping through now anyway, so if you can hang in there, that elusive uninterrupted night's sleep shouldn't be too far away. GL.

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Feb 2004
    Melbourne
    11,171

    I would cut out the feeds altogether at night.
    When she wakes up. No lights, no talking, don't pick her up and just settle her by patting her to sleep.
    My bub went through the same thing. Once they realise that you aren't going to talk, play or feed them when they wake up, they work out that there isn't much point waking up. I have this great book that I used and had my bub back to sleeping through in five nights. If you want a copy, just send me a private message with your email.
    Not the case here at all!! We tried the quiet time, no lights, very little talking, no playing & it didn't work. My son just wasn't a big sleeper, some babies / children / adults are like that, my husband isn't much of a sleeper either! He started to sleep through the night around about when I got pregnant again 6 months ago, but then I was waking up myself

    As for what are you doing wrong - NOTHING!! Like I said, some people just aren't great sleepers. I noticed though the times you said were 12 & 3am, do you think she might be getting cold? Maybe snuggling with mummy & having a nice warm feed is warming her up enough to sleep & then she gets cold again? Zander was waking a bit the last two weeks because the night was cool but when we put him in bed it was still warm. I just put him in his winter jammies & we're all fine again.

  8. #8
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber
    Add sushee on Facebook

    Sep 2004
    Melb - where my coolness isn't seen as wierdness
    4,361

    Charlie was also a child who woke often, sometimes once a night, sometimes 4 times a night, almost never slept through, until he was 11 months old. Now he's an excellent sleeper and if he does wake and cry for any reason I always go in there as I know he doesn't cry for just any reason. I also think going in when he cries (I'm not talking small grizzle but a proper cry) allows him to feel secure in the knowledge that mum is near by if he's scared, sick or cold, and will take care of whatever it is that's bothering him. And I know that he only cries if he really needs me.

    Charlie also got 6 teeth in 3 weeks, so don't discount that she might still be teething. Or it might be that her sleep patterns are disrupted from the previous teething and she now wakes and doesn't know how to put herself to sleep. In my experience, they settle back into their old sleep routine just in time for another set of teeth to sart coming through and their sleep patterns go haywire again! At that age, so many things are happening to their little bodies, it seems almost inevitable they're going to be unsettled every now and then.

    But do remember it will pass. They don't stay little forever and they do learn to sleep through. Some earlier and some later. As I said before Charlie is now an excellent sleeper, and at bedtime, I go through the bedtime routine, and I put him in his cot awake and he goes to sleep on his own. If he's tired, he'll pull on my hand saying 'night night' so I know he wants to go to bed. This is a boy who as a baby, I believed would never learn to self-settle. So just keeping telling yourself that this phase will end, and it will.

  9. #9
    Registered User

    Feb 2008
    28

    First Bub... I am soooo glad you started this thread!! My 8 month old DS has been waking 3-4 times a night!! Last night he woke 5!! He is also on 3 meals a day plus formula!! I know he has started to pull at his ear and chew his fist... which probably means his top teeth are on the way through.. he already has his bottom 2 teeth. I have tried settling with a dummy and putting him in our bed, but al he wants is a bottle which he never finishes just snacks!! I am going back to work next week and I am hoping somehow that he does not wake so often. I have read some tips others have posted and will try that..but any other ideas would be great!

  10. #10
    Registered User

    Apr 2007
    120

    Thank you everyone for your replies! I feel heaps better knowing that I am not the only one having sleep issues. At my mothers group it feels like my bub is the only one not sleeping through the night! Hopefully Ella will settle back into a better routine soon. Until then I suppose all I can do is give her lots of cuddles and sleep when I can.

    Tomorrow is my 7th wedding anniversary!! My hubby is going to get up to Ella in the morning so I can have a sleep in so I am looking forward to that!

    Good luck to all the other mums and dads who are feeling sleep deprived!

  11. #11
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber

    Jun 2005
    Blue Mountains
    5,086

    firstbub - my DS has only really recently starting sleeping through consistently, and even then not always. We cut out the night feeds around 15 months by offering water, only because I was pregnant & it was too tiring to feed at night, and I think he was ready to drop the night feeds anyway.

    I wouldn't label it as 'sleep issues' at all.. they're babies, and it's completely normal for them to wake for a variety of reasons. I agree that feeding is the quickest and easiest method of getting everyone back to sleep peacefully, and if she is having a pretty good drink during these night feeds, well then she probably needs it When she wakes for that hour through the night, are you able to just pop her beside you in your bed.. then you can just sleep while she plays?

    I do recall the 8-9 month time being very unsettled, due to teeth & separation anxiety etc etc etc! But it does pass, bubs are constantly changing. Oh and btw, with regards to the other mothers with babies sleeping through.. I bet it's not every night Even adults don't sleep through every night! hehe. We wake up to pee, or wake up from dreams and go back to sleep. Bubs wake up and sometimes need to know that mum & dad are around.. so rest assured that you're helping her feel nice and safe and comforted as she learns about this big wide world.

    You're doing a great job, it will pass eventually.

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