Yep, that was me too. I finally stopped trying, or at least stopped thinking about sleep and watching the clock, and just went with the flow. If he was tired, I'd feed him, and he'd usually drop off to sleep. Wouldnt' necessarily stay asleep for that long mind you! I think I only tried putting him to bed awake a few times, and we both hated it, and it took so long! We didn't even have a bedtime routine - mainly coz a bath stimulated him too much back then (he loves his showers with daddy now tho) and well, I'm not a routine kinda person hehe. Now that he's a bit older he appreciates books and things more, so that's becoming a bit of a routine for bed.
It's only now that he'll come off the boob awake, and lie down next to me and go to sleep on his own. I actually love that we've never 'fought' to get him to sleep, and I think it's done the world of good in the long run (if you call 1 yr a long run LOL) because he doesn't fight us to go to bed. So long as he's got his arm wrapped around my neck, he'll go off in about 15 mins (and it's actually quite lovely). I think it's a nice transition from feeding to sleep, and I'm confident that this won't go forever either, and he'll soon go to bed on his own.
So, I can't offer you any practical advice, but if you find something that works.. do itBe it the rocking chair, the pram, feeding, co-sleeping (we've had no 'bad habits' from any of this, because you have to remember they change so much during that first year anyway) Co-sleeping I found really helped with tiredness in those weary weeks, because it was little effort to feed at night, and I 'got' to him before he'd fully woken up. If he was in his cot in his room, by the time I got there he was very awake and took longer to settle.
Are there gentle sleep schools there? Controlled crying or controlled comforting isn't recommended for under 6 months, and it sounds like you don't want this anyway, and that's probably what a 'normal' sleep school would encourage.


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Be it the rocking chair, the pram, feeding, co-sleeping (we've had no 'bad habits' from any of this, because you have to remember they change so much during that first year anyway) Co-sleeping I found really helped with tiredness in those weary weeks, because it was little effort to feed at night, and I 'got' to him before he'd fully woken up. If he was in his cot in his room, by the time I got there he was very awake and took longer to settle.


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