Feeding at night waking = rewarding for waking = more night waking?
I don't know that I 100% agree with that theory BUT I've seen it been said (typed...) on here a few times the past week or two and wondered what others think.
When Jazz wakes at night I feed her. I have tried 'ignoring' on the rare occassion just to see if she will go back to sleep and 99.99% of the time she'll progress to a cry, and then a distressed cry, thrash around the bed, and get pretty worked up about it. So i don't let her cry at night as settling her after she's worked up is harder than just feeding her while she's half asleep.
Our nights aren't as bad as they could be though, I do have to say. Most nights she'sok with just having a feed and going back to bed, she doesn't usually want to actually be UP.
Doesn't make it easier to be woken about 4 times a night to feed...
If I don't feed her then yes she wants to be up. And I know that she doesn't need to feed 3 hourly overnight anymore... heck she doesn't really feed that often during the day!
Anyway, just wondering how much validity do you think the "'reward' feeding = more waking" has?
Do you think her night waking is a 'habit'? Is feeding every time she wakes going to be problematic? I'm towards the end of tolerance on this, its really effecting me day-to-day and yes its all part of the territory but I need a good night sleep! Just one! How would I even break a habit like that without letting her cry? Should I start getting her up at night (OMG don't say that please LOL) instead of feeding? Or is that just going to create more bad habits.
MR... I know you'll have some good advice (you always do!!!!!) or even just some reassurance that its not going to turn into me bfing a 10yo back to sleep (hey, in my sleep deprived state my SIL is getting to me LOL)... ???
(... ETA ... no Shel won't do a night feed, so thats not an option. Suggesting I get out on my own and having time to myself isn't an option either. Its just not going to happen. I'm not moving her to her own room. I'm not switching her to formula or topping her up with formula. I'm not letting her cry it out. Sorry if they were your suggestions...)