Feb 25, 2011  •  In Baby, Claire, Motherhood, Parenting, Personal

Sleep Training: How We Did It

As promised, here is my follow-up post to Sleep Training Progress. Before continuing to read, please be advised that in no way am I a sleep expert, and that you should always do your own research and make an educated decision based on your baby and your family’s unique and specific needs. This post only outlines what I have found useful, and which methods worked best for us.


Why sleep train?

Sleep training is certainly not for every family, and not every baby needs it. The reasons we decided to sleep train are:

  1. Ever since Claire hit her 4-month wakeful period, her sleeping habits became horrible. She was waking up 5x a night and would nap for only 30-40 minutes at a time. While some babies are perfectly healthy and happy on such a schedule, it was clear that she was not one of those babies. She would wake up from each nap still groggy and tired, and her overtiredness would continue to accumulate to a point where she was a cranky, fussy mess at the end of each day.
  2. We knew that she was physically and mentally ready. Almost all sleep experts will tell you that most babies are ready to sleep train at 6 months of age, and that the majority are actually be ready for gentler methods by as young as 3 months.


Resources:

By far the best resource I have found for sleep training is the Teaching Your Baby & Toddler to Sleep board on BabyCenter. Not only are the ladies there super-supportive and informative, the instructional posts such as How to SUCCESSFULLY teach a baby to sleep have been invaluable sources of information that I returned to again and again, and still turn to now when I have any sleep-related questions.

Personally, I much preferred that particular thread to any sleep-training book. Because when you have a tired and cranky baby on your hands, the last thing you want to do is read through an entire book.

That being said, the two books I found to be most useful for our needs were Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child by leading pediatrician Dr. Marc Weissbluth, and Sleeping Through the Night by Jodi A. Mindell, PhD.

Healthy Sleep Habits is probably one of the most popular infant sleep books on the market today. It focuses on the parent reading the sleep cues of the child and acting accordingly, with an emphasis on the importance of sleep schedules and routines. While I found the 400+ page book to be chock full of research, data, suggestions and real-life stories, I became impatient after a while because it didn’t seem to be telling me, “If this happens this is how you should handle it.” And that’s where Sleeping Through the Night comes in.

Sleeping Through the Night is written by a psychologist who specializes in infant and children sleep disorders. As a result, one of the things I found most interesting about the book was its stance on the negative and positive associations dealing with sleep. For example, sleeping with a stuffed animal or another favorite object is considered a positive association, while needing to be rocked to sleep is a negative association.

I actually liked Sleeping Through the Night better than Healthy Sleep Habits because it was easier to read and follow, and actually has an entire chapter titled “What to do if…” that addresses common concerns (eg, how to deal with night owls and early risers).

While these two books are what I found to be the best for our situation, needs, and parenting style, others may not feel the same way. One book that is preferred by attachment-parenting advocates and goes by a much gentler approach is The No-Cry Sleep Solution. And if you prefer a firmer, more regimented solution, you can check out Solve Your Child’s Sleep Problems or On Becoming Baby Wise. (Mommy friend Creature Gorgeous got her son, who is one month younger than Claire, to sleep 10 hours through the night by using The Baby Sleep Solution.)


What We Did:

After immersing myself in sleep training books and websites and deciding which method would work best for our family (we were willing to CIO but did not want a strict schedule), I began to keep a sleep log and soon discovered what Claire’s two main sleep problems were:

  1. During naps, she was having trouble transitioning from the first sleep cycle (light sleep which lasts 30-45 minutes) to the next (deep sleep). Some babies do not have much trouble making this transition, but most need to be taught to do so.
  2. She was getting the majority of her nutrition at night, during her night feedings. She would only cluster-feed during the day. We needed to reverse this so that not only would she eat more during the day (which should eventually lead to only eating during the day), she will also start to sleep for longer stretches at night.

Solving the second issue wasn’t too difficult. We just started diluting her night bottles with water, little by little. Soon her night bottles just didn’t taste that good and weren’t as satisfying, so she naturally started to eat more during the day.

Tackling the first problem was a lot more difficult. These are the steps I took:

    1. Since she slept better with a swaddle (for the first couple of months she HATED being swaddled, but then began to depend on it starting at 2.5 months) we continued to swaddle. However, I also knew that we needed to transition out of the swaddle soon because she was almost rolling over from back to front — I was afraid that she would get stuck head down, utterly helpless with her arms tightly bound by her side during the middle of the night when I might not be able to get to her. Besides, she was REALLY starting to fight the swaddle, which is a sign that it’s time to stop swaddling.

 

    1. Meanwhile, I ordered a Magic Sleepsuit which is designed to help babies transition out of the swaddle. When it arrived, I stopped swaddling altogether and began to use the Sleepsuit instead. I won’t lie — the Magic Sleepsuit isn’t “magic.” If it did Claire would sleep 12 hours straight during the night and take three 2-hour naps during the day. But it really did help my daughter sleep better, better than when she was swaddled and MUCH better than without anything.

      Besides, she looks so stinkin’ adorable in it. It reminds me of Maggie Simpson’s star snowsuit.


      Claire now associates the Magic Sleepsuit with sleep. The one night I tried to have her go without it, she woke up 5 times.

 

    1. We ordered the Graco Sweet Slumber Sound Machine, which I chose because it’s the most popular baby sound machine on Amazon. Previously we had been using the Cloud b Sleep Sheep, but the Sleep Sheep is set to automatically turn off after a set amount of time and I discovered that Claire would actually wake up when it shuts off. Or, she would wake up to find that the Sleep Sheep is no longer on, and have trouble going back to sleep. I could always reset the timer, but I was getting sick of returning to her room again and again.

      The Graco Sound Machine runs all night and all through her naps. And now, whenever I turn it on she knows that it’s time for sleep. I also like that it can run on batteries, and it’s small enough for travel. We keep it on the default sound (which I can only describe as “whooshy white noise”) which seems to do the job just fine.

 

    1. At Claire’s age, the MAXIMUM amount of time that she should stay awake between naps is 2 hours. (To see what the recommended amount of sleep and wake times are for infants at various ages, check out this handy chart.) And by observing her and watching for sleep cues — which in her case are her eyes not being as bright and alert, and her drooling more than usual — I was able to determine that the maximum that SHE can go is 1.5 – 1.75 hrs.

      Let me make it clear that we never set a strict schedule for Claire because that’s not our parenting style (and we always have things popping up that would disrupt any given schedule). As soon as an hour has passed since she got up, I begin to watch closely for sleep cues and as soon as they begin, I put her to bed, drowsy but awake.

      And as any parent who has been through sleep training knows, once you pass this window of opportunity it is likely that your baby will become overtired and it will become even more difficult for him/her to go to sleep. By the time obvious signs of sleepiness, such as rubbing eyes and yawning, come about, most babies are already overtired.

 

    1. We let her CIO. Sigh. This was obviously the most difficult part. We began with a modified CIO with timed comfort checks, but I came to realize after a full week of using this method that it was not working for her. Seeing me would just get her worked up even more, and there were times when she would cry an hour straight (an hour was the limit I set for myself) — full on SCREAMING and WAILING, tears running down her face with arms flailing and shaking — and I wanted to gouge my eyes out.

      I switched to a more gentle method — the PUPD (pick up, put down) — and she got even worse. My picking her up would make her WIDE awake.

      So I decided to go with the extinction model, which is just to let her cry for a set amount of time without doing any checks. It seems so cruel, and there were times when I would just stare at the video monitor and cry myself. But this method worked the best for us, because it only took a couple of days for her to get the hint and start sleeping better.

      The trick for nap extensions is that if the baby has not napped for more than an hour, you should let her CIO (or use whatever sleep training method you are using) until that hour is reached. And by day three of the extinction method of nap extensions, Claire was taking at least one 1+ hour nap per day, and within a few more days she began to take at least one 2-hour nap per day.

      And it’s funny, because remember how I mentioned in the Sleep Training Progress post that she was still waking up 3 times a night? As soon as she began to nap better during the day she naturally cut out one night waking. She now sleeps in stretches of 6hrs, 4hrs, then 2hrs each night which is what many pediatricians and sleep experts recommend for babies her age.



And that’s how we did it. Claire’s sleeping is still not perfect, but it’s soooooo much better than before. What Dr. Weissbluth says about infant sleep is true: a well-rested baby is happier, more alert and attentive, and better able to concentrate. Additionally, getting your child to develop good sleep habits early will help prevent sleep disorders as he/she gets older.

Like I said at the beginning of this post, please do your own research and decide what is best for YOUR family. But if there is one thing that I want to tell EVERYONE, it would be this:

Start early. If you plan to sleep-train your child — no matter
what method — do the research as soon as possible (I recommend
before the baby is born) so that even if you don’t start sleep
training right away, you can help prevent bad sleep habits.

I wish that I had done my research beforehand, but I didn’t because I knew that we wouldn’t start sleep training until Claire was at least 3 months old. Little did I know that I was creating bad habits that I had to work hard at to break.

Good luck, and please let me know if you have any questions!


ETA, August 2013:
I’m sorry I haven’t responded to all the comments below, especially the newer ones. The truth is that this post was written over two and a half years ago after we sleep-trained my first, and it’s been over a year since we sleep-trained our second….and we still struggle with sleep from time to time! I am not a sleep expert, and as much as I would like to help everyone who reaches out to me, I just don’t feel that I have the experience or qualifications to answer your questions. Every baby is unique, and every situation is different. Please check out the BabyCenter sleep-training board linked to at the beginning of this post — Teaching Your Baby & Toddler to Sleep — the ladies here are much more experienced with sleep training matters than I ever was, or will be. Good luck, and sorry I can’t be of more help.

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51 Responses to “Sleep Training: How We Did It”

  1. Wow, that is some good information!! And she is sooo cute and smiley in that outfit 🙂

  2. Wendy says:

    Thanks so much! I’m so glad to hear that things are better. Your post reaffirmed what I do during her naps (let her CIO) and I loved that handy chart on sleep patterns!

  3. Thank you for writing this all out! Definitely some really helpful info here that I’ll be returning to soon.

  4. MrsW says:

    Did you see anything when you were researching about sleep-training older kids? My daughter is almost 15 months and she’ll still wake up at 4 or 5 and I REALLY want to get to a place where she’ll sleep till 7 or 8.

  5. Christina says:

    This is a great post. I am 20 weeks and willing to read and research anything possible. If you don’t mind me asking, what kind of bad habits did she form before you started sleep training? I didn’t even know that was possible.

    • The two big mistakes we made were using a pacifier as a “sleep prop” and rocking/holding her to sleep. While giving a baby a pacifier as she drifts off to sleep may be helpful, the mistake that we made was that whenever she woke up we would rush in and pop it back into her mouth. Soon, she became dependent on it to STAY asleep, which is not fun in the middle of the night. (Now, we just give her the pacie as we put her to bed and even though it pops out, she won’t cry about it.)

      As for rocking her to sleep, while this is a good idea to help calm and soothe the baby, if you do it UNTIL the baby falls asleep once again she becomes dependent on it to fall asleep. (And later on, as the baby gets older it will take longer and longer for her to fall asleep using this methods…it’s not uncommon for the parent to have to rock the baby for two hours every night!) The key here is to calm and soothe the baby, but to make sure that she’s still awake when you put her to bed, so that she will learn to fall asleep on her own.

      Hope that answered your question, and good luck with your pregnancy!

  6. LHR says:

    This is a really great write up. I wished that I had found someone to break it down for me like this when we needed it.

  7. sunny says:

    Thanks so much for this awesome post. I have a 4 month old and was starting to think about sleep training. The books you recommend and the baby center post have been soo helpful. Now I think I need to get the magic sleep suit. So how long should the daytime naps be? 2 hours? My boy’s first nap today was 45 min. and the 2nd was 1 hr. Now he is down for the 3rd nap. I, too, have the sleep sheep and am getting annoyed that it shuts off after 40 minutes- especially when that is when babies need to transition into deeper sleep.
    Anyway- thanks so much for sharing what you are learning.

  8. Joolz says:

    Thanks for taking the time to write this up – I’ve decided it’s time to tackle our baby’s sleeping issues and this is really useful.

  9. Hope says:

    Thank you for this post! I checked out Sleeping Through the Night after reading about it here and found it extremely helpful! I really liked the section on negative and positive sleep associations. We’ve been working on breaking some bad habits (like nursing him to sleep) and while our son doesn’t sleep through the night every night, he’s been sleeping much better since I’ve started putting him down awake (I still nurse him at night, but wake him up by burping and singing to him before putting him in his crib).

  10. Nadine says:

    Thanks for this post!!!!!!!!!!! Our little guy is 6 months old and was obviously overtired and we were not paying enough attention to his sleep cues. We are on day 5 of sleep training…this post gave me the hint as to why going in every 5 minutes to check up on him is making him wail even louder….

    I have been feeling horrible but your post has given us hope!

    Thanks and sweet dreams to all of you!

  11. Mel says:

    Thanks for the detailed information! I’ve been doing a lot of research for sleep training my 8 month old, realizing what I did for my first daughter probably won’t work for the 2nd one. I was wondering when you did the extinction method, what did you do when you checked in on her? Did you pick her up or just talk and comfort her? And was she still crying when you left the room again?

    I thought I read all the books out there but haven’t heard of ‘Sleeping Through the night’, I’ve got it on hold at the library!

    Thanks again!

  12. Becky says:

    Did you let her CIO in the magic sleep suit?

  13. Amy says:

    This sounds EXACTLY like my son. We are currently using the magic sleep suit and he associates it with sleep. But since his 4 month regression he keeps waking so many times. He also only takes 35-40 min naps. Did you do the nap CIO and the sleep CIO at the same time? How is she doing now? How and when did you transition out of the sleep suit? Thank you so much in advance! I appreciate your info so much!

  14. Les says:

    Great info! Thanks. We just started sleep training our 4 month old son with the CIO extinction method. The problem I’m having is during naps now. I put him down drowsy and he just cries for about an hour straight. Should we have a certain amount of time for the nap and if he sleeps he sleeps an if he cries he just cries? Do we then pick him up and continue on with the day even if he hasn’t slept at all during that nap? Do we pick him up when he’s crying? I’m afraid to do that because then I feel like we will be losing the progressing because he knows he can cry for a while and then we come pick him up; but it’s not night time so there’s a difference. Help please!

  15. Rebecca says:

    Thank you so much for this post. It was a good data point and helped me motivate to help me start our girl with her ST. From a fellow internaut

  16. Elizabeth says:

    I saw you posted something about how one mistake you made was letting your baby fall asleep with a pacifier and then when she would wake up, would cry because it wasn’t there. I am having the same problem with my 2-month old. You also mentioned that you give her the pacifier to fall asleep, but now she doesn’t cry when it falls out. How did you accomplish this? Was it through the extinction method? Just now I am trying to put my daughter down for a nap and every 5 minutes wakes back up for her pacifier. I actually just let her cry for 4 minutes and she fell asleep. I am wondering if this is what I need to continue to do and then maybe she will stop crying every time it falls out! So frustrating! thanks 🙂

  17. Iryna says:

    Thank you for such detailed and useful info, my 4 months old has the same problem and now I understand what I am doing wrong. I tried to check on him every 2-5-10 minutes but he just got more hysterical. I will try CIO method tonight. Could you please tell a little more about naps… I recognize his clues when he wants to sleep after 1 hours being awake, so what do I need to do ? just put him in a crib and let him CIO the same way as at night time?
    Thank you!!!!!!!!!

  18. Tonia says:

    Hi. I am the mother of boy/girl twins. Currently they are 5 months old. My daughter is sleeping most of the night and wakes once or twice during the night but my son is still waking every two hours or so; sometimes even every hour for a bottle. Sometimes I am able to pick him up and hold him for a couple minutes or sing him to back to sleep but he mainly wants a bottle. I try checking diapers and burping first because I am actually worried about him eating too much during the night. It seems like he eats every two hours 24/7. I have tried singing to him, which is getting old, putting him in his swing, letting him fall asleep on my bed then moving him to his bouncy seat. He won’t sleep on his crib very long. I have the white noise machine in his and his sister’s nursery and one on my iphone for good measure. I want to get rid of these sleep crutches but I just don’t know what to do. I’m getting so frustrated because my husband doesn’t hear the babies at night so it’s up to me to take care of them. I am constantly tired, irritable and starting to resent a lot which I feel terrible about. No one believes me when I tell them I haven’t had enough sleep and it’s really taking a toll on me. (I have actually had panic attacks because of a lack of sleep). They can’t understand that it takes at least 45 minutes for me to get into a deep sleep. I just don’t know what to do and anything I suggest to my husband is disregarded. Please help? I’m a first time mom at age 34 and I’m so exhausted. I love my children and husband with all my heart but I just can’t go on much longer like this. I feel like a bad mom.

  19. Tired Mama says:

    You are a lifesaver! I’ve done so much research and read one of the books you mention but was still confused. What you describe sounds just like our baby and now I’m hopeful for when we sleep train.

  20. Missy says:

    I’m currently sitting here listening to my 4 month old daughter cry. She doesn’t nap during the day and is up all night. I am at my wits end! I’m trying the CIO method, but I keep checking on her and picking her up. I think it’s making it worse like for you. Thanks for the info, cause I’m ready to shoot myself! My brain is fried from lack of sleep. Cross your fingers for me.

    • chloe says:

      HI,
      i’d be interested to know how your sleep training went with your daughter. i feel like i’ve tried everything! naps are ok, but i don’t know how to teach him to sleep through the night. he still wakes 4+ times a night and won’t settle unless i feed him.

  21. Kathryn says:

    Hi super information and really helps . I wondered if you know how to handle the noise level of CIO while you have an older child. We rush in to my son 8 months sometimes every hour all night because he cries so loudly it wakes my four year old. No book seems to address this issue. I did assisted CIO with my daughter and it worked well after the initial upset ( ours!!!) of listening to the cries and waiting the allotted time. I just can’t get around the fact he wakes her. Grrrr! Am in a right tough place. Hope you have some advice.
    Many thanks Kathryn

    • jaime says:

      Kathryn,
      I was concerned we would have the same issue and our house has walls made of tissue paper. You might want to consider a white noise app/machine for your older child. My almost 3 year old is a light sleeper but with his white noise app on the iPod dock cranked he does not wake up when the baby is wailing in the other room.
      That being said my five month old is up every few hours so heres hoping the white noise continues to work, we are going to need it.

  22. Rebecca says:

    This sounds just like my daughter. 30-45 minute naps and anywhere between 3-8 wakings a night! I am starting to sleep train her now (at 14 weeks) and had a questions about how you conducted naps with extinction. If baby wakes after 45 minutes, you let baby cry until 1 hour and then pick them up and they stay awake Or let them cry until they go back to sleep? Thanks for your help!

  23. Ashli says:

    This post was VERY helpful to me! We are currently trying to sleep train our 7 month old little girl and it has been very stressful! It’s all I think about every hour of the day. I wish I had researched and read into it more when I was pregnant with her….because I definitely don’t have time to read now. We were co-sleeping until a few nights ago and we have just started the sleep training process. She is still waking up 4-5 times a night and we have the EXACT same 2 issues that you described above. Thanks for your post!

  24. ld says:

    I have a 10 week old who somehow we have trained to sleep with paci. Its affecting naps and night. I feel as though it is affecting transition into deep sleep and next sleep cycle. Naps are a disaster, 20-30. Mins in her crib. Night we pop it in and 20 mind later again and most of the time she can go 4-5 hrs (nexxt feed). Then wake after 3hrs. Her issue Is she cannot self soothe. She loves to suck. I have tried offering her hand but no good. I don’t expect her to STTN yet as I’m BF, but want her to self settle and NO PACIFIER to sleep. Is she too young?help!!

  25. Mrs O'C says:

    Thank you!!! I have been looking everywhere for tips on how to extend naps. My little boy already sleeps straight through the night from 7pm to 7am (usually), but the naps have been ridiculously hit-and-miss. And I didn’t know what to do! We’ve started with your tip of letting him CIO (which was our sleep training method for night sleep), and it seems to be working well. I know its always a work in progress but I feel much more optimistic 🙂

  26. Dao says:

    For the past 2 weeks, my 8 mo old baby has napped horribly, only 10-15 mins/each nap. She appeared overtired and cranky. Then we decided to train her to nap using extensive CIO method. This is our first time to use this method and it seems working. . The first day, she cried for 1 hour in her crib and slept 15 mins. Today is the fourth day, she is getting better but still takes short nap (30 mins max after 10-20 mins of crying. Yesterday we discovered she just got 2 upper teeth. Should I continue to train her or wait until she overcomes this teething discomfort? How to lengthen her nap time? she seems to have a problem with sleep transition. She never sleeps through the night. I have to nurse her to sleep 2-3 times a night. Thanks for reading this long message.

  27. Mrs. H says:

    Thanks for sharing your story. I am very curious as to what age you transitioned your child out of the Magic Sleepsuit, and how that process went? Although the sleepsuit worked very well for my daughter, I am now trying to transition her out of it and it is not going well at all!

    • We decided to stop using the sleepsuit when they started to roll back to front (we didn’t want them to get stuck in a face-down position) — cold turkey — and neither of my girls seemed to be bothered by it much. They were both late rollers (about 8 months) so maybe that had something to do with it? Good luck!

      • Mrs. H says:

        Thanks so much for your reply! My daughter started rolling from back to tummy at 4 months and now at 7 months she still can’t roll back onto her back. (She is not able to roll at all while wearing the sleepsuit, though). In her crib without the sleepsuit on, she rolls onto her tummy and sometimes just falls asleep that way, but other times screams her head off until I come in and move her onto her back (and then proceeds to roll right onto her tummy and gets stuck again). I am thinking that maybe I need to continue using the sleepsuit awhile longer, until she is stronger and can roll both ways. Thanks again for your input! 🙂

  28. chloe says:

    thanks for your post, i’m really at the end of my teather with my childs sleeping dramas and in my fragial emotional state, being able to relate to your story brought a tear to my eye! still have a few questions about how to teach him to go back to sleep when he wakes in the night? I have found using CIO has worked best for him. His naps, and crying time, in the day are getting way better in the day but he is still waking 5 times a night and won;t settle again unless i feed him (breast). He is almost 8 months old and I feel his waking is maybe due to seperation anxiety bacause from 5- 7 months i was co-sleeping (because his waking was 6+ in the night and it was the only way i could cope). any one have any experiences to share?

  29. I have read in many forums that sleep training is not that healthy as natural baby sleep….. is that true?

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