Solve Your Child's Sleep Problems
Solve Your Child's Sleep Problems book cover

Solve Your Child's Sleep Problems

Paperback – April 17, 1986

Price
$15.52
Format
Paperback
Pages
256
Publisher
Fireside
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0671620998
Dimensions
5.42 x 0.66 x 8.4 inches
Weight
8.4 ounces

Description

When your child isn't sleeping, chances are that you aren't either. Solve Your Child's Sleep Problems --a tired parent's essential for more than 10 years--offers valuable advice and concrete help when lullabies aren't enough to lull your child into dreamland. Based on Ferber's research as the director of Boston's Center for Pediatric Sleep Disorders at Children's Hospital, the book is a practical, easy-to-understand guide to common sleeping problems for children ages one to six. Detailed case histories on night waking, difficulty sleeping, and more serious disorders such as sleep apnea and sleepwalking help illustrate a wide variety of problems and their solutions. New parents will benefit from Ferber's proactive advice on developing good sleeping patterns and daily schedules to ensure that sleeping problems don't develop in the first place. You'll also find a bibliography of children's books on bedtime, sleep, and dreaming, as well as a list of helpful organizations. Here's a book that is sure to put you and your whole family to sleep--in this case, that's a good thing. Kirkus Reviews Those wrestling with a persistent or more serious problem will find this a real boon. -- Dr. Richard Ferner is widely recognized as the nation's leading authority in the field of children's sleep problems. Director of the Sleep Lab and the Center for Pediatric Sleep Disorders at Children's Hospital in Boston (Harvard University's pediatric teaching hospital), Dr. Ferber also teaches at Harvard Medical School and is a pediatrician. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 At the End of Your Rope The most frequent calls I receive at the Center for Pediatric Sleep Disorders at Children's Hospital in Boston are from a parent or parents whose children are sleeping poorly. When the parent on the phone begins by telling me "I am at the end of my rope" or "We are at our wits' end," I can almost predict what will be said next. Typically, the couple or single parent has a young child (often their first), who is between five months and four years of age. Their child does not fall asleep readily at night and/or wakes repeatedly during the night. The parents are tired, frustrated, and often angry. Their own relationship has become tense and they are wondering whether there is something inherently wrong with their child, or if they are unfit patents. In most cases the parents have had lots of advice on how to handle the situation from friends, relatives, even the pediatrician. "Let him cry; you're just spoiling him," they are told, or "That's just a phase; wait until she outgrows it." They don't want to wait but begin to wonder if they will have to, since despite all their efforts and strategies the sleep problem persists. Often the more the parents do to try and solve the problem, the worse it gets. Sooner or later they ask themselves, "How long do I let my child cry -- all night?" And if he or she gets up four, five, and six times at night, "Will this phase pass before we collapse from our own loss of sleep?" Everything seems pretty hopeless at first. If your child isn't sleeping well or has other problems -- such as sleep terrors, bedwetting, nightmares, or loud snoring -- which are sources of worry and frustration, it won't take long for you to feel as if you're at the end of your rope too. Let me assure you there is hope. With almost all of these children we are able to at least reduce the disturbance significantly, and often we can actually eliminate the sleep disorder entirely. The information in this book will help you to identify your child's particular disorder and will give you practical ways of solving the problem. At the Sleep Center I meet with the family -- parents and child together -- and learn all I can about the child's problem. How frequent and long-lasting has it been? What are the episodes like? How do the parents handle the child at bedtime and during the nighttime wakings? Is there a family history of sleep problems, and are there social factors that might be contributing to the problem? With this detailed history, a physical examination, and, in certain cases, after laboratory study, I can usually identify the disorder and its causes. At that point I can begin to work with the family to help them solve their child's sleep problem. Our methods of treatment for the "sleepless child" rarely include the use of medication. Instead, I work with the family to set up new schedules, routines, and ways of handling their child. Sometimes the child's biological rhythms may need normalizing or he may have to learn new conditions to associate with falling asleep. The family may have to learn how to set appropriate limits on the child's behavior, and the child may need an incentive to cooperate. I always negotiate the specifics of the plan with the family. It is important that they agree with the approach and feel confident that they will be able to follow through consistently. If the child is old enough, we include him in the negotiating. Thus we use a consistent, firm, but fair technique, tailored to the child, the family, and the particular sleep disorder. This works, time after time. Usually the sleep problem has nothing to do with poor parenting. Nor are the episodes (with a few exceptions) part of a "normal phase" that must be waited (and waited and waited) out. And finally there is usually nothing physically or mentally wrong with the child himself. Most parents are immensely reassured to know that sleep disorders are common in all types of families and social environments, and that most children with such disorders respond well to treatment. In certain cases, such as in sleep apnea, or less often in bedwetting, medical factors may be involved and our intervention may include medication or surgery. In other instances, such as the sleepiness of depression, recurrent nightmares, adolescent sleep terrors, and extreme nighttime fears, emotional factors may play a role. Here the source of these feelings must be identified and satisfactorily dealt with before the sleep problems will resolve. Sometimes professional counseling may be recommended. The case studies in this book are based on my experience at the Sleep Center. The discussions of these cases, along with descriptions of the underlying sleep disorders and explanations of the methods of solving them, will help you to identify, understand, and deal with your own child's sleep problem. Can a Child Just Be a "Poor Sleeper"? If your child is a restless sleeper or can't seem to settle down at night, you should be very cautious about assuming that he is just a poor sleeper or doesn't need as much sleep as other children of the same age. Your own expectations can have a very strong influence on how your child's sleep pattern develops from the day you bring him home from the hospital. I have seen many families who were told by the nurse in the maternity ward, "Your baby hardly sleeps at all. You're in for trouble!" Because these parents were led to believe their child was just a poor sleeper and there wasn't anything they could do about it, they allowed their baby to develop poor sleep habits; they did not believe there was anything they could do to help him develop good ones. As a result the whole family suffered terribly. Yet I have found that almost all of these children are potentially fine sleepers and with just a little intervention can learn to sleep well. It is true that children differ in their ability to sleep. Some children are excellent sleepers from birth. In the early weeks they may have to be waked for feedings. As they grow older, not only do they continue to sleep well, but it is difficult to wake them even when you want to. They sleep soundly at night in a variety of situations -- bright or dark, quiet or noisy, calm or chaotic -- they tolerate occasional disruption of their sleep schedules, and even sleep well during periods of emotional stress. Other children seem inherently more susceptible to having their sleep patterns disrupted. Any change in bedtime routines, an illness, hospitalization, or guests in the house, may cause their sleep patterns to worsen. Even though these children may have always been considered "non-sleepers," we usually find that they too can sleep quite satisfactorily once we make appropriate changes in their routines, schedules, surroundings, or interactions with the family. Such children may still have occasional nights of poor sleep, hut if the new routines continue to be followed consistently, the more normal patterns will return quickly. There are, of course, children who sleep very poorly for reasons we have, as yet, been unable to identify. For these few, our treatment may help very little, or not at all. If your child is up a great deal in the night it may be tempting to assume that he is one of these poor sleepers. But this almost certainly is not the case. Such instances of truly poor sleep ability are quite rare among young children, and in all probability your child's sleep problem can be solved. Virtually all children without major medical or neurological disorders have the ability to sleep well. They can go to bed at an appropriate time, fall asleep within minutes, and stay asleep until a reasonable hour in the morning. And while it is normal for each child (and adult) to have brief wakings during the night, these arousals should last only a few seconds or minutes and the child should go back to sleep easily on his own. It is very probable that your child, regardless of his present patterns, is just such a child, with a normal inherent ability to fall asleep and remain asleep. This is true even if he has a sleep disturbance such as sleepwalking or bedwetting. These events occur during sleep or partial waking, and children with these symptoms still have a basically normal ability to fall asleep and stay asleep. Sleepwalking and bedwetting are actually a bit more difficult to treat than sleeplessness, but nevertheless they too usually improve, and are often resolved, with the appropriate intervention. How to Tell Whether Your Child Has a Sleep Problem When your child's sleep patterns cause a definite problem for you or for him, then he has a sleep problem. This is true, for example, if he complains of inability to fall asleep, or if you find you must be up with him repeatedly during the night. Sleep problems such as sleep terrors, sleepwalking, or bedwetting are also readily apparent and quite easy to identify as sleep disorders. But others may be less obvious. You may not recognize that your child even has a problem, or you may not realize that the problem he does have should be considered a disorder that can and should be treated. You may not be aware that loud snoring every night, besides keeping you awake, may be a warning that your child is not breathing satisfactorily while asleep. Other symptoms of possible sleep abnormalities which should be identified and treated are: frequent difficulty falling asleep at bedtime, waking during the night with inability to go right back to sleep alone, waking too early or too late in the morning, falling asleep too early or too late in the evening, or being irritable or sleepy during the day. One of the least obvious of sleep problems is that of insufficient sleep. There is no absolute way of measuring whether the amount of sleep your child gets per day is appropriate. Figure 1 on page 19 shows the average amount of sleep children get at various ages during the night and at naptime. But each child is different. We can watch each child's behavior during the day closely to see if he seems excessively sleepy or cranky. But the symptoms of insufficient sleep in a young child can be very subtle. If your two-year-old sleeps only eight hours at night but seems to be happy and functioning well during the day, it is tempting to assume he doesn't need more sleep. But eight hours is rarely enough sleep for a two-year-old, and with the proper intervention he can learn to increase his amount of sleep time considerably. You may begin to notice an improvement in his general behavior and only then will you be aware of the more subtle symptoms of inadequate sleep that actually were evident before you adjusted his sleep schedule. Now your child will probably be happier in the daytime, a bit less irritable, more able to concentrate at play, and less inclined to have tantrums, accidents, and arguments. Adolescents often do not get enough sleep. Teenagers are not likely to wake spontaneously on school days and tend to sleep at least one hour longer on weekends. When adolescents have the opportunity to sleep as much as they like, they will average about nine hours per night, and this is probably closer to the optimal level for their age. It is also difficult to decide when nighttime wakings are "abnormal." A young child from six months to three years may be getting adequate amounts of sleep at night, even though he wakes several times during the night and has to be helped back to sleep. Parents will say to me, "Tell me if this is normal. If it is, I will continue getting up; but if it is not, then we would like to do something about it!" I assure them that most healthy full-term infants are sleeping through the night by three or four months of age. Certainly by six months all healthy babies can do so. If your baby does not start sleeping through the night on his own by six months at the latest, or if he begins waking again after weeks or months of sleeping well, then something is interfering with the continuity of his sleep. He should be able to sleep better, and in all likelihood his sleep disruption can be corrected. Chapters 5 through 9 will help you to identify his problem and show what you can do to remedy it. How well your child sleeps from the early months affects not only his behavior during the day but also your feelings about him. I have often heard a parent say, "He is such a good baby. I even have to wake him for feedings." Although the parent is saying the baby is a good sleeper, the words imply that the baby is "good" in the moral sense. It is easy to see that this distinction will influence how you relate to your child. If your child does not sleep well, he may well be making your life miserable. It isn't hard to think of such a bad sleeper as a "bad" baby. You will probably feel enormously frustrated, helpless, worried, and angry if you have to listen to crying every night, get up repeatedly, and lose a great deal of your own much-needed sleep. If your child's sleep disturbance is severe enough, your frustration and fatigue will carry over into your daytime activities and you are bound to feel increasingly tense with your child, your spouse, family, and friends. If this is the case in your home, you will be pleased to learn that your child is almost certainly capable of sleeping much better than he is now, and you should be able to get a good night's sleep yourself. To do this, you will need to learn how to identify exactly what your child's problem is, and then you can begin to solve it. First, I want to explain briefly what we know about sleep itself. Although it is not necessary for you to be conversant with all the scientific research on sleep, it will be helpful for you to have some understanding of what sleep really is, how normal sleep patterns develop during childhood, and what can go wrong. Then you will be better able to recognize abnormal patterns as they begin to develop, to correct problems that have become established, and to prevent others from occurring. Although the information on sleep in Chapter 2 is not overly technical, you may be eager to read the chapters that follow it to learn about the actual sleep disorders and their treatments. If that is the case, I suggest you scan the material on sleep in the next chapter and then come back to read it more closely when you have identified your own child's sleep problem. The information is very interesting to almost everyone, and especially important to parents who want to help a child sleep better at night. Copyright © 1985 by Richard Ferber, M.D. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • You've tried everything. Warm milk. Bedtime stories. Sharing your bed. But your child still has problems falling asleep. Dr. Richard Ferber can help. Director of the Sleep Laboratory and Center for Pediatric Sleep Disorders at Children's Hospital in Boston, Dr. Ferber is widely recognized as the nation's leading authority on children's sleep problems.
  • Practical and easy to understand,
  • Solve Your Childs' Sleep Problems
  • tells you how to handle these situations in children aged one to six:
  • * Refusing to go to bed * Colic and other medical problems * Restlessness and insomnia * Night terrors * Bedwetting * Headbanging and body rocking
  • And other problems that keep you and your child awake in the night.
  • Based on six years of intensive research in a top medical facility,
  • Solve Your Child's Sleep Problems
  • is packed with tips, suggestions, sample problems and solutions, and a bibliography of children's "go-to-sleep" books.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(78)
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25%
(65)
★★★
15%
(39)
★★
7%
(18)
23%
(59)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Ferber vs. Sears

I have read all the reviews published up to date and need to clarify several things from the previous comments of other readers. I love Dr. Sears and practiced attachement parenting for the first 6 months. Our son slept with us in our bed for 6 months. At the end of the 6 months we had to go to bed with him at 7pm since this he could not sleep in his crib. We had practiced attachment parenting (Sears) and this is what he had learned to expect. He could only sleep in bed with us next to him. Add to this that my baby could only sleep with us and ate 80% of his milk during night time. So not only were we in bed with him by 7pm, but also feeding him all night long. When the morning rolled in, my husband and I felt like zombies. We were exhausted and fighting with each other all the time due to the stress and exhaustion.

I was then recommended Ferber. I was terrified as I had heard horrible things and I do not believe in Crying it out. Howeverm I had already tried the No cry sleep solution and this did not work for us. So I gave Ferber the benefit of the doubt and decided to read his book. I focused on chptrs 5 and 6.

First, you do NOT need to let your baby cry it out. Ferber explains it very clearly in his book. He suggests a timetable, but leaves it up to the parents to change the suggested minutes on the table to meet the baby and parents' needs. For example, he suggest to let the baby cry for 5 min and increase gradually, but that the parent can change this to any minute they wish. I would only let my baby cry 1 min at a time and would them run into his room and confort him for 3 min. I am not sure how the previous readers would be considered detachment parenting!!!!

I did this for 2 nights. After two nights my baby was sleeping through the night.

In order to correct his night feeding, we gradually reduced his night intake. Ferber suggests doing this over a week. Since I did not want my baby crying, I implemented his program over a 4 week period. During these 28 days, my baby cried once!!! I know can sleept through the night and so can my family. We all wake up rested and ready for another day. My husband and I are no longer exhausted nor fighting due to exhaustion.

In conclusion, give this book an opportunity. Remember, you can tailor his program so it is as gentle as you wish. I believe that the people that are giving this book a bad review is because they chose to let their baby cry all night long, did not modify the program/timetable and truly this is unacceptable!
63 people found this helpful
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This does NOT work for every child!!

My husband and I tried this method, twice (once at 6 months old and again at 13 months). We were both committed to giving this a fair trial, even though I had my doubts that it would work for my son. We did EXACTLY what the book says, and went through a week of sleepless nights the first time, and nearly 2 weeks the second round. All we acheived was to make everyone in the household miserable, throw off my baby's sleep rhythms for weeks afterwards, and make the baby clingy and insecure (and exhausted). I know enough people who have used this method successfully to believe it works for some kids, but I have also known enough people who say it didn't work for them to believe it is not successfull for every child, even if you follow the program to the letter. (My baby cried for 2, 3 or even 4 or more HOURS each night--the gradually lengthening times between visits to reassure him did not make him "realize it was doing him no good to cry". He eventually fell asleep from exhaustion each night, but the crying periods actually were getting LONGER over time. And sometimes he would only sleep 30-45 minutes or so and then wake up and cry for a few more hours. When he sleeps in my bed, or nurses to sleep and then is put into the crib asleep, he sleeps like an angel (waking up one or more times each night, but dropping back off easily with cuddling or nursing). Listening to the child you love screaming in fear and frustration for hours on end each night doesn't do mommy and daddy much good either. But we were determined to give it a fair trial--after nearly 2 weeks (the second time), I said "enough!". I threw Ferber in the trash and bought Sears' "Nighttime Parenting" which is just about the polar opposite of Ferber. Sears' style seems a much more humane and sensitive approach for my family. And, for what it's worth, Ferber has no children of his own (as far as I can tell from his bio); Sears has eight children. Who would you rather listen to??
50 people found this helpful
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Ferber has changed his mind

I hope you realize that Ferber is "rethinking" his advice. He now says that "the first need of that youngster is to feel confident at night and if that means a parent with them all night then that's the way it should be, the sleep problem can be solved as a secondary issue."

You probably should avoid this book if the author himself says the method isn't good.
36 people found this helpful
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Tried it, now have a 7 year old that won't sleep

When my daughter was a year old I decided to "Ferberize" her. She would sleep fine with us, but I thought it was time for her to "move out." I followed the guidelines and she did go to sleep after about 3 hours of crying. I continued until a month later when I couldn't take it anymore. By then though she wouldn't sleep with us anymore, so my husband had to sleep in a different room altogether with her. To get her to sleep required laying down with her for 1-2 hours. She finally began going to sleep independently at 5, but she still resists sleep and lays for hours in the dark and gets up at the crack of dawn. She's severely sleep deprived, but won't sleep. I wish I had never doubted my instincts and just let her grow out of our bed on her own time. I listened to my instincts with my next 2 and they have no sleep problems whatsoever. They hit the bed and they're out like a light (in their own bed).
32 people found this helpful
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I am AMAZED!

My 11 month old son never "outgrew" waking every 1-3 hours at night. It was hell on me and my husband. The sleep deprivation was taking a toll on our marriage because we were snappy and had no patience with each other. Plus, we didn't get any time alone together because of our son's constant wakings.

We had been using techniques from Sears, Pantley, and Hull for several months with little improvement. We did not believe in letting our son cry.

Finally, in desperation, I decided to buy yet another sleep book, this time one that involved crying. I figured I'd read it first and then make my decision.

I was very impressed with the book. Ferber explained in detail WHY the baby would cry at first. Surprise! It wasn't because the baby felt abandoned, which I had previously thought and why I was so against CIO techniques, it was because it was a frustrating change in routine. Instead of helping the baby fall asleep like we typically did, we were going to let him fall asleep for the first time without our help. Who wouldn't want someone patting their back or rocking them to sleep and giving them a taste of their favorite beverage every night and at every waking? I know I would certainly object at first if I had been falling asleep that way my entire life and then that was taken away!

I was also glad to see that Ferber is the only sleep expert that addressed how to wean middle of the night feedings... another problem we had. Ferber tells how to distinguish between feeding out of need and feeding out of habit and how to resolve each. In our son's case, he had a little of both.

After reading the book, I knew that we would try Ferber's sleep training method. We didn't want a 4 or 5 year old with sleep issues like some of Ferber's case studies. Sure, we could have chosen to wait out the sleep problems but I don't think my marriage would have survived if we had gone that route. It became clear to me that my son was not developing good sleep habits on his own and that Ferber's modified CIO sleep training might be his only chance at sleeping well.

My husband and I braced ourselves for a difficult first night or two. As predicted, our son was not happy with the change in routine. The first night of Ferber's sleep training was hell. Our son screamed every 20 minutes for the first 6 hours (by the way, the timed routine checks really put me at ease and reassured me that my crying son was okay) then fell asleep for 4-1/2 hours straight. It was the first time he'd ever slept more than 3 hours.

The second night was magical. He went to sleep without crying at all and slept 11 hours straight! I was amazed, euphoric, and giddy.

The fabulous sleep has continued. Ever since that second night, he's been consistently sleeping 11 hours each night. If he wakes at all, it's only once. In those instances, it only takes me or my husband laying him back down and leaving the room for him to go back to sleep.

I wish we'd done Ferber much sooner, like at 6 months old. I cannot believe our once-sleepless son in now sleeping through the night without protest!

I highly recommend this book to any parent whose child has sleep issues! I cannot say enough good things about Ferber's program. It works and it works fast!
26 people found this helpful
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Sears vs Ferber Part 2

I, too, tried the Dr. Sears method of attachment parenting, the Pantley method, then finally the Ferber Method with my second son. The Ferber Method was the only one that worked. With attachment parenting and breast feeding, my son learned to feed during the night and eat too little during the day. By the time he was btween 9 and 11 1/2 months old, he only gained 2 ounces and stopped progressing in development (he couldn't sit himself up, crawl, stand, or cruise). My physician didn't think there was anything wrong. I am NOT an overeactive parent and I am educated. But my instinct told me something was wrong, yet, I also KNEW my son was not developmentally delayed. I know that by 9 months of age, the infant can no longer get all of his nutrients from breast milk alone. My son's waking every 2-3 hours at night was no longer MY PROBLEM, but his. The "attachment parenting" I created with him was hurting his physical development. Enter Ferber. Because I was still breastfeeding, but looking to wean at 1 yr of age, I had to modify Ferber slightly. It's too painful to quit breastfeeding cold turkey at night. I applied the Ferber method at night but instead of letting him cry himself to sleep each time, I did it every other time, with breast feeding in between, then every third time. Eventually, I was able to stop feeding him altogether at night. In less then 2 weeks, he was sleeping through the night without waking. AND his developmental delays disappeared within 4 days of his first birthday. I knew I had done the right thing for HIM. Today my son is a happy, healthy, normal, and very bright 4 year old. I'm glad I trusted my instinct. I do not dislike Dr. Sears methods, but it just doesn't work for everybody and it can have it's own problems. I write this review because my sister now needs help with her 5th child and I recommended this Method to her. I don't give Ferber 5 stars because even this method doesn't work for everybody. You decide.
21 people found this helpful
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It Works.....It Really Really Works!!!!

I agree with another "reviewer" that anyone who thinks this is abuse has not completely read the book, merely scanned it. My son was 14 months old and I still had to hold him in my arms to go to sleep. When he'd wake up at night, I'd have to put him in bed with me to get him back to sleep and then put him back in his crib. The only person in this method that this was cruel to was me and my husband. It broke our hearts to hear him cry, but IN THREE DAYS HE WAS SLEEPING right off the bat!! The book was given to me by my daycare provider and recommended to me by his pediatrician. The book emphasizes that after 5 minutes, you go in and spend 3 minutes with him to assure him you did not abandon him, then let him cry for 10 minutes, go in for 3 minutes, then let him cry for 15 minutes, go in for 3 minutes, etc. By the 20 minute mark, he was asleep. Now I can lay him in his crib at night and he coos at his toys, is comfortable with himself, and goes to sleep on his own. If he awakens in the middle of the night sometimes, just a gentle pat on the back and some soft words gets him back to sleep because he recognizes this as his "sleep place." I feel we did HIM the favor, not US.
20 people found this helpful
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How do they do it? I couldn't

There is no way I could let my baby cry himself to sleep. I was left to cry myself to sleep as a baby/child, and it definitely did not teach me healthy sleep habits: I have sleep apnea, wet the bed until I was 6 or 7, in a sleep study showed signs of narcolepsy as well as insomnia, and also tend to need about 10-11 hours of sleep myself. So I could never do this to my baby. He sleeps OK at six months, and I think I will let him sleep in our bed until he is at least two...
16 people found this helpful
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Helpful, but not too helpful

Please note if you have a very stubborn child, this book may push you past all sanity. While I learned a good deal about sleep habits and sleep associations that was helpful, I ended up having to create my own method for getting my bright, sweet, incredibly stubborn year old baby to sleep. Believe me I read the book, and applied the method as stated. My little boy cried (read screamed non-stop) for 9 1/2 hours, and my going in every 10-15 minutes soothed him not at all. The next night he fell asleep (Gee, wonder why?), but the third night he was back to screaming for hours and hours. Not for us, thank you. I used the information on sleep associations, and gradually added the ones that would be helpful (dark room, same blanket, etc.), while gradually removing the ones I didn't want (rocking, singing). It took a while but my son sleeps pretty well these days, and I don't think any of us would have survived pushing through and using the outlined extinction method.
16 people found this helpful
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Dr. Ferber Saved Our Sanity!

I was your typical anti-Ferber kind of mom but figured, if I was going to trash somebody's theory, then I should at least READ THE BOOK.

At this point my son was approaching 9 months of age and rarely slept more than 5 or 6 hours at a time. By the time he was 9 months old, he was waking 5, 6, 7 times a night and was only napping about 1/2 hour at a time. I tried the "No Cry Sleep Solution" and charted everything but realized the author's best hope was that your child would be sleeping better in a few months. A few months? We didn't have a few months! It had stopped being about whether or not I was "tough enough" to handle no sleep and it was truly obvious my child's health was being compromised by his lack of sleep.

I read Ferber. Everything he said made sense. I gave it a try. The first night I, literally, sat there with his book in my hand to help steel my resolve. NEVER did we have to leave our child crying for more than 15 minutes and that was only once. Within two days he was sleeping through the night and taking appropriate naps.

He is now approaching 2 1/2 and continues to sleep for about 11 hours each night and takes a 2-3 hour nap each day. Not only that, he loves his crib and never fusses when we tell him its time to go to bed. I've never seen anything like it in my life.

Every child is different and what may work for one child may not work for another. However, if your child is sleeping badly, ask yourself if you're really doing your child any favors by constantly running to their side every time they make a noise?

And, yes, I breastfed (14 mos.) and our child co-slept with us for his first 6 months.

Do whatever is best for YOUR child but, after reading and trying several approaches, I can honestly say that Dr. Ferber makes the most sense and that his method worked incredibly well for us.
15 people found this helpful