oh GG!!
I feel for you! I wish sleep training would not be so hard on us parents. But trust me, it's not as hard as it seems on babies. Rememeber that crying is more a language to them than an expression of pain as is for us adults (although in some cases, it looks like
)
You just keep consistant with whatever routine you've chosen. It may not pay off instantly and therefore, be frustrating but beleive me, if you keep switching it will take you longer to get results.
By that age, my lo became especially restless to go to sleep. I applied a "human swaddle" since he was way too strong to be swadled on a sheet. I'd sit with him in the rock chair after 15-20 mins of winddown (changing nappie, lowing lights, reading book, holding stuffed animal) and sing him hold on through 10 minutes of rage cry and kicking and beating my chin (yea, hes way TOO Spirited :roll: ). The trick is holding him as if you were the sheet, stopping him from kicking and arm flailing which I ovbserved was making the falling asleep more difficult. The first time it took me 40 minutes but i just kept holding and singing him with my eyes closed (so I wouldn't look at the mess I was causing :oops: ). Second day it took me 15 minutes (which is WAY too much if you're thinking on hysterical crying). In a week he'd cry hysterically for a couple of minutes and then fall asleep. I'm suggesting this to you because 1. It was my alternative for PU/PD since Im too chicken to try it. 2, DS was about the same age as yours when I started doing this. 3. The method was comfortable for me since i was sitting in the rockchair and not getting tiredfor leaning over the crib or walking or picking him up (see, if you're phisically comfortalbe is more likely that you'll succeed because your only tiredness will come from your mind)
After 2 months I could skip the human swadle part and put him in the crib straight after winddown and pat his back and he'd fall asleep. One month later I stopped patting.
About teething, they can teethe for MONTHS before you even see anything. They might be distrurbed for a couple of days and then nothing for weeks and then again and this can last months before you even see reddish gums. Try some oraljel before winddown to see if it helps you.
Also tweaking will be a contstant from this age. Maybe he needs to extend his awake time. Sometimes the difference is 15 minutes to stop all the fighting to go to bed.
But the key is consistance. You just pick a method/routine that is comfortable for you to do every time and keep doing it even if the first days does not seem so succesful.
Stop thinking that you're a bad mom! we all make mistakes even those moms who are not first time moms.
All my family told me that if my baby napped he would never sleep through the night. So get this: I woke him from his naps and would never let him nap longer than 30 mins for his first two months of life. Then, when I read Tracy's book i'd be fighting with short naps till 5 months!!!!!!!!!!!1 I almost fainted when he took his first 1 hour nap! I felt like I won the Nobel Prize
Talk about ruining things for him and confusing him!!!!! so chin up! you'll be fine! HUGS