Thanks so much!
First, I went and read up again on pu/pd and *red on my face* ... there were some holes in my theory! Most important of all is that according to Tracy 8m is actually too old for pu/pd.
How to PU/PD (inc age adaptations)(And to be honest I am glad because he weighs 22 lb already.) It seems they respond better to help in the cot. Which now remember is how I did it with LO#1
I really need to go re read the chapter.. but it feels like I need to sleep more!
So I used the cot method last night. (I put him on his side facing away and held one hand on hip, one on shoulder, PU/PD when too upset.) There was a lot more crying, and it took almost an hour to settle, but only one more NW before the EW. And I really felt positive about the result, because what's been bothering me most is that during the day he is so good at settling himself, but at night I was just NOT helping him to figure it out, I was just soothing and soothing, not teaching him, so I am prepared for many more nights of crying, but I was anyway!
regards the EW:
I have never managed to "fix" LO#1 so he WU at 5 and often wakes LO#2.
He is also quite often super tired at the 2h 2.5hr A time mark, so I have no idea how he will make it to 4 hours without complete meltdown and not sleep well because of OT?
To answer some questions:
I am confident BF during the day is sufficient, thought he is distracted despite trying to be clever about it, and could drink better. Nights if he gets the chance he always drinks well! So he COULD be genuinely hungry, but I am not stopping cold turkey at night and he is thriving so ... what are you asking? Also, solids wise, he definitely eats very well. Good quality and quantity! Steamed broccoli and avocado are his faves, I do puree aswell as LOTS of messy finger foods. The constipation is much better these days we are (I hope!) finding a balance with the osmotic laxatives. (which are basically a way of holding water in the gut, so yet he gets water with food
approx 200 ml through the day.
So I'll see how it goes tonight (he is already "grumbling" now at 9... I am leaving him to try settle himself, but I find the earlier it starts in the eve the worse it is going to be that night.
I was trying to cut out the milk when I started this thread, I am going to have to start working on that again... i fed him again at 3:30 last night, so feeding at 5 seems like might not put him back to sleep until he is hungry enough at that time... But I will try because as you say 5am!!!
At that time, the thing that has worked is co-sleeping... Do you think that is equally "safe" from prop? I don't know, bad habit wise LO#1 still comes into our bed at 5 every day and kicks all the kidneys in a unreasonable radius! One thing to mention is that here it is fully light at 5am... So blackout curtains might be a win.
Question - the paci.
PU/PD and Paci Use. Why they don't mix. As I said, the room is very dark, and the mattress isn't as firm as I would like, so the paci ends up under him a lot. This means he often can't really find it by himself... I'll pretty much always grab another or find his and put it in his hand when I go to him. Sometimes lately he is crying and holding it when I go to him. I do mostly not put it in for him, but it does get dropped and thrown around and become a distraction with me trying to find or pick it up off the floor. I am quite keen for him to use it, not only because it seems too daunting to wean, but because it's been useful with LO#1 with teeth as a soother and I use it as a sleep trigger. They only have it when they sleep but it means where ever we are, I can hand out the blanket and paci and it's like "okay I sleep now" Wake up and the paci is not used till it's sleep time again.
I am just asking about it because the article makes a big deal about any prop being a non starter with teaching independent sleep. So ... if I have to put it in his hand is it a prop...?
Thanks again for your time and thoughtful responses Fabi!