At Little M’s six-month well visit, the nurse asked me all the typical questions:
“Has he started solids yet?”
“Yup, he’s had some.”
“How often is he nursing?”
“Oh, every three hours,” I lied. No point in actually trying to put a pattern on it.
“And does he take both breasts?”
“Not always.”
“How’s he sleeping?”
I laughed. “Terribly! He’s up every hour or so,” I said with a smile. It obviously wasn’t bothering me. My babies’ sleep is like my own inside joke at this point. I have never met anyone whose infants sleep worse.
“And is he sleeping in his crib?”
“Yup!” I lied again.
Fast forward. Doctor comes in. Checks out Little M. Everything looks good. Looks at the chart. “You know, six months is a great time to start sleep training.”
I get all defensive. When I hear “sleep training,” I immediately assume people are talking about crying it out.
“We’re not comfortable with that,” I said. “This is the baby who will scream—at the top of his lungs—on an hour-long car ride, with no indication of quieting.”
“Yeah, it’s hard," the doctor replied. Sometimes you have to let them cry for longer than an hour. But it’s usually only three nights. I had to leave the house when I sleep trained my baby.”
So she was talking about crying it out. She went on to say how much harder it is to let them cry it out when they are two and can actually communicate their needs. It’s much better when they are only six months old and don’t use words, she said.
Better for who?
Here’s the thing: What are doctors so afraid of? Do they really see so many patients who are in their toddler years and have behavioral issues because they don’t sleep enough? She insinuated that babies who aren’t sleep trained turn into toddlers who don’t get enough sleep. But I can’t believe that’s actually true.
Parents are helping their babies sleep
Think about it: Babies (and toddlers, kids, and adults) usually wake up at night because one sleep cycle has ended, and they’re waiting for the next to begin. Kids who are soothed back to sleep by their parents… are soothed back to sleep by their parents. They go back to sleep. The type of parent who soothes baby back to sleep is not the type of parent to suddenly stop doing it, letting their toddler stay awake for hours on end in the middle of the night. So how are kids who are soothed back to sleep getting any less sleep than those who wake anyway and then go back to sleep without soothing?Self-Soothing sounds so nice, doesn't it?
Here’s the other thing: “self-soothing” is the choice of words that is often used to describe how kids put themselves back to sleep after waking at night. Of course that sounds like a peacefully desirable goal to work towards. But what if we changed the choice of words? What if we said that babies who go back to sleep on their own after night wakings “don’t need their parents anymore?” That makes it a little less desirable, but is relatively neutral, right? Some parents would see that as independence, and others would see it as a little sad.But what if we said that kids who put themselves back to sleep after night wakings are “exhausting themselves from anxiety?” When moms get together, would they say, “I’m so glad I sleep-trained my baby, because now he stresses himself back to sleep every time he wakes in the middle of the night.”
All babies have different sleep habits
Not every baby who is sleep-trained is anxious or stressed, but not every baby who is soothed to sleep by his or her parents is a poor sleeper or has a sleep disorder. I understand that pediatricians see hundreds of parents who are at their wits’ end looking for the next magical sleep solution, but not every parent is that desperate. And not every baby is the same. It’s annoying to be treated like just another number.And it’s annoying that many pediatricians don’t have other constructive advice to give exhausted parents. One thing that always concerns me is the number of wakings my kids have every night. I feel like there is no other mom out there whose kids wake up every hour. I hear moms complain that their kids wake two or three times a night, and I get vindictively envious—I want those moms to step in my shoes for a night. But when I asked the pediatrician if waking up that often is normal, she said it was.
So what's the problem?
So if it’s so normal, why is she so quick to recommend that I let Little M cry it out? What would the harm be in soothing him back to sleep?Stay tuned for more in this series on sleep. Now I better get some myself, before I develop a "problem."
Read the other posts in the Sleep series:
Sleep Training Part II - Then and Now
Sleep Training Part III - A Momentary Lapse of Reason
Sleep Training Part IV - The Data behind the Philosophy