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  #81  
Old 10-24-2007, 07:13 PM
HeavenlyOne HeavenlyOne is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MissBrattified View Post
When a baby is newborn, parents should respond to every cry. Period.

I have never been a fan of the "let them cry it out" theory. We have always had happy, well-adjusted, content babies. None of them were spoiled because they were held or given lots of attention.

That said, you have to identify the need and meet it. Babies NEED:

Food. Sleep. Attention. Affection. Nurturing. Cleaning. Diapers changed. Sleep. Attention. Food. Diapers. Sleep. Sleep. Oh, wait...the PARENTS need sleep....LOL!!!!!

That said: It is the parents job to properly interpret what the child needs and administer it to the child in a helpful and healthy manner. For instance, you don't want to greet every cry with food...he may not need food every time. You know whether or not he needs food based on the amount of time since the last time he ate, in addition to factors such as growth spurts, etc. You know if a baby hasn't slept in awhile, that they may be crying because they're tired. In my experience, a sleepy baby falls asleep fairly quickly, so if it takes too long, they're probably crying for another reason.

I'm not a fan of everything Dr. Sears espouses, but I do like this quote:

"Pick him up quickly, he'll get down quickly."

Good Article

Crying is the main method of communication from infant to parent. Parents should always listen and respond. A lack of communication WILL create behavioral problems and fussy babies.

As they get older, of course, throwing tantrums becomes an issue, and most parents can tell the difference between a cry and a tantrum. With your children, you will be the experts. A 6 month old really isn't capable of an intentional tantrum. The manipulation and premeditation involved hasn't been developed yet. At 1, they may have it a bit more refined.

I suggest reading, and lots of it.

People have always commented about how well-behaved and sweet our kids are. And we held them and played with them and talked to them and read to them ALL the time.

One other note: If your wife is exhausted, and needs you to take over with the baby for awhile, the answer is not to let the baby cry it out so she can have time to herself. That will just stress her out even more. Take the baby and pay attention to him and hold him and play with him and feed him, and keep him contented and happy for awhile so your wife can rest without any guilt or stress.

When I was a baby, I was so colicky that I cried constantly, and my parents and two of my older sisters had to take shifts holding me and rocking me at night. No one really ever understood the reason. When my son was born premature, the neonatologist informed us that premature infants are more inclined to be colicky, because of their undeveloped digestive systems, and the resulting sensitivity to formulas. Since I was born 5 weeks early, that could have very well have been the problem. I'm glad my parents didn't just leave me in the crib to "cry it out."
Good post, Bratty!
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  #82  
Old 10-25-2007, 06:18 AM
Jodiah91 Jodiah91 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NightOwl View Post
Just remember this, even though he is a baby, he is learning, and picking him up each time he cries is teaching him more and more how to get attention, and while that may be ok now it will get harder to break him from it later.
It bothered me not picking my son up but I knew it was best for him to be able to get himself to sleep and not having us always rocking / picking him up and walking with him to get to sleep
Exactly. . .with my first son, my husband and I constantly picked him up when he cried. . .and we always rocked or held him until he fell asleep. The end result was that it wasn't until he was about 3 years old when we could finally just put him in bed WITHOUT having to hold or lay down with him. He refused to fall asleep on his own unless we did. FINALLY, we broke him of this at like I said, around 3 years old. With my second son, who is only 10 months old, we've done things differently. He goes in his crib, and has since he became to big for the bassinett, and he will generally go to sleep on his own with no problem. So I agree, kids will learn that if they cry loud enough and long enough, mom & dad will come get them, only to find there's really nothing wrong, they just wanted to be picked up.
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  #83  
Old 10-25-2007, 06:23 AM
Jodiah91 Jodiah91 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rgcraig View Post
Especially curious babies seem to fight sleep - they are afraid they are going to miss something!
This made me laugh. . .my oldest son was terribly curious ('nosy') as an infant/toddler. . .he would practically 'break his neck' in his hurried attempt to swing around when he heard the slightest noise behind him. He always had to crawl toward any cluster of people to try & get in the middle. . . .and he has always fought sleep. He's much better now, but even at 6, he doesn't require much sleep. A 10 minute nap in the middle of the day will have him up until at least midnight. . .seriously. So this post made me laugh because my husband says the same thing about Tristan!
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  #84  
Old 10-25-2007, 02:36 PM
HeavenlyOne HeavenlyOne is offline
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Babies at 6 months of age have needs, not desires. If they are crying, there is a reason, not because they want their own way.
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  #85  
Old 10-25-2007, 02:49 PM
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BrotherEastman BrotherEastman is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tawana View Post
Jest give that little one a swig of whiskey, he'll drop right off to sleep.
That's gonna happen. NOT! LOL!
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