E.I.
i want you to write to me by email - ____@____.com - if you would like to talk and stuff. ... i feel really compassionate toward you - and i would really like to help you. some of what i have to say is straight to the point, and that may come across as rude or arrogant or hurtful, and i dont want you to feel that way - so please call me on any offensive statements....
in the end of my response i have an offer for you - i would like to send you something...
anyway... read on....
nope. sorry mom, this is typical, normal infant behavior.
www.askdrsears.com - and any book by william and/or martha sears (and family) will be of GREAT use for you. they have one book called "the baby book" that covers pretty much everything from birth to age 2.
baby's tummy is about the size of their fist. thats pretty small. it fills up fast, and empties fast. this is the ONLY time in a persons life where they will double their height and TRIPLE their weight in only one year. thats a HUGE amount of growth, and though it seems small, its really HUGE for a baby. that requires lots of food. theres really NOTHING you can do at this age except keep responding and feeding your baby.
a friend i know of had her daughter and thought it was some sort of deception that her daughter needed her that much at night - and they pushed baby out in the hall in the bassinett.
ill have you know that this baby does NOT listen to mom - is very violent toward mom and her baby brother - and is simply a terror.
my son, and the son of a friend, were both raised with very much response and connectiveness, feeding on baby's schedule not mine (its important that baby only eats when tummy tells him - not the clock. otherwise they can start to forget that eating is to fulfill hunger - and thats one way we have obese children) - any my son and his friend are both VERY compassionate, empathetic children - they are very concerned when they see people cry, and are very touched by others love and affection. :D attachment parenting. it works, i swear. :D
one thing i KNOW wont work - do NOT put cereal in a bottle. first of all - cereal, or any solid foods - are simply NOT needed until after baby's first year. we start giving them solids around 6 months in order to get them used to other textures - and although it seems that cereal is the usual first food - i HIGHLY encourage (at 6 months or aroudn there) giving simply a pear or something like that - in one of those mesh bag thingys they make for babies.... but moving on.... cereal in bottles is not going to work so dont do it! especially not now - allergies are a lot of times caused by solids too early - the digestive system is not ready to deal with that stuff yet! :D
allow baby to suck on a nuk or something if feeding is over. DO NOT WORRY as much about the amount of the feeding as making sure baby gets fed when baby is hungry, and stops when baby is full. never force a baby to finish a bottle just because you think that baby should. :D the more things you can do to connect with your child and make sure baby's needs are fulfilled, the more happy, healthy and confident your baby will be. independence is NOT created by force and making baby be alone - independence is taught by building trust and respect - the more you respond to babys cries, no matter what, the more baby can trust you - and the less afraid baby is going to be. its PROVEN over and over and over.
this is VERY normal. it will not go away until baby is read to developmentally deal with this. babies DO NOT manipulate us - babies only cry when they have a need - this wont change until around a year old - the more you respond to your baby's cries now and fulfill baby's needs - the easier it will be for you to understand what your baby's cries mean, and when baby gets around that year old mark - you will notice a shift in the cries. my son was about 11.5 months old when i noticed that my son didnt sound so urgent. i could let him fuss a little before i had to get to him. however, there is no reason a baby should be left to cry, unless you fear you will hurt baby. please take a break if this happens.
babies who cry are more likely to have high blood pressure, more stress in their life, have more fears, and they are MORE likely to cry MORE about things that children who arent left to cry wouldnt cry about. my son doesnt cry over every injury, he trusts me, he knows im taking care of him, he knows if he is seriously hurt or something that i wont dismiss his feelings..
this is a long process, and really, the way you raise your baby now directly determines what kind of toddler, kindergartener, school ager, and most importantly, the kind of teenager you will have. teens of parents who were responsive to them as babies and never used cry it out methods are more likely to feel their parents are 'with it' and understand their feelings. they are more likely to communicate daily events and feelings with their parents because that bond of trust has never been broken. its really simple, though thoroughly exhausting.
i want you to know that this time is VERY short. you will have this child in your house, hopefully, for 18 years! eating every 2 hours all 24 hours of every day wont last long - maybe 3 or 4 more months. trusting your baby has a need and responding to baby without forcing baby to deal with it on his/her own ..... maybe another 10 months. how much time is that really? there are 216 months until your child is 18. being highly sensitive and responsive for another 10 months? what is that? in the long run, its no time at all, and you will look back and go, wow. that wasnt very much time.
one thing you DONT want to do is look back and wish you had spent more time you know? you dont want to look back and say 'i wish that i had just given more of myself'.
parenting is NOT easy. anyone who tells you it is isnt being completely honest. i will tell you that attachment parenting makes things a MILLION times easiER. it doesnt make it easy, just easier. its easier to respond to a child who is crying or having a tantrum when you understand why they are crying or having a tantrum. i cant tell you how many times ive heard a still small voice inside going "your son just needs ____" - i give it to him, hes fine. for example, i have a small child care in my home. my son loves the company, but sometimes he starts getting cranky and spazzing out everywhere - i simply bring him to his room and shut the door. though its not the easiest response to make, i never hear a complaint. he plays in his room for 30 minutes alone (or so) and he will knock on his door and say "KNOCK KNOCK" or "moooooooooom" and i can go get him and let him out and hes FINE. :D trust me, listening to the instincts that you have and just doing things... almost automatically - is the best way to go.
every child is different. its unfair of anyone to assume that if they have had children, they are all the same, they should all be treated the same. thats a really unfair assumption. there are high need babies. there are sickly babies. there are healthy babies who just want attention and comfort. their are babies who are just excited about their world. babies come the person that they are. and nature gives mom the EXACT instincts for THAT child. if you follow them - you will NEVER go wrong.
and im sure this is exhausting. im sure you just want more sleep. thats normal. but honestly, you are a mom now, you wont be getting 'normal' sleep ever again! even when they graduate and move away you will lose sleep over who they are hanging out with, what they are doing, if they are safe, if they have food, if they have too much food, if they are doing something bad, or what they are doing that is good....... i swear, it will never be the same.
HOWEVER, you have a sweet little baby who loves you unconditionaly. and even if you screw up and they grow up to 'hate' you - they would be devastated to lose you. so the best thing you can do for your child is to start NOW being the parent you want to be when they are grown. a parent who responds when their child has a need, no matter what it is. a parent who allows their child to have their feelings and tries to make it better. someone your child can trust to always be there for them - night or day. parenting isnt just a day job - its 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year - 25,000 + days left of your life. 36,792,000 minutes for the rest of your life. the sleep you had before you were a mom is history. its a hard fact, but its true. im not going to tell you its not exhausting. but every minute i spent awake nursing my son, every second that i spent holding him, rocking him to sleep, laying with him in bed, talking to him, singing to him, reading to him..... every second of that time is precious. and even all the times ive responded to his cries, every time ive talked to him, played with him, read to him - it never seems like enough. but at least i know that im doing what i can in every second that i can do it.
one thing that i always say about parenting is that we dont have children so we can continue our regularly scheduled lives with them. we have children so we can change our lives and make it more fulfilling. and to see fulfillment in the eyes of our child??? theres nothing better than that. it absolutly breaks my heart to see a child who is angry, and who simply doesnt trust their parents and a young young age. it makes me scared for who they are going to grow up to be - what kind of idea of love they have if they cant trust their parents to be there when they have a need, who can they trust?
i dont know. in your exhausted state i doubt you need all of this information. im just really passionate that the best way to raise a child is by following that still small voice inside taht tells you what your child needs. its not like someone is literally talking to me - i dont literally hear a voice, my heart just aches and i feel i should do something - and every time i do it, its building not only my son's trust for me, but my own trust in myself. i have many times rejected someone else's ideas of parenting, even from my own family, simply because my heart knows better. and i never once doubt it. i simply KNOW.
i would like to send you "the baby book" by william sears. please email me if you would like someone to talk to - if you need me to clarify anything ive said - and if you want the book - you can send me your address. it was really the best thing that ever happened to me - finding william sears's books. and i want to share that with EVERYONE i meet :D
anyway, good luck mom, just try to do the best you can. if you have a husband, get him to do one feeding - thats one benefit you have by bottlefeeding.... someone else can share the load with you. if the dad or husband isnt involved - see if your mother or siblings or someone can help you out for a while. usually babies will stop waking every 2 hours sometime around 3 or 4 months - though they will have much night waking until far past one year - far past 2 years ..... kids dont sleep at night and thats a good thing! :D :D
a few things that may assist your sleeping though - we used a white noise CD - and we still do. we found a disk called "for crying out loud" - it has 8 tracks on it of different noises. our son was a fan of the vacuum - we ran our vacuum at night for the first 2 months of his life - every night. yeah we wore it out - when we found this cd, we were very scared it wouldnt work - but it did. so you can try that.
nightlight. always helps everyone. when getting the bottle, dont use bright lights while preparing, that can wake baby up more.
yeah. please write to me. i would love to help you out - talk you through things. again, my email address is ____@____.com - i hope to hear from you soon! please put something in the subject line about writing to talk from mamasource so i know who it is - but i will watch for a P. in my inbox too... i know i wrote a HUGE response for you, and im sorry it was so long - im just really passionate and excited to help you -
so anyway, i hope to hear from you.