Archive for the ‘baby crying’ Category

How to Use the Miracle Blanket to Swaddle Your Baby

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

If you’re thinking of swaddling your new baby, or are already trying to do so, but are struggling with folding blankets into diamond shapes while your wriggly newborn screams, take a look at this video to see just how easy it is to use the Miracle Blanket Swaddle Wrap.

The Miracle Blanket Swaddle Wrap is available in the Sleepytot Shop


Will Crying Cause Your Baby Brain Damage?

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

The recent media coverage of Penelope Leach’s new book, The Essential First Year – What Babies Need Parents to Know, has focused on this sensational headline –

“Crying-it-out Harms Babies Brains.” 

This media coverage is tough on the sleep deprived mother who hears that on the one hand that, if she doesn’t do something about her sleepless baby, he will probably grow into a sleepless child who will have problems with his weight and/or behaviour. And on the other hand, if she allows him to cry until he figures out how to fall asleep by himself, it may harm his brain.

I think it’s safe to say there’s a middle ground, which might be called “common sense parenting”. As parents we are faced with choices that we have to make on behalf of our children on a daily basis and these choices have to take into account the needs of our whole family. (more…)


“Cry it out” or “Controlled Crying”. Is There a Difference?

Monday, April 19th, 2010

I often hear people say there is no difference between these two baby sleep training techniques because they both allow a baby to cry. As with all things “parenting”, there are different views and we all must choose our own way (and try not to be too judgemental when people do something that we wouldn’t do!). In my opinion there is a significant difference between allowing a baby to “cry it out” and “controlled crying”. (more…)


An Alternative to White Noise!

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Here’s one alternative to white noise to help calm your crying baby!

For something a little more portable, try our baby sleep CD!


Is “Controlled Crying” Safe for Babies?

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

Using behavioural techniques including ‘controlled crying’ to help infants to sleep does not lead to later emotional and behavioural problems, according to new research by the Murdoch Childrens Research Institute.

The world-first study followed up 225 six-year-old children who had received behavioural sleep intervention as babies to assess their health including emotional wellbeing, behaviour and child-parent relationship. (more…)


How Not to Teach Baby to Sleep in her Cot

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

If you’re finding it hard to teach your baby to sleep in her cot or crib, this video won’t help. But it will make you smile! For a little more help with your baby’s sleep, visit our community area.


Can technology tell you why your baby’s crying?

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

Two recent product launches in the US have me asking… why?

Firstly there’s the WhyCry Baby Cry Analyzer, which  promises to tell you why your baby is crying. And then there’s a new iPod application which apparently translates your babies cries.

Having once been a terrified new mum with no idea what to do, I can see how there might be a moment when I’d have loved one of these. But I personally feel that this steep learning curve is all part of being a new parent. We have to come a long way very quickly, but actually learning to tune into our babies and listen to our instincts is the very beginning of parenthood. (more…)


Men can’t hear the baby cry?

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

New research from MindLab has found that men and women are likely to be woken by different sounds.

For the study, volunteers slept in a custom sleep environment and were exposed to different noises. Researchers monitored their brain patterns to see what most affected the volunteers.

The research showed that women are much more likely to be woken by the sound of a baby crying than a man. Since my husband has always slept through my newborns’ screaming at 2am, I have no trouble believing this. But here’s the interesting part of the research. (more…)


Mums who Teach their Babies to Self Settle have Better Sleepers

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Researchers in Israel followed 85 mums through pregnancy and the first year of their babies’ lives. They found that pregnant mums who believed babies should learn to self settle had babies who slept better at night than babies of mums who felt newborns crying at night should be soothed and comforted.

Basically, the study (published in the Child Development journal) found that the more parents “intervene” in helping their babies to sleep through the night, the less well their babies sleep. The results show that mums who teach their babies to self settle have better sleepers.

The Independent’s headline today, “Screaming babies – it’s all Mum’s fault for fussing”, is naturally designed to grab the reader’s attention. But it’s unnecessary to interpret the findings in this way.

The results of the study don’t seem to me to be “new”. Most sleep experts will say that the key element of teaching a baby to sleep is helping him learn to “self settle”. And I don’t think it’s too much of a stretch for us to assume that a pregnant mum’s belief about how to respond to her crying baby in the middle of the night will probably follow through into her parenting after her baby is born.

It doesn’t surprise me to see that whilst the study suggests that the more we leave our babies alone at night, the better they will sleep. The Independent’s coverage of the report goes on to refer the reader to advice from James J McKenna, who advocates co-sleeping and argues that expecting infants to self-soothe is at odds with their basic biological and emotional needs. 

It seems to me that this conflicting evidence continues to leave parents confused. On the one hand we shouldn’t leave them to cry because of the damage it can do. On the other hand, by soothing our crying babies in the middle of the night, we’re just making their sleeping habits worse.

And aside from the guilt we feel about the impact of our decisions on our babies, we’re also coping with sleep deprivation, which makes it so much harder to make decisions and stick to them when woken for the fifth time during the night.

And it doesn’t have to be so black and white. It is possible to teach a baby to sleep well without leaving him to cry for hours alone. It takes time and guidance. Just like everything else he needs to learn. Through boundaries, fairness, love and tenderness we support our little ones as they learn how to crawl, talk and walk. How to behave in social situations and how to read and write. We potty train them, teach them to ride bikes and build towers. Much of this is instinctive. When to be firm and when to be tender, when to enforce the boundaries and when to let them slide a little – these are things which we find ourselves learning as we go along.

For me, sleep is just the same. We should teach our babies healthy sleep habits. The sooner, the better for everyone. But we also need to be realistic in our expectations of what our babies can do. Just as a toddler’s behaviour won’t be perfect all of the time, nor will a baby sleep through the night every night without fail.


A Simple Reason why your Baby might be Waking

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Anyone who knows me, who spends a little time with me, who’s signed up to my newsletter, who reads my blog, or follows me on Twitter etc… will know that I say it’s impossible for a baby to sleep through the night, every night, without fail.

For one thing, they’re going to get sick, or have a day of disrupted naps, or be too hot or hungry… the list of reasons why a baby might wake occasionally is not short.

 But there is another reason why your baby will wake. And this is because every baby has what’s known as eight mental development leaps. These happen at roughly the same time for all babies as they go through the first 14 months of life. When these leaps happen, babies become fussy, clingy and more difficult to console than usual. They often go off their food and sleep poorly. (more…)