Not exact matches
He'll eat, have a bath and we'll do his bedtime
routine, but then he'll get super fussy and will «cluster
feed» every 15 - 30 minutes
until around 9 pm (meaning he'll eat, fall asleep, then wake up 15 - 20 minutes later and eat again).
She is six months old and I had been nursing and rocking her to sleep
until then (oops) but I was going crazy with her waking up for
feedings at 1 am and 4 am so that is why we started letting her CIO and started the baby wise
routine.
It took me 3 months of painful breast
feeding and tears
until I established a
routine.
Also, we do our bedtime
routine at 7 with a bath, eat (about 8 pm when he done bathing and eating) and he supposed to go to sleep but he always is wide awake and won; t sleep
until after his next
feeding at 10 - 10:30 pm.
Wait
until you and child have adjusted to the change and are comfortable with the new
routine before eliminating the next
feeding.
I have twins a boy and a girl... I am trying to use the baby whisper
routine... So I do a dream
feed at 11:20 and 11:40... And of course I am still up at 3:00... Then up at 6:30 to start my day... So I cant wait
until they sleep for more then 4 hours at a time...
Babies are born with enough fluid and fat to keep them going
until they get into a regular
feeding routine.
«NOTE: Whether a baby is breast or bottle
fed, I advise the above
routine — allowing for variations in times —
until 4 months old.
Babywise says to not lengthen the times between
feedings until they are sleeping 9 - 10 hours at night, so I'm just going to stick with a basic 3 hour
routine until this happens.
Do we change her
routine and put her right back down after
feeding her or do we keep her up
until the next
routine naptime?
One caveat — if you're breast -
feeding, wait to offer a pacifier
until your baby is 3 to 4 weeks old and you've settled into a nursing
routine.
Sophie
feeds every 3 hours during the day and follows a
feed - wake - sleep
routine, except that after the sleep portion (40 minutes), there's still quite a bit of
until her next
feeding.