Awakenings from Being Held Until Asleep (Trained Night Crier)
How do I know if my baby is a trained night crier?
A trained night crier is a baby who:
is over 4 months old and wakes up and cries one or more
times a night
can only return to sleep if you hold him or her
is held, rocked, or walked until asleep at bedtime or
naps
doesn't need to be fed in the middle of the night
has awakened and cried at night since birth.
When should my baby be able to sleep through the night?
From birth to the age of 2 months, most babies awaken twice
each night for feedings. Between the ages of 2 and 3
months, most babies need one feeding in the middle of the
night. By 4 months of age, most bottle-fed babies sleep
more than 7 hours without feeding. Most breast-fed babies
can sleep through the night by 5 months of age. Normal
children of this age do not need calories during the night
and are capable of sleeping through the night without being
rocked or held in the middle of the night.
Why does my baby wake up crying at night?
Some common reasons babies over 4 months old wake up crying
at night include:
Holding or rocking your baby until asleep.
All children normally wake up 4 or 5 times each night
after dreams. Because they usually do not wake up fully
at these times, most children can get back to sleep by
themselves. However, children who have not learned how
to comfort and quiet themselves cry for a parent. If
your custom at naps and bedtime is to hold, rock, or lie
down with your baby until asleep, your child will not
learn how to go back to sleep without your help. Babies
who are not usually placed in their cribs while they are
still awake expect their mothers to help them go back to
sleep when they wake up at night. Because they usually
fall asleep away from their cribs, they don't learn to
associate the crib and mattress with sleep. This is
called poor sleep-onset association.
Providing entertainment during the night.
Children may awaken and cry more frequently if they
realize they gain from it; for example, if they are
walked, rocked, or played with, or enjoy other lengthy
contact with their parents. Being brought to the
parents' bed makes the problem far worse. Crying at
night can also begin after situations that required the
parents to give more nighttime attention to their baby
for a while. Examples of such problems are colds,
discomfort during hot summer nights, or traveling. Many
babies quickly settle back into their previous sleep
patterns after such situations. However, some enjoy the
nighttime contact so much that they begin to demand it.
Believing any crying is harmful.
All young children cry when confronted with a change in
their schedule or environment (called normal protest
crying). Crying is their only way to communicate before
they are able to talk. Crying for brief periods is not
physically or psychologically harmful. The thousands of
hours of attention and affection you have given your
child will easily offset any unhappiness that may result
from changing a bad sleep pattern.
How long does it last?
If you try the following recommendations, your child's
behavior will probably improve in 2 weeks. The older your
child is, the harder it will be to change your child's
habits. Children over 1 year old will fight sleep even when
they are tired. They will vigorously protest any change and
may cry for hours. However, if you don't take these steps,
your child won't start sleeping through the night until 3 or
4 years of age, when busy daytime schedules finally exhaust
your child.
How can I help my child sleep?
Try the following suggestions if your baby is over 4 months
old and wakes up crying one or more times in the night.
Place your baby in the crib drowsy but awake for naps and bedtime.
It's good to hold babies and to provide pleasant bedtime
rituals. However, when your baby starts to look drowsy,
place him in the crib. Your child's last waking memory
needs to be of the crib and mattress, not of you. If
your baby is very fussy, rock him until he settles down
or is almost asleep, but stop before he's fully asleep.
He needs to learn to put himself to sleep. Your baby
needs to develop this skill so he can put himself back
to sleep when he normally wakes up at night.
If your baby is crying at bedtime or naptime, visit your baby briefly every 5 to 15 minutes.
Visit your baby before she becomes too upset. You may
need to check younger or more sensitive babies every 5
minutes. You be the judge. Gradually lengthen the time
between your visits. Babies cannot learn how to comfort
themselves without some crying. This crying is not
harmful. If your child is fearful, hold him until he
calms down. Then temporarily sit or lie down in his
bedroom until he settles down. Try to leave before he
falls asleep.
Make the visits brief and boring but supportive.
Don't stay in your child's room longer than 1 minute.
Don't turn on the lights. Keep the visit supportive and
reassuring. Act sleepy. Whisper, "Shhh, everyone's
sleeping." Add something positive, such as "You're a
wonderful baby," or "You're almost asleep." Never show
your anger or punish your baby during these visits. If
you hug him, he probably won't let go. Touch your baby
gently and help him find his security object, such as a
doll, stuffed animal, or blanket.
Do not remove your child from the crib.
Once you put your child in the crib, do not remove him.
Do not rock or play with your baby or bring her to your
bed. Brief contact will not reward your baby enough for
her to want to continue the behavior. Most young babies
cry 30 to 90 minutes and then fall asleep.
For crying during the middle of the night, temporarily hold your baby until he is asleep.
Until your child learns how to put himself to sleep at
naps and bedtime, make the middle-of-the-night
awakenings as easy as possible for everyone. If he
doesn't fuss for more than 5 or 10 minutes, respond as
you do at bedtime. Otherwise, take your crying child
out of the crib and hold him until he is asleep. Don't
turn on the lights or take him out of the room. Try not
to talk to him very much. Often this goes better if Dad
goes in.
Help your child attach to a security object.
A security (transitional) object is something that helps
a waking child go to sleep. It comforts your child and
helps your child separate from you. A cuddly stuffed
animal, doll, other soft toy, or blanket can be a good
security object. Sometimes covering a stuffed animal
with one of the mother's T-shirts helps a child accept
it. Include the security object whenever you cuddle or
rock your child during the day. Also include it in your
ritual before bedtime by weaving it into your
storytelling. Tuck it into the crib next to your child.
Eventually, your child will hold and cuddle the stuffed
animal or doll at bedtime in place of you.
Later, phase out the nighttime holding.
Phase out nighttime holding only after your child has
learned to quiet herself and put herself to sleep for
naps and at bedtime. Then you can expect her to put
herself back to sleep during normal middle-of-the-night
awakenings. Go to her every 15 minutes while she is
crying, but make your visits brief and boring. After
your child learns to put herself to sleep at bedtime,
awakening with crying usually stops in a few nights.
Other helpful hints for sleep problems.
Move the crib to another room.
If the crib is in your bedroom, move it to a separate
room. If this is impossible, cover one of the side
rails with a blanket so your baby can't see you when
he wakes up.
Avoid long naps during the day.
If your baby has napped for more than 2 hours, wake
her up. If she has the habit of taking three naps
during the day, try to change her habit to two naps
each day.
Don't change wet diapers during the night.
Change the diaper only if it is soiled or you are
treating a bad diaper rash. If you must change your
child's diaper, use as little light as possible (for
example, a flashlight), do it quickly, and don't
provide any entertainment.
Leave your child standing in the crib, if necessary.
If your child is standing up in the crib at bedtime,
try to get your child to settle down and lie down.
If he refuses or pulls himself back up, leave him
that way. He can lie down without your help.
Repeatedly helping your child lie down can soon
become a game.
Keep a sleep diary.
Keep a record of when your baby is awake and asleep.
Bring it with you to your office follow-up visit.
When should I call my child's health care provider?
Call during office hours if:
You think the crying has a physical cause.
Your child acts fearful.
Someone in your family cannot tolerate the crying.
The steps outlined here do not improve your child's
sleeping habits within 2 weeks.
You have other questions or concerns.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, M.D., author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.