26 answers

My 10 Month Baby Is Still Waking up All Through the night....HELP!

I am a first time mom and so exhausted! My little girl wakes up all through the night. She sometimes will sleep for 2 hours after I lay her down at night but other times, she wakes up after only 20 minutes. Most nights she wakes up at least 5 times. Every now and then she will sleep well and only wake up once or twice. I have tried several things that others have told me would work. I have let her cry until she became hoarse after and hour and half. They told me it would only last 3 nights and then she would stop crying and sleep...I tried it for about 10 days and couldn't handle it anymore. I have tried giving her cereal and warm bath before bed. I put on a fan to make white noise. I give her gas drops. I am breastfeeding her and my doc says that sometimes the breastfed babies just want to stay close to their mommy but even if I let her sleep with me in my bed she still tosses and turns and wakes up crying. I have tried giving her a pacifier instead of nursing her. I am beginning to worry that there may be some medical issue that she is suffering from. In the meantime, I am a full-time nursing student and just trying to keep my head above water with school work and a baby to tend to at the same time. Thankfully, I have a supportive husband but he is only home on the weekends and does help me when he is home but I am so tired and just keep praying and hopeing that one night she will finally sleep all the way through. Does anyone have any suggestions or maybe been through the same thing and can offer me the hope that she is okay and will finally sleep one day soon?

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

Neither of my children were good sleepers. They slept through the night when they were maybe 2 or 3 YEARS old. LOL One thing that helped my DS sleep was letting him fall asleep laying on top of us (tummy to tummy). When he went to sleep, we would roll over, letting him slide off onto the bed. That worked the best. Sometimes if he woke up at night, he would get in that position again, and go right to sleep. I guess it made him warm and comfortable, because it worked! I can't stand the cry-it-out method.

~A.

I agree with Amy as well! My daughter is 13 months old and I still breastfeed. She sleeps with us b/c I don't want to make her "cry it out". I think that is awful! I will def get that book too! Thanks so much!

The first thing I thought about is teething. If she just wanted you, she would sleep fine with you. Have you tried tylonel before bed? That seemed to work with my girls. I know that their little gums start throbbing when they are laying flat. Another trick you might try is to lift up one end of her mattress. This way, her head stays higher, which might help with the pain. My youngest teethed for months before her teeth came in. She was a year old before her first tooth. I hope this might help. I would definitely call her pediatrician if this continues on too much longer.

T., mother of two girls. they are now 6 and 4, and growing up way too fast!!!!

PS A friend said to rub dimatapp on thier gums to help with the teething.

More Answers

do you have a bedtime routine? that may helpe her know that is bed time and she is expected to sleep for at a few hours. maybe she is too hot or too cold or uncomfortable. my daughter was like that the first 2 months, she was awake more than she slept. it was rough. at 3 months though she sleep through the night just fine. not sure what else it could be at 10 months. I would just make sure she is comfortable in her pj's and in her bed and that she has been fed. maybe spend some quaility time with her before you put her to bed. Good luck.

Neither of my children were good sleepers. They slept through the night when they were maybe 2 or 3 YEARS old. LOL One thing that helped my DS sleep was letting him fall asleep laying on top of us (tummy to tummy). When he went to sleep, we would roll over, letting him slide off onto the bed. That worked the best. Sometimes if he woke up at night, he would get in that position again, and go right to sleep. I guess it made him warm and comfortable, because it worked! I can't stand the cry-it-out method.

~A.

I agree with Amy, the No Cry Sleep Solution is the best book about helping your baby sleep through the night. I don't believe in "crying it out", I think it's cruel. It's just going to make your baby afraid to sleep in her bed. Go get that book and I know it will be a huge help to you. I know it's hard but the book gives such great ideas, and it helps within a month, sometimes sooner. It will get better, I promise! Let us know what happens.

C.

Is she still spitting up more than once a week? My daughter was very similar at that age (only sleeping a few hours at a time if that, tossing and turning but never resting) and it turned out to be acid reflux. I also breastfed, so after we got her on meds for the reflux she still didn't sleep through the night, but it was more like every five hours instead of every two.

you are probably trying this, but just in case i wanted to suggest white noise. we use a cd with streams and waterfalls and also in my 9 month old's room we have a cool mist humidifier going which is loud white noise and is helping her breathe better. you can find one for $20-$25 at walmart. hope that helps.

The no cry sleep solution by Elizabeth Pantley. my son woke up every hour, or more for the first ten months of his life, after spending the first three sleeping on our chests, and within ONE MONTH he was waking up only to nurse, and then only once a night. sleeping nine hours at night, plus a two hour nap. she has tons of little ideas that add up to big sleep, and you can still allow your baby to nurse as often as you want without messing up her 'plan'. the BEST book ever, and very gentle and kind to you and your baby.

please, IGNORE most of the other advice you will get here, to let your baby cry it out, or to wean her, which are both really common reccommendations here, i've noticed. you can help her learn to sleep better, without switching her to formula or damaging your bond (not to mention her emotional health!) by letting her cry alone in the dark.

I would read Dr.Furber's book about training your child to sleep. It will also help you figure out if something might be wrong. I just did his technique on my 10 month old. He is my seventh child. I have had to do this with 3 of my babies. I would also get The Contented Little Baby Book by Gina Ford which has schedules. Your 11 month old baby should nap from 9 to 10, 12:30pm to 2:30pm then sleep through the night. Furber's system works like this put the baby in the crib in a DARK room (velcro black out fabric over your windows if you need to) leave the room and shut the door. When the baby cries, let her cry for 5 min, go back in pat her tell her you love her but it's time to go to bed. Then let her cry 5 for 7 min, go back in. Then 10, 15, 20 minutes. Her crying time should not exceed one hour. This way she'll get the picture that mom loves me but she's not picking me up. If she doesn't fall asleep after an hour pick her up and try again for her next nap. You really need to get the book. The biggest thing is to commit to enduring her crying you will feel bad for her but it probably take 2 nights of crying possibly a week. She will be so much happier once she sleeps through the night. And she deserves a mother who can function. You can't live long without sleep you will turn into a grouch. You really have no choice since she doesn't sleep even if she's in your bed. I also suggest a noise machine.

I know what that is like. We tried many different things with our daughter too. The one thing I tried with our daughter is letting her know I was there for her but I immediately left the room. Are you strictly breast feeding her? Can she sit up? She may be ready for table/solid food. See what her doctor says. Try letting her sleep with something that has your scent. She may just need your scent for her to feel close to you. For example, if she has a favorite blanket. Try sleeping or just laying on it so that it gets some your scent. When ever our daughter would wake up in the middle of the night, I would make sure she was ok and if she was I would just leave her. It is tough but it did take longer than 3 days. This may not help but good luck! Let me know it goes!

Required Fields

Our records show that we already have a Mamapedia or Mamasource account created for you under the email address you entered.

Please enter your Mamapedia or Mamasource password to continue signing in.

Required Fields

, you’re almost done...

Since this is the first time you are logging in to Mamapedia with Facebook Connect, please provide the following information so you can participate in the Mamapedia community.

As a member, you’ll receive optional email newsletters and community updates sent to you from Mamapedia, and your email address will never be shared with third parties.

By clicking "Continue to Mamapedia", I agree to the Mamapedia Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.