Laugh it Out
Why I will never ever ever do cry it out.
Tonight something magical happened, but before I get to it, a little history. Almost every night (sometimes multiple times a night) for the past 11 months I have put my son to sleep by rocking/bouncing/holding him.
My strategy for getting him to go to sleep is pretty much this:
- Turn on the spinny musical projector thing (not that he likes it, he used to, but now it’s more just a signal that it’s sleepy time. He actually gets upset when I turn it on, because he knows what it means and he doesn’t want to go to sleep)
- Hold him (I always start with him facing me with his head on my chest, sometimes he will fall asleep that way immediately, usually he will just squirm into some other random position and get comfy. This can include facing away from me. I try to be very cooperative and guess what he wants. The quicker he gets comfy, the quicker he goes to sleep)
- Move (usually I do half-squats semi-rapidly in time with the music. By the end my legs are BURNING. Usually about the time I can take no more he is asleep and I can switch to a sway/gentle-bounce combo)
This whole process takes about 5 minutes. Once he is out, I let “rock-a-bye baby” play three times through and I’m done. I take him to the living room and give him to his mommy to sleep while I get ready for bed, or I go sit in my recliner and rock while I read a book and relax (this used to be a very important step. If I didn’t do this for at least 30 minutes, as soon as I tried to lay him down on the bed he would wake up screaming).
Yes, this sounds insanely easy and almost pleasant. It didn’t always work out so well. I perused numerous “sleep” books (several of which are on my bookshelf) looking for “a better way”. What was I looking for? Well, if I think about it logically, I was looking for an “out”. I was looking for something that would make me feel ok about leaving my child to scream himself to sleep. I knew that the best way for my child to go to sleep was in my arms. What I also knew was that I was tired and bored. I spent a lot of time thinking about the fact that I could be doing “something else” and that I was tired and would too like to go to sleep. I was very frustrated and sometimes angry. Sometimes enough so that I would have to hand him to Julie while I went and calmed down.
I wanted to just be able to take him to his room, lay him in his crib and have him magically close his eyes and go to sleep for the night. Then I could go to my room and do whatever I wanted. Basically, when it comes down to it, I didn’t want to have a baby.
I mean, sure, I “wanted a baby”, right? I mean, “having a baby” is fun, right? Babies are cute and do cute things and make you smile. Except when it’s two in the morning and they are screaming for no discernible reason and you want to be asleep but instead you’re bouncing him and going “shhhh shhh shhhhh” and feel like crying yourself. That’s when you find out what you’re made of.
Just like I’d love to walk out back and pick money off of my money tree, and slice a piece of fat free, calorie free, guilt-free bacon off of my talking-flying pig, I wanted to just walk the baby into the nursery with no real prep-time whatsoever, plop him down on his mattress and watch his little eyes magically slide shut with ner but a lullaby.
Sorry Charlie, doesn’t work that way.
Once I realized that I was starting to resent Zeke for “impeding on my freedom/time/happiness/whatever” I really started thinking things over. Why was I getting mad at him? Is this really his fault? Why is he crying? Why can’t he sleep? Can he do anything wrong? What am I doing wrong?
What I realized is that I was “fighting it”. I hadn’t truly embraced being a father. Sad but true. You’d think that with God giving me NINE MONTHS to prepare, I’d have really committed to it. You’d think that 5 months into actually having him in the world I’d be caught hook-line-and-sinker. Nope, I was still balking. When’s he going to go to sleep on his own? Why do I have to do this? Why can’t he just sleep and stay asleep? Wah wah wah. I need I need I need, I want I want I want. Who’s the baby here anyways???
He is a little human being that I created. God gave him to me to raise. He is my most important priority and job and responsibility in the whole world. He is God’s and does not belong to me. Would I give him to someone else? No. Why? Because I love him. And yet God loves him a gagillion times more than I do and HE gave him to me. I’d better not screw this up. Of all the bad things I could do, that would be the absolute worst. It’s time to encase my feet in concrete and throw myself into the deep-end of this ocean called “Fatherhood”.
Suddenly all the anger, resentment, and whiny-ness melted away. I realized there was NOTHING more important I could be doing than rocking my son to sleep at night. No matter how much time it took. No matter how much sleep I lost. No matter how tired I was. That was my job. So I did it, and I became happy. I learned some tricks too. I got GOOD at it.
What I discovered was this:
- Babies need a schedule (step 1. Read a book, step 2. take a bath, step 3. go to bed).
- This schedule in no way revolves around the made up construct we call “a clock”. It’s possible that at 9pm sharp, little Timmy will get tired and be easily put to bed each night for a month, but that’s just sheer crazy dumb luck. Depending on naps, level of activity, feedings, visitors, trips, etc. it’s more likely that sometime between 7pm and 1am little Timmy will finally be primed for sleeping. What matters is the order in which you do things leading up to (signalling) impending long-term night-time sleep. Maybe ~around~ 9pm you can get him to sleep, but he’s not an alarm clock that can really be “set”.
- Everything will change. He used to like his projector; now, not so much. He used to like laying cradled in my arms while I patted his back, now he screams if I put him that way, except for tonight when he didn’t… Roll with the punches.
- It won’t last forever. Enjoy it while you can. Every now and then something amazing will happen
Which brings me to tonight. Two amazing things happened tonight.
First I put him facing me with his head on my chest as usual. He starts fussing (he was really really tired. I waited too long to start trying to put him to sleep) and ends up With his head thrown back and his hands up in the air (he’s trying to escape). I counter attack by doing some squats while turning my entire body (up-left/down-middle/up-right). This immediately begins to soothe him but he stays in that position with my hand behind his head to hold it up. He then starts blowing raspberries at me while he is falling asleep. The sleepier he gets the funnier sounding they get until I’m choking back outright laughter trying not to wake him up. From the other room it sounds like sobs and my wife comes rushing in to see what’s wrong (which of course wakes him up). Mister Buddy: 1, Daddy: 0.
Next he settled with his feet in my left hand, and his head nuzzled into my shoulder with his face turned up towards me. I thought he was asleep. I leaned down and gave him a little kiss on his cheek. He smiled a big toothy grin. It was adorable. I kissed him again. This time he giggled. I kissed him again, now he laughed. His eyes still shut he reaches up and places his little hand on my chin/cheek as if to say, “Daddy, you’re so silly. I love you.” before he fell asleep completely.
Those two little things made me think back down the path that led me here. All the hard work and wondering if I was doing the right thing, and being the only one I know not letting my baby scream himself to sleep. Now here I am with a wonderful bonding experience with my son, him laughing himself to sleep (in under 10 minutes almost every night). I wouldn’t trade it for any other way. It’s harder, but most of the right things in life are.
One last note on cry-it-out (and co-sleeping/breast-feeding in general actually). My new argument against cry-it-out is “look at what a wonderful bonding opportunity you are missing”. One of my old arguments (which I still think is true) against it is, 10,000 years ago, when my great-great-etc-grandpa was living in a cave/ditch/hut/tree/whatever with wild predators lurking about. Would he EVER have just put his son/daughter down on the ground to scream themselves to sleep? NO WAY. The baby would have gotten eaten or something. That dude CLUNG to his baby through the whole night to make sure nothing bad happened. That’s how we were made. Babies were meant to sleep in their parents arms, or at least directly next to their parents. If not, breasts would be detachable, and kids would come with ninja-skills and wolverine claws. Seriously, rocking to sleep and co-sleeping are the absolute most-natural way there is. They just make sense.
Posted in autobiography, family | 1 Comment »


February 22nd, 2010 at 4:18 pm
I loved reading your descriptions of your interactions with Zeke, how you have bonded with him, and the important insights you’ve gained. I’ve been very thankful and gratified to see what an awesome father you are! At the risk of gushing, I’ll say I’m extremely proud of you and Julie and I think you’re awesome parents. Furthermore, I agree with most of the points that you make in this post.
It does trouble me that your post sort of suggests that you’ve gotten the idea that every baby is basically the same when it comes to their sleeping needs. Your experience with Zeke is far different from any experience I had with my three babies. None of you had more than occasional difficulty falling asleep and unless my memory has completely failed me, we didn’t ever let you scream (nor even cry, more than at most a few whimpers or a very brief moment of time) yourselves to sleep. And each of you had different preferences and needs regarding being put to sleep/bed for the night. One preferred nothing more than to be lain in his crib, quite alone, thank you very much I’m quite fine, Mommy. One fell asleep instantly with no trouble or fuss whatsoever anywhere and anytime she was tired, the more commotion in the room the better and could be moved to her own bed with no difficulty. And one had a mixture of preferences, including cuddles, but still generally did best when simply lain in his bed when it was clear he was tired, with his familiar comfortable items around him, and he slept more soundly in that peaceful environment (that was you, by the way). I do hope that I would have learned the same lesson you have learned, if I’d had a baby with needs and preferences identical to Zeke, and I commend you for studying and really really getting to know your child, and responding to his unique personality and needs in a loving, appropriate, and yes, sacrificial manner. To me, that’s the main point, and it’s a big, important point: study and know you child. Become a student of your child. Pay attention! I believe that’s something every parent needs to learn and to do for their child, without exception, in order to be a really good parent and I think you made that point quite well.
But I caution you regarding what you say beyond that point and I hope that you will please, for the sake of not having to eat crow when you get a child that turns out to be very different from Zeke, and also in order to avoid alienating your friends that are also struggling to do this “parent thing,” please be aware that every child is different and just because you learn something valid and valuable about babies via Zeke, please don’t start thinking that all the answers are the same for every parent, in regards to what “works” and how to do things like putting a baby to sleep “the right way.” It’s way too easy to get the idea, or at least to sound as if you think, that you’ve got things all figured out and everyone else is just plain wrong. Would I have been a better parent if I had forced all my babies to sleep in my arms and/or in my bed with me if they preferred sleeping alone in a quiet room? That makes no more sense to me than the idea that a baby should have to scream himself to sleep because somebody says so, when all he wants is to be rocked for a few minutes. After all, I believe that nothing is going to be more important in your journey to be the best parent possible, than basic humility.