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Our un-Wise Baby Experience

Encouragement for Christian Parents

Before having our first baby, I thought I had the whole ‘rearing children’ thing sorted.  I had watched my older siblings raise their children, done plenty of babysitting, and even helped mothers with post natal depression for a while.  I thought fussy babies were created by fussy mothers, and was convinced I would have an easy child who would sleep through the night by the six weeks.  I certainly wouldn’t be one of ‘those’ mothers still getting up during the night for their six month old!

I had heard a lot of positive stories about Babywise before having my son, and read Preparation for Parenting just before he was born.  Most of the mothers I knew had their babies on similar routines and said it made things so much easier.


Enter our son!  I remember holding him for the first time and thinking ‘this wasn’t what I expected’!  He just wriggled so much more than I remembered other babies doing, was very strong and unsettled, and put his very loud voice to a lot of use!   Little was I to know this wouldn’t change!

The first few weeks I had a lot of difficulties breastfeeding, so we didn’t manage to establish much of a routine.  I still followed much of the advice in the book though – I fed, then had some awake time, and then put our son to bed. 

As the weeks went on I became more and more frustrated.  Our son just wasn’t doing what he was meant to do!  He was very fussy during feeds, then would be awake for a while, but by the time I put him to bed he wouldn’t sleep!  I would refuse to rock him or hold him because then he would ‘get used to that’.  But he used to cry and cry.  I would feel like such a failure if I gave in and fed him, feeling like I was going to completely ruin him.

I persevered for around four months.  By this time we had a very unsettled baby who wasn’t putting on as much weight as he should be.  My milk supply was dropping, he screamed through most feeds (most likely frustrated he wasn’t getting enough!)  and was still waking up 5 or 6 times a night. 

What I was doing was most definitely not working!  Where was this easy baby I had been promised who would sleep through the night and learn to ‘self-soothe’?

I would go back to the book for advice and found nothing that seemed to fit my situation or my baby.  Because my supply was dropping so badly I knew I needed to try something else.  A call to the ‘Australian Breastfeeding Association’ told me I should be feeding more often.  Unfortunately it was too little too late, and I never managed to establish a decent milk supply again.

It took a long time to remove the voices in my head from reading Preparation for Parenting.  I found it so hard to relax, to parent our son to sleep, to ‘break the rules’. 

I’m so thankful I did though!  While our son could not be labelled ‘easy’, and still has a lot of difficulty settling down to sleep, we have a great relationship, and he is so much more secure.    We ended up co-sleeping and have so many wonderful memories.  My husband is convinced all those parents with babies in cots on the others side of the house are missing out on so much!

I truly believe now that the command to “Do unto others as you wish them to do to you” should be extended to our babies and toddlers.  Since I wouldn’t wish to be left to cry alone, I sure don’t expect my son to anymore!  And if I wake up hungry and thirsty after a bad dream at night I would love to be fed and comforted, not ignored! 

Why should we believe the lie that parenting is meant to be convenient?  That it shouldn’t interrupt our sleep or couple time or personal hobbies?  Shouldn’t parenting be an exercise of servanthood – caring unselfishly for a small person who is unable to care for himself or herself?


by E., Australia
4/21/09

Invitation for Connection

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  • Professionals Say
  • Signs of Hunger
  • Recent Research
  • A Mom Says

Rosemary Shy, MD , FAAP
Director, Children's Choice of Michigan Ambulatory Pediatrics
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Wayne State University, Children's Hospital of Michigan, Detroit, Mich

"It is dangerous to do it the way he describes," Pediatrician Dr. Rosemary Shy says of Ezzo's technique. "It puts these babies at risk for jaundice, at risk for dehydration, and at risk for failing to thrive, all of which we’ve seen." -- Wilson, Steve, "Baby Care Controversy," WXYZ-Detroit, November 14, 2004

 

Arnold Tanis, MD, FAAP
1999 recipient, John H. Whitcomb Outstanding Pediatrician Award, presented by the Florida Pediatric Society and the Florida Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

"There is no scientific basis whatsoever in their philosophy....It is contrary to what nature intended.

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Watch Your Baby's Signs of Hunger

Although Babywise says to feed a hungry baby, it usually instructs parents to observe a time interval between feedings, or a certain order of events, such as only feeding the baby after she wakes up. There's another way to tell that your baby is hungry. You can watch your baby for her own signs of hunger.

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends watching for the following early signs or cues by which your baby lets you know when she's hungry.

  • Small movements as she starts to awaken
  • Whimpering or lip-smacking
  • Pulling up arms or legs toward her middle
  • Stretching or yawning
  • Waking and looking alert
  • Putting hands toward her mouth
  • Making sucking motions
  • Moving
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Maternal use of parent led routines associated with short breastfeeding duration.

Published Feb 12, 2014
Brown A, Arnott B (2014) Breastfeeding Duration and Early Parenting Behaviour: The Importance of an Infant-Led, Responsive Style. PLoS ONE 9(2): e83893. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0083893

"Results: Formula use at birth or short breastfeeding duration were significantly associated with low levels of nurturance, high levels of reported anxiety and increased maternal use of Parent-led routines . Conversely an infant-led approach characterised by responding to and following infant cues was associated with longer breastfeeding duration."

Raising Emotionally Healthy Children - 2014 Video

This KET Special Report looks at the importance of social and emotional development in the first years of life, featuring experts on infant and child development in Kentucky.

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Our first child was born in the summer of 09, and I promptly began trying to apply the Babywise method. The book had been highly recommended by a distant relative, and promised structure and sanity amidst the exhaustion and upheaval I felt as a new mother. However, our baby did not respond the way the book promised he would if we followed the schedule. All my attempts to adhere to the book led to deep frustration, arguments with my husband (who knew better than to let a book dictate our newborn's schedule), feeling like a failure, and the worst--resentment of my infant. Why couldn't he sleep and eat like the book said he should be doing? The Ezzos presented their arguments as infallible.
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Babywise and Preparation for Parenting

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Key Documentation

LIVING HOPE EVANGELICAL FELLOWSHIP:
Excommunication Statement

GRACE COMMUNITY CHURCH:
Statement about Ezzo - Materials

GRACE COMMUNITY CHURCH:
Statement about Ezzo - Character

CHRISTIAN RESEARCH INSTITUTE:
"The Cultic Characteristics of Growing Families International"
(originally titled "More than a Parenting Ministry")

CHRISTIAN RESEARCH INSTITUTE:
"GFI"
(orginally titled "A Matter of Bias?")

CHRISTIANITY TODAY:
Unprepared to Teach Parenting?

CHRISTIANITY TODAY:
Babywise Publisher Plans Contract Cancellation

AMERICAN ACADEMY of PEDIATRICS:
Media Alert