
He said the same exact thing. Shut the monitor off, ear plugs, and you will know when he cries with how loud he will get.
He said the first 4 days will be hard but you will be buying me a beer in a week when he is sleeping through the night.
took us 3 or 4 nights.Cnasty wrote:Dude, were you in the exam room today?!?!![]()
He said the same exact thing. Shut the monitor off, ear plugs, and you will know when he cries with how loud he will get.
He said the first 4 days will be hard but you will be buying me a beer in a week when he is sleeping through the night.
8:30, nice.ajalves wrote:from that day forward he will sleep 8:30 till the next morning
Audio monitor I can see if your in a bigger house and the kids bedroom is a good distance away. Video monitor? Absolutely ridiculous. What's the new born gonna do climb out of the bed and start doing acrobratics on the mobile? Brilliant post on the falling down part too.dakshdar wrote:I have no kids but I have nephews and two of my best friends out here in California have kids.
I'm probably not qualified to chime in, but I find the baby monitor (with video now too!) to be completely ridiculous. My one friend's wife watches the monitor like it is Emmy winning television and goes to check on the kid every freaking time he moves or makes a sound. It isn't even my kid and, when I'm over there hanging out, it drives me crazy!
Maybe I'm a heartless, logical android, but I'm letting that kid cry after it's bed time.
The other thing I laugh about is how the kids react to falling down. All of the kids I've been around are boys and they run around like maniacs slamming into things and they just get right up because they're (almost) doing it on purpose. Then, once in a while, they bump into something they don't see and collapse on the ground like an Italian soccer player and start howling. If I'm the nearest person to the kid when that happens I pick them up, put them on their feet, and say, "You're fine, you're not hurt, go play." And 9 times out of 10 they do just that. But, when I see the mom react instead, and they get upset because they think the kid is hurt, it just plays into the kid's reaction, which then amplifies everything to another level. If the kid really is hurt, you're going to know.
Anyway, non-parent rant over. You guys with kids may tell me I'm crazy and that I'll learn some day, but I'm sticking with this for now.
the kid had a will of steel. he'd stop for like a minute here or there, but yeah 2.5 hours pretty much straight of crying....he was like a machineCnasty wrote: This will just take some getting used to if its AJ's 2.5 hours or so first on. First nights will be hell!
Sounds to me like the monitor isn't the problem.dakshdar wrote:My one friend's wife watches the monitor like it is Emmy winning television and goes to check on the kid every freaking time he moves or makes a sound. It isn't even my kid and, when I'm over there hanging out, it drives me crazy!
shel311 wrote:Sounds to me like the monitor isn't the problem.dakshdar wrote:My one friend's wife watches the monitor like it is Emmy winning television and goes to check on the kid every freaking time he moves or makes a sound. It isn't even my kid and, when I'm over there hanging out, it drives me crazy!
That is when we took the bars off one side of the crib.ajalves wrote:when my oldest was like a year and a half (maybe younger, maybe older, but whenever he started semi walking) we went in to get him after his afternoon nap and he was sitting on the floor....![]()
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he had climbed out of his crib. no idea how
conversely, another time, i swear to christ, he was real tired he actually climbed into his crib
Yeah really.shel311 wrote:Sounds to me like the monitor isn't the problem.dakshdar wrote:My one friend's wife watches the monitor like it is Emmy winning television and goes to check on the kid every freaking time he moves or makes a sound. It isn't even my kid and, when I'm over there hanging out, it drives me crazy!
Unless I visibly see them take a pretty nasty fall, this is exactly what I do. Some say just ignore, but instead, I'll just continue on and keep playing with him like nothing happened. Like you said, 9 times outta 10, they stop crying in 3 seconds.dakshdar wrote:Then, once in a while, they bump into something they don't see and collapse on the ground like an Italian soccer player and start howling. If I'm the nearest person to the kid when that happens I pick them up, put them on their feet, and say, "You're fine, you're not hurt, go play." And 9 times out of 10 they do just that
I was 10 when my younger sister and cousin were born. I have (so far) successfully raised a 6 year year old who is well behaved and well ahead of the rest of the kids in her class. Don't know why you wouldn't want to listen to me. Dak is dead on with the falling bit. My little girl will fall running around, offf her bike, whatever, I'll get her up dust her off, get a bandaid, clean her up if need be, and she's fine. If she falls and mama is around it is 10 times worse because of the reaction she gets from mama.Cnasty wrote:Yea, coming from someone without a kid and autiger, not listening.![]()
thats like my buddies son whos 4. when he falls, hes just like "dont cry" and he wont.autiger730 wrote:I was 10 when my younger sister and cousin were born. I have (so far) successfully raised a 6 year year old who is well behaved and well ahead of the rest of the kids in her class. Don't know why you wouldn't want to listen to me. Dak is dead on with the falling bit. My little girl will fall running around, offf her bike, whatever, I'll get her up dust her off, get a bandaid, clean her up if need be, and she's fine. If she falls and mama is around it is 10 times worse because of the reaction she gets from mama.Cnasty wrote:Yea, coming from someone without a kid and autiger, not listening.![]()