Hello, I did the Ferber method, and keep going back to it to retrain if my boy has had a period of illness. (When poorly we Co sleep as you never leave to cry in this case) For us the first time we trained him was 7 months. It took 3 nights. Night 1 he cried for an hour (with me going in every 5 mins) then fell asleep. And again another hour cry sesh in the middle of the night. Night 2 & 3 were a bit less crying. Then perfect sleep. We have retrained him after illness or teething about 5 times now. Each time it’s much easier and quicker. The Ferber method for me 100% works. And most importantly I don’t feel like it’s as distressing as people make out. I’ve had him cry for solid hours in the car seat when I can’t physically see to him every 5 mins. He still can cry at nappy change, so I think he’s just a baby that cries a lot 😅 For this reason I don’t feel like an awful mother during training. We also use a dummy and a soft teddy that’s long and skinny (no worry of suffocation)
He specifically puts his face into the teddy and this soothes him. Sometimes now I hear him winging in the night and go in, put his dummy back in and his teddy to the side of his face. I just retrained last week after 2 weeks Co sleeping with his cold. He barely needed much training and now sleeping 8pm to 8am. He used to wake every hour as you say. All babies are different. I think if the training involved him crying to the point of horrible stress, and hours in the night, I wouldn’t have done it. I do it because 2-3 nights of 2 hours max disturbance and then done x
I'm pretty sure someone told me there's a regression at this age. My little ones been like this for 2/3 weeks now but the last 3 days he's slept right the way through and seems to be easier with naps. I think this is developmentally normal sleep change you just have to ride it out from what I read.
We recently went through this with our little one and we decided to give him a toddler pillow a little early, complete game changer only wakes once now compared to previous 3/4 times a night x
You might find this a reassuring post, that this is all normal (but difficult!!!) https://www.instagram.com/p/CrY5gdrogq1/?img_index=5&igsh=bjl5ZHE2dnlmMGts