Health

5 Ways to Get Through Colic

Some common, painful reactions you might have to colic, and what can help

By Jen Singer, Parenting
 
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My newborn's fussing started every afternoon around the same time as Oprah. By the time the show ended, he was usually in a full-out cry -- and often, so was I. He cried for upward of 12 hours a day, morning and night, longer than an Iron Man triathlon and, to me, just as grueling. Only, no training could have prepared me for colic, that nebulous diagnosis for a newborn's inconsolable crying that ought to be a four-letter word. In fact, when my son's doctor gave me the diagnosis, he whispered it, as if he were delivering very disturbing news. The look on his face told me that colic was going to be harder on me than on my baby.

After suffering through two colicky infants, I can't tell you for sure how to make your baby stop. But I can assure you whatever you're feeling is normal. Some common, painful reactions you might have to colic, and what can help:

"I'm a bad mother."


When my kids were babies, I despised the woman in the baby-lotion commercial -- the one with the clean hair and the content baby -- because she made me feel like a bad mom. Her baby cooed while my babies cried. As least I think her baby cooed. I couldn't really hear over my sons' wails.

When you already feel like a terrible mom, comparing yourself to others is like pouring salt on a wound. Watching new mothers doting over their peaceful babies while her offspring screamed convinced Andrea Kahl of Kings Park, New York, a mom of two, that she was the worst mother around.

And what about when you think you have no excuse for not knowing what to do? Valerie Burton of Roseville, California, had raised two children from her first marriage. So when she couldn't stop her new baby's tears, she says, "I felt like I was failing in my husband's eyes."

This'll help: Cut yourself some slack. You're trying, and you care, and that's what makes you a good mom. If you can find something that eases the tears even a little bit (swaddling, playing music, patting your baby's back), great. But don't wrap your self-esteem up in it. Babies just can't be controlled that way.

"No one else gets it."


When my best friend's newborn, whom I nicknamed "Rip Van Emma," slept peacefully through our get-togethers, I felt very alone. Emma slept so often and cried so little, I didn't dare share with her mom just how awful I felt about the three and a half months of colic I had just endured.

Joining a moms' group can be helpful because you may find another secretly miserable mom of a crier. But if all their babies are perfect in every way (or so they claim), get out. "I had a really nice network of new-mom friends," says Julie Watson Smith of Carlsbad, California, "but I didn't feel like any of them understood." The dirty little secret of colic is that it's hard to connect with a baby you're not sure you even like. So get those moms' numbers and save them for six months from now, when you and your baby are getting along better (it'll happen).

This'll help: Actively look for a fellow sufferer. Try the forum at Parenting.com/colic to start. When I met a mom who also had survived two colicky babies, we bonded like just-hazed fraternity pledges. Instantly, I felt better.


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