Why Newborns Fight Sleep Even When They Are Exhausted

Your baby is clearly tired.

Red eyes. Fussing. Yawning. Maybe even crying.

You do everything “right” — feed, hold, rock, dim the lights…

And somehow, instead of falling asleep, your baby fights sleep even harder.

If you’re in this stage, it can feel incredibly frustrating — especially when you’re already running on very little sleep yourself.

Because it’s not just about a tired baby.
It’s about being a tired mother, trying to calm a baby who needs sleep… but won’t take it.

If your baby seems exhausted but still won’t sleep, you’re not imagining it — many newborns go through phases where sleep feels surprisingly difficult.

The good news is: this is very common in newborns, and there are real reasons behind it.


Why Newborns Fight Sleep

Newborns don’t fight sleep on purpose.

What looks like resistance is usually a sign that their nervous system is overwhelmed.

Here are the most common reasons.


1. Overtiredness (The Biggest Reason)

This is the most common cause.

When a newborn stays awake too long, their body releases stress hormones (like cortisol). Instead of helping them sleep, it actually makes it harder.

Overtired babies often:

  • cry more intensely
  • arch their back
  • resist being put down
  • seem “wired but exhausted”

If this sounds familiar, you may want to read:
👉 Overtired Newborn: Signs Your Baby Is Overtired (And How to Help)

And if you’re unsure about timing, this helps connect everything:
👉 Newborn Wake Windows (0–12 Weeks): What’s Normal and Why Babies Get Overtired


2. They Don’t Know How to Fall Asleep Yet

Newborns are not born knowing how to fall asleep smoothly.

They often need help with:

  • rocking
  • feeding
  • being held
  • movement

So even when they are exhausted, they may struggle with the transition into sleep.

This is not a bad habit — it’s normal development.


3. Overstimulation

Newborns get overwhelmed easily.

Too much:

  • light
  • noise
  • interaction
  • passing between people

…can push them into a state where they are too stimulated to settle.

You might notice your baby:

  • turning their head away
  • becoming fussy after activity
  • crying during attempts to sleep

This connects closely with:
👉 How to Calm an Overstimulated Newborn


4. Gas or Physical Discomfort

Sometimes babies seem like they’re “fighting sleep,” but they’re actually uncomfortable.

Common culprits:

  • gas
  • reflux sensations
  • needing to burp

If your baby gets fussy after feeds, this may also be part of the picture:
👉 Newborn Crying After Feeding: Is It Normal and What It Means


5. They Need More Contact

Newborns regulate through closeness.

When they are tired, their need for contact can actually increase — not decrease.

This is why some babies:

  • only fall asleep while being held
  • wake immediately when put down
  • cry when separated

If that feels like your situation:
👉 Is It Normal for Newborns to Want Constant Holding? (And Why It’s Okay)


What Fighting Sleep Can Look Like

Sometimes it’s not obvious that your baby is overtired.

Here’s a quick breakdown:

BehaviorWhat It Might Mean
Crying when you try to put them downOvertired or overstimulated
Arching back / stiff bodyStress response, discomfort
Falling asleep briefly then wakingOvertired cycle
Fussing even while being heldNervous system overload
Seeming alert but cranky“Wired but tired” state

Why This Feels So Hard (For You)

This stage can be incredibly draining.

You’re:

  • already sleep deprived
  • doing everything you can
  • trying to read your baby’s cues

And instead of things getting easier, your baby becomes more unsettled right when they need sleep most.

That can lead to thoughts like:

  • “Why isn’t this working?”
  • “What am I doing wrong?”
  • “Why won’t my baby just sleep?”

But this isn’t a failure.

It’s a moment where your baby’s biology and regulation are still catching up.

And unfortunately, it often happens at the exact time you’re most exhausted too.

If you’re in the early postpartum weeks and constantly wondering “is this normal?”, I put together a simple guide that walks you through what to expect — without the overwhelm.

Get the free guide

What Can Help When Your Newborn Fights Sleep

There’s no perfect fix, but small adjustments can make a difference.

1. Watch wake windows closely

Avoid letting your baby stay awake too long.


2. Start sleep routines early

Don’t wait until your baby is already crying.


3. Reduce stimulation

Dim lights, quiet environment, slower movements.


4. Use more contact

Holding, rocking, or babywearing can help regulate.


5. Keep expectations realistic

Newborn sleep is not linear or predictable.


If evenings feel especially intense, especially if your baby cries more in the evening or seems harder to settle than during the day, you’re not imagining it:
👉 Newborn Witching Hour: Why Babies Cry Every Evening

👉 Newborn Cries Every Evening But Is Fine During the Day


When Fighting Sleep Is Usually Normal

This phase is usually normal if:

  • your baby eventually falls asleep
  • feeds are going well
  • weight gain is on track
  • there are calm periods during the day

Most newborn sleep struggles improve gradually over time.


When to Look a Bit Closer

Consider speaking with a healthcare professional if:

  • your baby seems in pain
  • sleep is extremely difficult every time
  • feeding is also challenging
  • your instincts tell you something feels off

Final Thoughts

When your newborn fights sleep, it can feel like everything is working against you.

A tired baby who won’t sleep…
and a tired mother trying to help them.

But in most cases, this isn’t a problem to fix — it’s a phase to move through.

Your baby isn’t resisting you.
They’re overwhelmed, learning, and still adjusting to the world.

And even when it doesn’t feel like it — what you’re doing is enough.


FAQ: Newborn Fighting Sleep

Why does my newborn fight sleep when clearly tired?

The most common reason is overtiredness. When babies stay awake too long, stress hormones make it harder for them to fall asleep.


How do I know if my baby is overtired?

Signs include crying, arching their back, resisting sleep, and seeming alert but fussy.


Should I wake my newborn to prevent overtiredness?

In some cases, yes — especially if long wake periods are leading to difficult sleep. Following age-appropriate wake windows can help.


Is it normal for newborns to only sleep when held?

Yes. Many newborns need contact to fall and stay asleep. This is part of normal development.


When does this phase get easier?

For many babies, sleep becomes more predictable around 8–12 weeks, as their nervous system matures.

Note: The information shared in this article is for educational purposes only and reflects personal experience and research. It is not intended as medical advice. If you have concerns about your health or your baby’s health, please consult a qualified healthcare professional.

8 Reasons Your Baby Is Crying Even After a Full Feeding

You finally feed your baby.
They seem satisfied.

And then… the crying starts again.

Many parents expect feeding to instantly calm a baby, so when a baby cries even after a full feeding, it can feel confusing and frustrating. You might wonder if your baby is still hungry, uncomfortable, or if something is wrong.

The truth is that babies cry after feeding much more often than people expect — especially in the newborn and early infant months.

In most cases, the reason has nothing to do with hunger.

Here are some of the most common explanations for why babies cry even after eating.


1. Your Baby Needs to Burp

During feeding, babies swallow small amounts of air along with milk. That air can become trapped in the stomach and cause discomfort shortly after feeding.

Some babies need to burp more than once during a feed, not just at the end.

Signs your baby may need to burp include:

  • squirming or arching their back
  • pulling their legs up
  • fussiness right after feeding

Holding your baby upright for a few minutes and gently patting their back can often help release trapped air.


2. Your Baby Is Overtired

Sometimes babies cry after feeding because they are already overtired.

When babies stay awake longer than their comfortable wake window, their nervous system becomes overwhelmed. Feeding alone may not be enough to calm them.

Common signs of overtiredness include:

  • rubbing eyes
  • jerky movements
  • sudden crying after a calm period
  • difficulty settling even when held

If this happens often, it may help to understand your baby’s natural sleep rhythm.
You may find this helpful: Newborn Wake Windows (0–12 Weeks): What’s Normal and Why Babies Get Overtired.

You can also learn more about tiredness cues in Signs Your Newborn Is Overtired (And How to Help).


3. Your Baby Is Overstimulated

Newborns are still adjusting to the world outside the womb. Even normal daily activities can feel like a lot.

During feeding, babies experience:

  • touch
  • movement
  • sound
  • light
  • closeness

Afterward, they may cry simply because their nervous system needs help calming down.

Reducing stimulation can sometimes help:

  • dim lights
  • quiet environment
  • gentle rocking
  • skin-to-skin contact

If your baby often seems overwhelmed, you may find this guide helpful: How to Calm an Overstimulated Newborn.


4. They Want Comfort, Not More Milk

Sometimes babies cry after feeding because they still want closeness and comfort, not more food.

Feeding often creates a calm, connected moment. When it ends, babies may protest the change.

This is especially common in the newborn phase, when babies rely heavily on contact to regulate their emotions.

If your baby settles when held or rocked, they may simply need reassurance.

If it feels like your baby constantly wants to be held, you may also like:
Is It Normal for Newborns to Want Constant Holding? (And Why It’s Okay).


5. Digestive Adjustment

Newborn digestive systems are still developing.

Coordinating sucking, swallowing, breathing, and digestion is complex, and babies are learning these skills in real time.

Because of this, babies may experience:

  • mild reflux sensations
  • gas movement
  • intestinal activity

All of these can cause fussiness after feeding.

If your baby specifically cries right after feeding, you can read a deeper explanation here: Newborn Crying After Feeding: Is It Normal and What It Means .


6. Your Baby Is Going Through a Growth Spurt

During growth spurts, babies often become:

  • fussier
  • hungrier
  • more clingy
  • harder to settle

Even after a full feeding, your baby may cry because their body is rapidly changing and they need extra comfort.

Growth spurts are common around:

  • 2–3 weeks
  • 6 weeks
  • 3 months

During these periods, babies often want more frequent feeds and more contact.

If you’re in the early postpartum weeks and constantly wondering “is this normal?”, I put together a simple guide that walks you through what to expect — without the overwhelm.

Get the free guide

7. Cluster Feeding Is Happening

Cluster feeding is when babies feed many times close together, often in the evening.

Parents sometimes think a baby is crying because the previous feeding “didn’t work,” when in reality the baby simply wants to feed again soon.

Cluster feeding is normal and especially common in the first few months.


8. Your Baby Is in the Normal Crying Phase

Many babies go through a phase of increased crying during the first months of life.

This period is sometimes called the “purple crying” phase, where babies cry more frequently, often in the evening.

During this stage, crying may happen even when babies are:

  • fed
  • clean
  • held
  • comfortable

This phase usually improves as babies’ nervous systems mature.


When Crying After Feeding Is Usually Normal

Crying after feeding is often completely normal if:

  • your baby is gaining weight
  • feeds generally go well
  • crying eventually settles
  • your baby has calm periods during the day

Babies communicate primarily through crying, and not every cry means something needs to be fixed.


When to Look a Bit Closer

While post-feeding crying is common, you may want to speak with a healthcare professional if you notice:

  • intense or inconsolable crying
  • poor feeding
  • frequent vomiting
  • poor weight gain
  • signs of pain

Trusting your instincts as a parent is always important.


Final Thoughts

If your baby cries even after a full feeding, it doesn’t mean you did something wrong.

Babies cry after feeding for many reasons — from gas and tiredness to overstimulation or simply wanting comfort.

In the early months, babies are still learning how to regulate their bodies and emotions. What feels confusing now often becomes easier as you learn your baby’s patterns.

And sometimes, the most helpful response isn’t fixing the cry immediately — it’s simply being there while your baby works through it.


FAQ: Baby Crying After Feeding

Why does my baby cry after feeding but seems full?

Babies may cry after feeding due to gas, tiredness, overstimulation, or needing comfort rather than more milk.

Should I feed my baby again if they cry after eating?

If your baby still shows hunger cues, offering another feeding is reasonable. However, try burping or holding your baby upright first.

How long does crying after feeding last in babies?

For many babies, this improves as digestion and nervous system regulation mature — often around 8–12 weeks.

Is it normal for babies to cry more in the evening even after feeding?

Yes. Many babies have fussier evenings during the early months due to cluster feeding and normal developmental crying phases.

Note: The information shared in this article is for educational purposes only and reflects personal experience and research. It is not intended as medical advice. If you have concerns about your health or your baby’s health, please consult a qualified healthcare professional.

Why Newborn Evenings Feel Harder Than the Rest of the Day

Introduction

Many parents notice the same pattern in the newborn phase.

The day might pass relatively calmly — feeding, short naps, quiet alert moments — and then suddenly evening arrives and everything feels harder.

Your baby becomes fussier, harder to settle, and nothing seems to work for long.

If this happens in your home, you are not imagining it. Evening fussiness is extremely common in the newborn stage and often surprises parents who expected nights to gradually become calmer.

Understanding why newborn evenings feel different can make this part of the day feel a little less overwhelming.


The Newborn Nervous System Is Still Learning Regulation

During the first weeks of life, a baby’s nervous system is still learning how to regulate stimulation, fatigue, hunger, and sleep.

Throughout the day, babies experience many small inputs:

  • light
  • sounds
  • movement
  • feeding
  • interaction

While each of these moments seems small, they accumulate over time.

By evening, many newborns reach a point where their nervous system simply becomes overloaded, and that overload often shows up as fussiness or crying.

This is one reason many parents feel that evenings are when everything suddenly falls apart.

If you’re in the early postpartum weeks and constantly wondering “is this normal?”, I put together a simple guide that walks you through what to expect — without the overwhelm.

Get the free guide

If you want to better understand early tired signals, you may find Newborn Sleep Cues Every Parent Should Know helpful.


Overtiredness Builds Up Throughout the Day

Another reason evenings feel harder is that sleep pressure accumulates during the day.

Newborns can only stay awake for short periods before becoming tired. When those wake windows stretch even a little too long, babies can become overtired.

Overtired babies often struggle to fall asleep, even when they clearly need rest.

Instead of becoming calmer, they may:

  • cry more intensely
  • resist being put down
  • wake quickly after falling asleep

If you’re unsure how to recognize overtiredness, Signs Your Newborn Is Overtired (And How to Help) explains the most common signals.

You might also find it helpful to understand Newborn Wake Windows (0–12 Weeks): What’s Normal and Why Babies Get Overtired, since short wake periods are an important part of newborn regulation.


The Evening “Witching Hour”

Many newborns experience a period of increased fussiness in the evening, often called the witching hour.

During this time, babies may cry more, want to be held constantly, or seem difficult to soothe.

This period usually happens in the late afternoon or evening and can last anywhere from 30 minutes to several hours.

Although it can feel worrying, this behavior is considered normal in the newborn stage. It often peaks around 6–8 weeks and gradually improves afterward.

If your baby seems especially unsettled during this time, you may find reassurance in How Long Does the Newborn Witching Hour Last? (And When It Finally Gets Easier).


Babies Often Need More Comfort in the Evening

Evenings can also be a time when babies simply need more physical closeness.

After a full day of stimulation, many newborns seek extra regulation through:

  • being held
  • feeding more frequently
  • gentle rocking or movement

This behavior sometimes surprises parents who expected babies to sleep more at night.

But in the early weeks, newborn sleep is still developing. Babies often rely on caregivers to help them transition from wakefulness to sleep.

If your baby seems to calm only when held, it may help to know that Is It Normal for Newborns to Want Constant Holding? (And Why It’s Okay) explains why this is actually very common.


Feeding Patterns Can Also Change in the Evening

Many babies cluster feed in the evening.

Cluster feeding means babies feed more frequently within a short period of time. This pattern helps support growth and can also help babies settle before a longer stretch of sleep.

For parents, however, it can feel like the baby is suddenly hungry all the time.

Sometimes it can be difficult to tell whether a baby is hungry, overtired, or overstimulated. If you’re navigating this confusion, Newborn Overtired vs Hungry: How to Tell the Difference (Before Everyone Melts Down) can help clarify some common signals.


Why Evenings Eventually Become Easier

The good news is that this phase does not last forever.

As babies grow, several important developments begin to happen:

  • wake windows gradually lengthen
  • sleep cycles mature
  • circadian rhythms develop
  • the nervous system becomes better at regulating stimulation

These changes usually begin appearing around 8–12 weeks, which is why many parents eventually notice that evenings slowly become calmer.

If you are wondering when sleep generally starts improving, When Does Newborn Sleep Get Easier? (A Realistic Timeline) explains what most families experience during the first months.


A Gentle Perspective for Parents

Evenings in the newborn stage can feel especially intense because parents themselves are often already tired.

After a long day of caring for a baby, it can feel discouraging when the hardest part of the day begins just as your energy is fading.

But these evening struggles are not a sign that you are doing something wrong. They are often simply part of how newborn nervous systems develop and adapt to life outside the womb.

Many parents look back later and realize that what once felt like chaos was actually a normal stage of early development.


Final Thoughts

Newborn evenings can feel heavier than the rest of the day because babies are processing hours of stimulation, building sleep pressure, and learning how to regulate their developing nervous systems.

While the crying or fussiness may feel overwhelming in the moment, this stage is temporary.

As babies grow, their ability to settle, sleep, and tolerate stimulation gradually improves — and evenings slowly begin to feel calmer.

Note: The information shared in this article is for educational purposes only and reflects personal experience and research. It is not intended as medical advice. If you have concerns about your health or your baby’s health, please consult a qualified healthcare professional.

How Long Does the Newborn Witching Hour Last? (And When It Finally Gets Easier)

Introduction

If your newborn cries every evening like clockwork — even after feeding, changing, and holding — you’re probably wondering:

How long does the newborn witching hour last?

Because when you’re inside it, it doesn’t feel like a “phase.”
It feels endless.

The reassuring truth?
For most babies, the witching hour peaks around 6–8 weeks and gradually improves by 12–16 weeks.

Understanding how long evening fussiness lasts — and why it happens — makes it easier to survive without assuming something is wrong.


What Is the Newborn Witching Hour?

The newborn witching hour is a period of intense crying or fussiness that usually happens in the late afternoon or evening.

It often includes:

  • Crying at roughly the same time each day
  • Refusing to settle despite being fed
  • Increased clinginess
  • Short naps or skipped naps
  • A sense that nothing is working

This pattern is common in the first 6–12 weeks of life and is linked to immature nervous system regulation.

→ If you want to understand how newborn regulation works, read Signs Your Newborn Is Overtired (And How to Help).

It is not a parenting failure.
It is developmental.


When Does the Witching Hour Start?

For many babies, evening fussiness begins around 2–3 weeks old.

It often becomes more intense between:

Weeks 4 and 8

This period coincides with:

  • Rapid neurological development
  • Increasing sensory awareness
  • Immature digestion
  • Accumulated overtiredness

→ If you’re unsure whether your baby is overtired or hungry, this guide may help: Newborn Tired vs Hungry: How to Tell the Difference.

Even if your baby seems calm during the day, evenings can feel completely different.

If you’re in the early postpartum weeks and constantly wondering “is this normal?”, I put together a simple guide that walks you through what to expect — without the overwhelm.

Get the free guide

How Long Does the Newborn Witching Hour Last?

This is the question most parents search for.

For most babies:

  • It peaks around 6–8 weeks
  • Gradually improves between 8–12 weeks
  • Often fades significantly by 3–4 months

Some babies stop earlier.
Some take a little longer.

With both of my babies, the witching hour eased around 15–16 weeks. I survived it — twice. It wasn’t nice. It was loud and exhausting and repetitive. But it ended.

That matters.

What feels permanent is usually nervous system maturation unfolding in real time.

A Typical Newborn Witching Hour Timeline

Although every baby is different, evening fussiness often follows a similar pattern:

2–3 weeks
Evening crying or fussiness begins to appear.

4–8 weeks
Witching hour often becomes most intense during this stage.

8–12 weeks
Many babies begin to settle a little easier in the evenings.

12–16 weeks
For many families, the pattern fades significantly as the nervous system matures.

Of course, some babies move through this phase faster and others take a little longer. But understanding this general timeline can help parents see that what feels endless now is usually temporary.

Many parents search for how long the newborn witching hour lasts because when you’re living through it, the pattern can feel relentless and unpredictable.


Why Does It Happen in the Evening?

Evenings are when:

  • Sensory input has accumulated
  • Wake windows stretch too long
  • Parents are tired
  • Stimulation peaks

By late afternoon, a newborn’s immature nervous system can feel overloaded.

Crying becomes the release valve.

It’s not manipulation.
It’s regulation.

→ You can read more about this pattern in Why Newborns Cry When Put Down (And What Actually Helps).


Is It Colic or Just the Witching Hour?

Colic is often defined as:

  • Crying more than 3 hours a day
  • More than 3 days a week
  • For at least 3 weeks

But many babies with evening fussiness do not meet strict colic criteria.

Witching hour crying is usually:

  • Time-specific
  • Developmental
  • Gradually improving

If crying feels extreme, constant all day, high-pitched, or painful, consult your pediatrician to rule out medical causes.


What Helps During the Witching Hour?

You may not eliminate it completely.
But you can soften it.

Helpful strategies may include:

  • Preventing overtiredness earlier in the day
  • Contact naps
  • Baby wearing
  • Dimming lights before evening
  • Holding upright after feeds
  • White noise or rhythmic movement

The goal isn’t perfection.
It’s containment.


Frequently Asked Questions About the Newborn Witching Hour

How long does witching hour last in newborns?

For most babies, witching hour peaks at 6–8 weeks and gradually improves by 12–16 weeks.


Does the witching hour happen every night?

It often happens daily for a period of weeks, usually at roughly the same time in the late afternoon or evening.


When should I worry about evening crying?

Seek medical advice if your baby has fever, vomiting, poor weight gain, or crying that lasts all day and does not ease.


Does the witching hour mean my baby has colic?

Not necessarily. Many babies experience evening fussiness without meeting clinical colic criteria.


Final Thoughts

The newborn witching hour stretches evenings in a way that tests patience and confidence.

But it is temporary.

For most families, it eases somewhere between 8 and 16 weeks.

For us, it was closer to 15–16 weeks.
It wasn’t beautiful.
But it passed.

Your baby’s nervous system is maturing.

And so is your resilience.

You are not failing.

You are in a phase.

And phases end.

You Might Also Find These Helpful

If evenings with your newborn feel overwhelming, these guides may also help:

Signs Your Newborn Is Overtired (And How to Help)
Why Newborns Cry When Put Down (And What Actually Helps)
Newborn Tired vs Hungry: How to Tell the Difference

Note: The information shared in this article is for educational purposes only and reflects personal experience and research. It is not intended as medical advice. If you have concerns about your health or your baby’s health, please consult a qualified healthcare professional.

Newborn Cries Every Evening But Is Fine During the Day

(Why evening fussiness happens and what actually helps)

If your newborn cries every evening but is calm during the day, you’re not imagining it.

And you’re not doing anything wrong.

Many parents search for:

  • “Why does my newborn cry every night?”
  • “Newborn cries in the evening but is fine during the day”
  • “Is evening fussiness normal in newborns?”

This pattern is very common in the first 6–12 weeks of life.

And there are biological reasons for it.

When a newborn cries every evening but seems fine during the day, it usually points to nervous system fatigue — not a problem you caused.

No one really prepares you for how constant newborn care is. If you’re trying to figure out whether your baby is hungry or simply exhausted, understanding the difference between newborn tired vs hungry cues can make those early weeks a little less confusing.

If you’re struggling with your first newborn, this is normal

Many new moms quietly experience:

• feeling overwhelmed by constant newborn care
• bonding that grows slowly instead of instantly
• pressure to “get everything right”
• confusion around newborn sleep and feeding
• doubt about whether they are doing enough

If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. These experiences are far more common than most people talk about.

What many first-time moms don’t expect

The early weeks with a newborn can feel completely different from what many parents imagine. Instead of a calm rhythm, many families experience:

• unpredictable sleep
• constant feeding
• emotional highs and lows
• a deep sense of responsibility that can feel overwhelming

Understanding that this phase is intense — and temporary — can help new mothers navigate it with more compassion for themselves.

If you’re feeling unsure about what’s normal right now, you’re not alone. I’ve put together a gentle postpartum guide to help you understand what’s happening in those early weeks — physically, emotionally, and mentally. You can find it here → your postpartum guide


Why Your Newborn Cries More in the Evening

1. The Nervous System Is Overloaded

Throughout the day, your baby absorbs:

  • Light
  • Sounds
  • Touch
  • Feeding
  • Movement
  • Interaction

By evening, their immature nervous system is saturated.

Newborn evening crying is often a release of accumulated stimulation. They don’t yet have the ability to wind down independently.

This isn’t misbehavior.

It’s regulation.


2. The Witching Hour Is Real

Many babies go through a “witching hour” — a predictable period of intense evening fussiness.

If your newborn cries every evening around the same time, especially between 5–9 PM, this is often developmental.

It does not automatically mean:

  • You don’t have enough milk
  • Something is medically wrong
  • You created a bad sleep habit

Evening fussiness in newborns tends to peak around 6–8 weeks and gradually improves as the nervous system matures.

If evenings feel impossible and nothing seems to work, you might also find this helpful:
[How to Calm a Newborn When Nothing Seems to Work]


3. Overtiredness Builds Up

Newborn sleep patterns are fragmented and biologically driven.

If naps were short or slightly irregular, overtiredness can quietly accumulate during the day.

By evening, cortisol levels rise — and crying increases.

If you’re unsure whether your baby is overtired, read:
Signs Your Newborn Is Overtired (And How to Help)


4. Gas & Digestive Immaturity

Another reason a newborn cries more at night is digestive immaturity.

Gas discomfort often becomes more noticeable in the evening. Babies may:

  • Arch
  • Strain
  • Pull their legs up
  • Cry harder after feeding

This doesn’t always indicate reflux or a serious issue. Often, it reflects a developing digestive system.


What Actually Helps With Evening Crying

You’re not trying to eliminate it completely.

You’re trying to support regulation.

Try:

  • Lowering lights before late afternoon
  • Reducing stimulation after 4–5 PM
  • Contact holding
  • Gentle rocking or rhythmic movement
  • White noise
  • Attempting an earlier bedtime

Sometimes nothing fully “fixes” newborn evening crying.

But containment helps.

Your calm nervous system matters more than a perfect strategy.


When to Speak With Your Pediatrician

Evening crying in newborns is common.

But check with your doctor if:

  • Crying sounds high-pitched or painful
  • Baby seems consistently uncomfortable
  • There are feeding concerns
  • Weight gain is poor
  • Crying lasts more than 3 hours daily for multiple weeks

Most evening fussiness is developmental.

But reassurance matters.

FAQ

Is it normal to feel overwhelmed with a newborn?
Yes. The newborn phase is physically and emotionally intense, especially for first-time mothers.

Is it normal if bonding takes time?
Absolutely. Many parents find that love grows gradually through daily care and connection.

Why does the newborn phase feel so exhausting?
Because newborn care is constant. Feeding, soothing, and sleep disruptions happen around the clock.


Final Thoughts

If your newborn cries every evening but is fine during the day, this doesn’t mean:

  • Your milk changes at night
  • You overstimulated them
  • You caused a bad sleep association

It means they are new.

Evenings are heavy for new nervous systems.

This phase shifts.

Not suddenly.

But gradually.

And one evening you’ll notice it wasn’t as intense.

And then another.

You might also find these helpful:

Note: The information shared in this article is for educational purposes only and reflects personal experience and research. It is not intended as medical advice. If you have concerns about your health or your baby’s health, please consult a qualified healthcare professional.

Newborn Overtired vs Hungry: How to Tell the Difference (Before Everyone Melts Down)

If you’ve ever fed your newborn, only for them to start crying again minutes later, you know the confusion.

Are they still hungry?
Are they overtired?
Did you miss something?

In the early weeks, it can feel impossible to tell the difference between a hungry newborn and an overtired one. The cues often overlap, the crying sounds the same, and by the time you’re trying to figure it out, everyone is already overwhelmed.

Understanding the difference between a hungry newborn and an overtired newborn doesn’t mean you’ll get it right every time. But it can reduce panic — and help you respond with more confidence.


Why Hunger and Overtiredness Look So Similar

Newborns don’t have many ways to communicate. Crying is their main tool. And whether they’re hungry, tired, overstimulated, or uncomfortable — crying often looks the same at first.

Both hungry and overtired newborns may:

  • Fuss or cry intensely
  • Arch their back
  • Pull their legs up
  • Clench their fists
  • Seem restless in your arms

This overlap is what makes the newborn phase feel chaotic.

It’s not that you can’t read your baby. It’s that their nervous system is still immature, and their signals are still developing.


Signs Your Newborn Is Hungry

Hunger cues usually appear before full crying. Catching early signs can make feeding calmer.

Common signs of hunger in newborns include:

  • Rooting (turning head toward touch)
  • Bringing hands to mouth with sucking motions
  • Smacking lips
  • Soft whimpering before escalating
  • Calming once feeding begins

If your baby latches and quickly becomes more relaxed — with rhythmic swallowing — hunger was likely the main issue.

But if feeding seems to frustrate them more, something else may be happening.


Signs Your Newborn Is Overtired

An overtired newborn can look almost identical to a hungry one — but feeding doesn’t bring relief.

Signs of overtiredness in newborns often include:

  • Turning head away from stimulation
  • Stiffening or arching the body
  • Crying that escalates with movement or noise
  • Refusing breast or bottle despite appearing hungry
  • Jerky arm and leg movements
  • Eyes that look wide, glazed, or unfocused

When a newborn stays awake longer than their nervous system can comfortably handle, stress hormones rise. Once that happens, settling becomes harder. If you’d like a deeper breakdown, here are the clear signs your newborn is overtired and what actually helps.

If this sounds familiar, you may want to read more about the specific signs of an overtired newborn and how to help — because overtiredness can easily be mistaken for hunger.


What to Do When You’re Not Sure

Sometimes, you genuinely can’t tell.

And that’s normal.

If you’re unsure whether your newborn is hungry or overtired, a simple approach can help:

  1. Offer a feeding once.
  2. If they latch and settle → continue.
  3. If they resist, arch, or cry harder → pause and reduce stimulation.

Try:

  • Moving to a dim, quiet room
  • Slowing your movements
  • Gentle rocking instead of bouncing
  • Skin-to-skin contact
  • Holding them upright and still

Often, overstimulated or overtired newborns need regulation before they can feed calmly. If settling feels impossible, here’s how to calm an overtired newborn when nothing seems to work.

You may also find it helpful to review newborn sleep cues every parent should know, since catching tiredness sooner prevents the overtired spiral.


The Truth: Sometimes It’s Both

Here’s the part no one tells you.

Sometimes your baby is hungry and overtired.

They may have missed a comfortable sleep window, become overstimulated, and now they’re too dysregulated to feed well — which then makes them hungrier and more frustrated.

This doesn’t mean you failed.

It means newborn biology is messy.

In the early weeks, feeding and sleep are deeply connected. And if your days feel unpredictable, it may help to remember that in the beginning, there is no real newborn rhythm yet.

Figuring out that connection takes time.

If you’re in the early postpartum weeks and constantly wondering “is this normal?”, I put together a simple guide that walks you through what to expect — without the overwhelm.

Get the free guide

Frequently Asked Questions About Hungry vs Overtired Newborns

How do I know if my newborn is hungry or overtired?
If your baby calms and feeds rhythmically once latched, hunger is likely the main cause. If feeding increases frustration, arching, or crying, overtiredness or overstimulation may be playing a role.

Should I feed or put my baby to sleep first?
If you’re unsure, offer a feeding once. If your baby resists or struggles to settle during feeding, reducing stimulation and focusing on calming may help before trying again.

Can a newborn be too tired to eat?
Yes. An overtired newborn may struggle to latch or feed effectively because stress hormones make regulation harder. Gentle calming first can sometimes make feeding easier.

Why does my baby cry after feeding but still seem tired?
Sometimes babies are both hungry and overtired. Feeding may not immediately calm them if they are already dysregulated.


Final Thoughts

Learning to tell the difference between a hungry newborn and an overtired newborn isn’t about becoming perfect at reading cues.

It’s about slowly recognizing patterns.

Over time, either things get clearer — or your baby simply outgrows the intensity of this phase. Usually, it’s a bit of both.

The crying softens. The cues become easier to recognize. The nervous system matures.

And one day, what once felt impossible to decode becomes instinct.

Until then, you’re not doing anything wrong.

You’re learning your baby — and they’re learning the world.

Note: The information shared in this article is for educational purposes only and reflects personal experience and research. It is not intended as medical advice. If you have concerns about your health or your baby’s health, please consult a qualified healthcare professional.

Newborn Witching Hour: Why Babies Cry Every Evening

There’s a moment in the day when everything shifts.

The light changes.
The house feels messier.
You’re more tired than you realized.
And suddenly — your calm, sweet newborn turns into a tiny, inconsolable storm.

They cry.
They squirm.
They refuse the breast… then want it again.
They won’t settle.
They won’t stay asleep.
They won’t let you put them down without crying.

And you sit there thinking:

What is wrong?

If this sounds familiar, you’re not failing.

You’re probably experiencing the newborn evening witching hour — a very common phase in early infancy.

The “witching hour” describes a predictable phase in early newborn development when evening crying peaks — often between 2 and 8 weeks — even in otherwise healthy babies.

It can feel relentless, but it is a known pattern — not a sign that something is wrong.


What Is the Newborn Witching Hour?

The witching hour is a period of increased fussiness in newborns, usually happening in the late afternoon or evening.

By evening, sensory input from the entire day accumulates. A newborn’s nervous system has limited filtering capacity. As fatigue increases, cortisol can paradoxically rise — making sleep harder despite visible exhaustion.

Evenings often collide with maternal depletion. Lower energy, accumulated stress, fading patience. Two tired nervous systems interacting amplifies intensity. Awareness reduces shame.

This is a stress threshold phenomenon, not a personality trait.

It often begins around 2–3 weeks of age.
It tends to peak between 6–8 weeks.
And for many babies, it gradually improves by 12–16 weeks.

For some families, including ours, it happens almost like clockwork.

Same time.
Same intensity.
Same confusion.

And no — it’s not because you “spoiled” your baby during the day.


Our Experience (And Why I Take This Seriously)

With our first baby, we had no idea what the witching hour was.

When the evening crying started, we thought something was terribly wrong. We rushed to the hospital several times. We booked countless doctor appointments. At one point, we were even referred to neurosurgery and did transfontanellar ultrasounds just to exclude any possible pathology.

Everything came back normal.

Still, the evening crying continued — intense, repetitive, exhausting — until around 15–16 weeks old.

And then, almost quietly, it stopped.

If you’re in the early postpartum weeks and constantly wondering “is this normal?”, I put together a simple guide that walks you through what to expect — without the overwhelm.

Get the free guide

With our second baby, we still didn’t recognize it at first. We rushed her to the hospital too. But this time, after thorough check-ups and excluding any medical cause, a pediatrician calmly explained what was happening.

“Witching hour,” she said.

She explained how newborn nervous systems become overloaded by evening, how cluster feeding increases, and how regulation becomes harder at the end of the day.

With our daughter, it also faded around 15–16 weeks.

That conversation changed everything.

Not because the crying stopped instantly — but because the fear did.


Why Evenings Are Harder for Newborns

Understanding why the witching hour happens can reduce anxiety dramatically.

1. Nervous System Overload

By evening, your newborn has experienced:

  • light
  • sound
  • feeding sessions
  • diaper changes
  • movement
  • interaction

Even calm days are stimulating for a newborn brain.

Newborns cannot self-regulate yet. When they become overstimulated, they often need help calming down. They regulate through you.

When they reach their limit, crying is often the release.

If you’re wondering how long this phase lasts, this guide may help: How Long Does the Newborn Witching Hour Last? (And When It Finally Gets Easier).


2. Overtiredness Builds Up

Even if naps happened during the day, overtiredness tends to surface in the evening.

Cortisol levels rise.
Sleep becomes lighter.
Settling becomes harder.

Sometimes what looks like hunger is actually an overtired newborn who has passed their sleep window.

Sometimes what looks like gas is overstimulation.

And sometimes it’s simply a newborn reaching their daily limit.


3. Evening Cluster Feeding Is Normal

Many newborns cluster feed during the witching hour. If your baby cries after feeding during this time, it doesn’t automatically mean hunger.

They feed.
Then cry.
Then latch again.
Then fuss.
Then want comfort.

This does not mean your milk isn’t enough.

It often reflects:

  • comfort seeking
  • regulation
  • preparing for a longer sleep stretch
  • biological closeness

Evening cluster feeding is common in the first months of life.


Why This Feels So Hard on You

Evenings are heavy.

You’re tired.
Your body is tired.
The house feels louder.
And the crying feels amplified in the dark.

This is the part of newborn life that catches many parents off guard — not the feeding schedules or the diapers — but the emotional weight of trying to soothe a baby when nothing seems to work.

If you’ve ever counted minutes until bedtime, wondering if something is wrong…

You are not alone.

And most importantly — you are not doing anything wrong.


What Helps During the Witching Hour

There is no instant fix. But gentle adjustments can soften the intensity:

  • Dim lights earlier than you think.
  • Reduce stimulation after late afternoon.
  • Use babywearing during the fussy period — newborns are wired for closeness.
  • Offer the breast without overanalyzing supply.
  • Step outside briefly for fresh air.
  • Rock or sway without trying to “solve” the crying.
  • Lower expectations for the evening.

Sometimes the goal is not stopping the crying.

Sometimes the goal is simply:
We move through this hour together.


Something That Changed My Evenings

With my first baby, I tried to “handle it.”

Clean the kitchen.
Fold laundry.
Reset the house.
Prove I could manage everything.

With my second, I chose differently.

I let the dishes wait.
I wrapped my baby close and moved slowly — or didn’t move at all.

Some evenings, I simply sat.

Yes, the house was wrecked.
Yes, the pink elephant was obvious.

But I stopped feeding the “mom’s OCD.”

Because I’ve learned something that evening crying taught me:

There is always a tomorrow.

But this phase — even the hard parts — passes faster than you think.


When to Seek Medical Advice

The newborn witching hour is normal.

However, contact a healthcare provider if:

  • your baby develops a fever
  • crying is unusually high-pitched or persistent
  • feeding is refused completely
  • you notice symptoms that feel concerning
  • your parental instinct says something is not right

Trust that instinct. You know your baby best.


Final Thoughts

The evening witching hour does not mean:

  • your baby is sick
  • your milk is insufficient
  • you created bad habits
  • you are failing

It means your baby is new.

And their nervous system is still learning how to transition from day to night.

For many babies, this phase improves around 12–16 weeks.

One evening, you’ll realize it wasn’t as intense anymore.

And you won’t remember exactly when it changed.

If tonight feels heavy, breathe.

You are not alone in the dark.
And this is not forever.

Note: The information shared in this article is for educational purposes only and reflects personal experience and research. It is not intended as medical advice. If you have concerns about your health or your baby’s health, please consult a qualified healthcare professional.

A Gentle Newborn Day (When There Is No Schedule)

I’ve been meaning to write this post for a while.
Not because I didn’t know what to say — but because living it every day makes it strangely hard to explain.

Everyone talks about newborn routines. Wake windows. Schedules. “Good days” and “bad days.”
But when you’re actually inside the newborn phase, most days don’t feel like they follow any kind of plan at all.

They blur.
They repeat.
They stretch and fold into each other.

And if you’re waiting for a clear rhythm to appear before you feel like you’re doing okay — this post is for you.

Because the truth is: a newborn day doesn’t need a schedule to be gentle, healthy, or right.


Why Newborns Don’t Have Schedules (And Aren’t Meant To)

Newborns aren’t being unpredictable.
They’re being newborns.

Their nervous systems are still learning how to exist outside the womb. Hunger, comfort, safety, connection — these needs all feel the same to them. There’s no internal clock, no understanding of “later,” no ability to separate feeding from soothing from closeness or recognize early sleep cues.

In the early weeks, circadian signaling between the brain and body is still immature. Melatonin production rises slowly. Sleep cycles are short and fragmented. Feeding patterns are driven by growth velocity and regulation needs — not by social clock structures.

Unpredictability is neurological.

What looks like randomness is actually biology doing exactly what it’s supposed to do.

This is why newborn schedules often feel impossible in the early weeks. Not because you’re missing something — but because there isn’t anything to impose yet.

There is no rhythm because the rhythm is still forming.

And that’s okay.


What a Gentle Newborn Day Actually Looks Like

A gentle newborn day doesn’t run on time.
It runs on needs.

It often looks something like this:

You wake up — maybe because your baby woke, maybe because they never really slept deeply in the first place. You feed them. You hold them. They might drift off. Or they might stay wide-eyed and restless.

You try a nap.
Sometimes it works.
Sometimes it doesn’t.

You feed again. You walk. You sway. You sit down even though you just stood up. You put them down — and pick them back up when your newborn cries when put down.

And then you do it all again.

If you’re in the early postpartum weeks and constantly wondering “is this normal?”, I put together a simple guide that walks you through what to expect — without the overwhelm.

Get the free guide

There may be moments of quiet. There may be long stretches where nothing feels settled, especially when a newborn becomes overtired. There may be one good nap that carries the whole day emotionally — or none at all.

This repetition is the structure.

Not hours on a clock.
Not a predictable routine.

Just the steady loop of responding to your newborn’s cues.


How My Approach Changed With My Second Baby

With my first baby, I used every nap to do something.
Laundry. Dishes. Tidying up. Catching up.

Rest felt optional — almost indulgent.

Now, with my second newborn (and thankfully my first in daycare), I’ve made a different choice. When the baby sleeps, I often sleep too. Or I rest. Or I simply lie still and breathe.

When things need to get done, I do them with my baby in a wrap.
I fold laundry while holding her. I move around the house while she’s close and content. Somehow, that closeness keeps her calm – especially when she’s overstimulated — and keeps me from feeling overwhelmed.

And yes — there are absolutely days when the house is wrecked.

On those days, I consciously choose not to feed the “mom’s OCD.” I see the mess. I acknowledge the pink elephant in the room. And then I ignore it. And probably step on a toy.

But I’ve learned something important:
There is almost always a tomorrow.


Tiny Anchors That Help (Without Becoming a Schedule)

Even without a schedule, many newborn days naturally develop small anchors. These aren’t rules or goals — just gentle signals that help both you and your baby move through the day.

Things like:

  • Opening the curtains in the morning
  • Going outside once, even briefly
  • Letting one nap happen in a familiar place
  • Dimming the lights in the evening
  • Repeating the same sounds, music, or white noise

These moments don’t create a routine overnight. They simply add a sense of familiarity and calm.

They’re not there to control the day — just to hold it.


The Emotional Weight of Unstructured Newborn Days

This part doesn’t get talked about enough.

Unstructured days with a newborn can feel surprisingly heavy. You might feel bored and overwhelmed at the same time. Tired, but unable to fully rest. Grateful — and still longing for something to feel easier.

It’s common to wonder if you should be doing more. Or differently. Or better.

But feeling unsettled doesn’t mean something is wrong.

Newborn care is repetitive by nature. There’s very little feedback, very little closure, and almost no visible “progress” from one day to the next. That can be mentally exhausting — especially if you’re someone who usually finds comfort in routines and productivity.

When days lack pattern, many mothers feel psychologically unmoored. Humans regulate through predictability. Without structure, anxiety can rise — not because you lack competence, but because your nervous system prefers rhythm.

Postpartum rarely provides it early on.

Nothing about that makes you ungrateful.
It makes you human.


When to Stop Trying to “Fix” the Day

Some days don’t need improving.
They need accepting.

If your baby was fed, held, and kept safe — the day did its job. Even if nothing else happened. Even if the laundry stayed untouched. Even if the naps never came together the way you hoped.

Success in the newborn phase is quiet. It doesn’t look impressive. And it doesn’t need to.

Not every day is meant to feel good. Some are simply meant to pass.


Final Thoughts

There will come a time when your days start to organize themselves. Not suddenly, and not because you forced it — but because your baby grows.

Until then, a gentle newborn day isn’t about schedules or productivity.
It’s about responsiveness, rest, and letting go of the pressure to “optimize” this phase.

You’re not behind.
You’re not missing anything.
And you don’t need a routine to be doing this well.

Right now, this is what a newborn day looks like.
And that’s enough.

Note: The information shared in this article is for educational purposes only and reflects personal experience and research. It is not intended as medical advice. If you have concerns about your health or your baby’s health, please consult a qualified healthcare professional.

There Is No Rhythm Yet — And That’s Okay

If you’re looking for a newborn routine, a rhythm, or any predictable schedule — and all you see is chaos — you’re not failing.

You’re just parenting a newborn.

In the early weeks, there is no real newborn rhythm yet. No dependable sleep schedule. No consistent feeding pattern. And that’s not because you’re doing something wrong — it’s because your baby is still learning how to live outside the womb.

Newborns Aren’t Meant to Have a Schedule Yet

Newborns don’t arrive with an internal clock.
Their nervous system is immature. Their digestion is still developing. Their sleep cycles are short and fragmented.

Hunger, comfort, and overstimulation often blur together — which is why many parents struggle to tell the difference between hunger and an overtired newborn.

In the first 12 weeks, circadian rhythms are still forming. Melatonin production is immature. Sleep cycles are short. Feeding patterns are driven by growth and regulation, not the clock. What feels chaotic isn’t dysfunction — it’s neurological development in progress.

Some days your newborn sleeps more.
Some days they barely sleep at all.
Some feeds feel calm and connected.
Others end in crying for reasons you can’t identify — sometimes because your baby cries after feeding for reasons unrelated to hunger.

This isn’t inconsistency — it’s normal newborn development.

Why Newborn Rhythm Comes Later (Not in the First Weeks)

A predictable rhythm only starts to appear when a baby’s nervous system matures enough to handle patterns. That happens gradually, not suddenly — and usually not during the newborn phase.

Before that, your baby relies entirely on you to regulate:

  • body temperature
  • stress and overstimulation
  • hunger and fullness cues
  • transitions between sleep and wake

That’s why newborn days can feel uneven and unpredictable. You’re doing the regulating for them, one moment at a time.

If you’re in the early postpartum weeks and constantly wondering “is this normal?”, I put together a simple guide that walks you through what to expect — without the overwhelm.

Get the free guide

When there’s no rhythm, mothers often feel unanchored. Humans crave predictability. The absence of pattern can trigger anxiety — not because you’re failing, but because your nervous system prefers structure. Early postpartum rarely offers that.

What to Focus on Instead of a Newborn Schedule

Instead of trying to force a routine too early, focus on responsive anchors:

  • feeding based on hunger cues
  • watching for early sleep signs
  • reducing stimulation when your baby is overstimulated
  • offering comfort without overthinking it

Many newborns resist being put down during this phase, and that doesn’t mean you’re creating bad habits.

These aren’t routines — they’re signals of safety. And safety is what eventually allows a rhythm to form.

When the Lack of Rhythm Feels Hard for You

And often, what makes this phase feel even harder is expectation.

We expect our newborn to fall into a rhythm quickly. We expect longer stretches of sleep, clearer signals, calmer days — forgetting that this is a baby who has been on this earth for only a few weeks.

It’s easy to compare, too. To look at other babies online who seem to sleep peacefully, feed quietly, and fit neatly into a routine. But social media shows a carefully edited moment — not the crying before the photo, not the broken nights, not the days that feel endless.

On top of that, many mothers hear well-meaning advice from relatives who simply don’t remember how intense the newborn phase is — or who raised babies in a very different time, with different expectations, different rules, and often very little support for the mother herself.

All of this can quietly build pressure. And pressure makes the lack of rhythm feel like failure — when it’s actually just biology.

Letting go of comparison, outside noise, and unrealistic expectations doesn’t mean lowering your standards. It means aligning them with reality — and with the needs of a newborn who is still learning how to exist in the world.

It’s also normal if you struggle with the lack of structure.

Some days you may feel calm and capable.
Other days you may feel overwhelmed, overstimulated, or unsure if you’re doing enough.

That doesn’t mean you’re failing.

Take small pauses when you can. Breathe. Step outside. Hand the baby to someone else if possible — even briefly. The newborn phase asks a lot, and it’s okay to acknowledge that.

And keep this in mind: with newborns, things really are just a phase. What feels endless now will change — often faster than you expect.

Looking back, many parents realize there are things they wish they had known earlier. This reflection might resonate: What I Wish I Knew With My First Newborn.

Rhythm Will Come — When Your Baby Is Ready

Rhythm forms gradually — not through control, but through maturation. And your steadiness matters more than a schedule ever could.

One day, without warning, things will feel slightly more predictable.

Feeds will space out a little.
Sleep will stretch a bit longer.
You’ll start recognizing patterns instead of guessing.

Not because you forced a routine — but because your baby was ready.

Until then, there is no rhythm yet.
And that’s okay.

Note: The information shared in this article is for educational purposes only and reflects personal experience and research. It is not intended as medical advice. If you have concerns about your health or your baby’s health, please consult a qualified healthcare professional.

How to Calm a Newborn When Nothing Seems to Work

Introduction

There are moments in the newborn phase that feel especially defeating.

You’ve fed them.
You’ve changed them.
You’ve held them, rocked them, walked the hallway, whispered reassurances you barely believe yourself.

And still—your newborn cries.

Once cortisol is elevated, it does not drop instantly. The nervous system requires time to metabolize stress hormones. This is why soothing can feel delayed — not because it’s ineffective, but because biology has a rhythm of its own.

When a baby won’t calm no matter what you try, it’s easy to wonder what you’re missing, or whether you’re doing something wrong. But often, these moments aren’t about fixing anything at all. They’re about understanding what newborns are actually asking for when they can’t settle.

This post is for those stretches when your newborn won’t calm—when feeding, rocking, and soothing don’t seem to work. Not with rigid solutions, but with context, reassurance, and gentle ways to help calm a newborn when sleep and regulation fall apart.


When “Nothing Works,” It Usually Means Too Much Is Happening

Newborns don’t yet have the ability to regulate themselves. Their nervous systems are brand new—easily overwhelmed and still learning how to exist outside the womb.

When a newborn cries despite being fed, dry, and held, it’s often because their system has reached a tipping point.

This can happen due to:

  • accumulated stimulation throughout the day
  • feeding, handling, and environmental input piling up
  • tiredness layered on top of discomfort

What looks like a baby who “won’t settle” is often a baby whose system needs fewer inputs, not more.

If you’re in the early postpartum weeks and constantly wondering “is this normal?”, I put together a simple guide that walks you through what to expect — without the overwhelm.

Get the free guide

Trying multiple soothing techniques quickly—switching positions, offering more feeding, changing rooms—can sometimes increase overstimulation. When nothing seems to work, it’s often a sign that slowing down is the first step toward calming an overwhelmed newborn.


Why Calming a Newborn Isn’t Always Immediate

Many parents expect calm to come right after feeding or holding, but newborns don’t work on adult timelines.

When soothing efforts fail repeatedly, the maternal nervous system can shift into urgency. Urgency changes tone, muscle tension, breathing. Babies detect that shift. Regulation begins with slowing yourself first.

Their bodies need time to:

  • process feeding and digestion
  • adjust after stimulation
  • shift from alertness into rest

This is especially true for an overtired newborn. In these moments, soothing doesn’t happen instantly—it happens gradually.

Instead of aiming to stop the crying, it can help to focus on:

  • slowing the environment
  • staying predictable and steady
  • allowing the cry to soften over time

Crying while being held, supported, and comforted is not the same as distress alone. It’s communication—not failure.


When Comfort Matters More Than Fixing

There are moments when a newborn doesn’t need hunger solved, gas relieved, or sleep forced.

They need co-regulation.

This can look like:

  • holding your baby close without constant repositioning
  • slow, steady movement instead of bouncing
  • quiet presence rather than continuous shushing

Many babies calm not because something was fixed, but because someone stayed.

This is why contact—being held, worn, or close to a caregiver—often helps calm a newborn when techniques don’t. Newborns are biologically wired to seek safety through closeness, not independence.


Overtiredness and Overstimulation Often Overlap

When a newborn is overtired, their tolerance for stimulation drops sharply. Light, sound, touch, and even feeding can quickly feel like too much.

Signs that your newborn may be overtired or overstimulated include:

  • crying that escalates instead of easing
  • stiffening or arching while being held
  • difficulty settling despite familiar comfort

In these moments, calming an overstimulated newborn often starts with reducing input:

  • dimming lights
  • lowering voices
  • slowing movement
  • limiting caregiver hand-offs

Sometimes calm comes after the crying—not before it.


What Can Help When You’ve Tried Everything

There’s no single way to calm a newborn, but many parents find relief in choosing one gentle approach and staying with it instead of switching strategies rapidly.

This might include:

  • holding your baby upright in a quiet space
  • allowing crying while staying physically present
  • stepping outside briefly for fresh air
  • focusing on slow, steady rhythm and breathing

The goal isn’t to silence your baby—it’s to help their nervous system feel supported.


Final Thoughts

When nothing seems to work, it doesn’t mean you’re doing something wrong—or that your baby is unusually difficult.

More often, it means your newborn is still learning how to regulate their body and nervous system. Crying is part of that process. And supporting a baby through it can be deeply demanding on you, too.

Some days will feel heavy. Some days you’ll need to pause, breathe, and remind yourself that this stage isn’t permanent. With newborns, so much of what feels overwhelming is just a phase—one that shifts and softens with time, often before you realize it has.

Calm doesn’t always arrive quickly. Sometimes it arrives because you stayed. And sometimes it arrives because you gave yourself permission to rest for a moment.

Both matter.

Note: The information shared in this article is for educational purposes only and reflects personal experience and research. It is not intended as medical advice. If you have concerns about your health or your baby’s health, please consult a qualified healthcare professional.