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Newborn Crying: Types and What to Do With Each

How to tell hunger, sleep, pain, and over-stimulation crying apart — and the right response for each.

Crying is your newborn's only language. The great news is they're not random — there are patterns. Most parents learn to tell them apart between weeks 2 and 4. This doesn't mean you should decode them perfectly: it means that with time and observation, you'll start to anticipate the baby before they cry.

The 5 types of crying and how to respond

  • 🍼 HUNGER: rhythmic, repetitive, gradually escalates. Accompanied by rooting reflex (turns head). Response: always offer breast/bottle first.

  • 😴 SLEEP: soft and broken crying, with half-closed eyes. Intensifies if the moment passes. Response: darkness, white noise, swaddle.

  • 💨 GAS/PAIN: sharp, sudden crying, with legs drawing up to chest. Response: clockwise tummy massage, airplane position in arms.

  • 🌪️ OVER-STIMULATION: loud crying after lots of activity, visitors, or noise. Baby looks away. Response: reduce stimuli, quiet and dark place.

  • 😤 BOREDOM: soft whimpering, more like "uhh uhh", calms when picked up or repositioned. Response: position change, new face, eye contact.

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If crying is high-pitched, very different from usual, lasts more than 2 hours without calming with anything, or the baby looks different — call your pediatrician. Real pain crying sounds very different from hunger crying.

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Harvey Karp's 5-S Rule: Swaddle, Side/Stomach, Shush, Swing, Suck. In order. Works in 90% of cases.

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Always offer food first. 80% of newborn crying is resolved with a feeding.

🍼 80% of crying = hunger⏱️ Learn the pattern: week 2-4🤫 5S Rule: works 90%🚨 Crying 2h+ = call pediatrician

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mi·ma is a support logbook for parents. This guide is informational and does not replace consultation with your pediatrician. For any concerns about your baby's health, consult a healthcare professional.

Sources

  • · Harvey Karp — The Happiest Baby on the Block
  • · Dunstan Baby Language (Priscilla Dunstan)
  • · AAP — Why Babies Cry (HealthyChildren.org)