Dreadful book full of advice which runs contrary to NHS guidance. Ford claims that responsive feeding creates unrealistic expectations on the part of an infant, ignoring the fact that babies don’t have a rational mind or even a fully-formed consciousness until several months old and therefore cannot have expectations, only needs which are either met or not. Her solution to most things is to let babies cry, even from birth, so that they learn to “self-soothe”. Again, this assumes a cognitive capacity that babies don’t have. No other species does this with their infants, and although babies do eventually stop crying, this is because they operate on instinct, and instinct tells them that if they cry and no one comes they will attract predators instead. So essentially they are shutting down in order to conserve energy and hide from predators so they survive. Quite the lesson to be taught at 2 weeks old. And it implies that unless you follow a rigid routine of ignoring your baby you will have sleep problems for years. This is clearly not true. Reading this made me feel like a failure because my baby didn’t do as he was supposed to, according to Ford, and distressed me by requiring a most unnatural and illogical set of behaviours. Ford’s defence is always “people buy my books so I can’t be advising anything harmful.” This is like saying because people choose to drive fast, it can’t be dangerous.