Sounds like he may just be a a high-need child. My sister’s son is the same way, and it can be exhausting. Here is a checklist that is meant to aid in identifying high-need children:
Here are some characteristics of high need children and ways as parents to help them.
- Supersensitive
High need children are very alert to changes in their environment, especially sudden ones, and they usually dislike them intensely. They may be afraid to visit new places, meet new people, etc. They tend to thrive on a familiar, routine day, and anything out of the ordinary upsets them.
Physically, many high need children may have sensitivity to clothing. Tags, seams, synthetic fabrics, and other clothing items may be intolerably itchy to them. Don’t dismiss their complaints; while these things may not bother you, they can drive a sensitive child to tears.
- Intense
High need children are often very energetic in everything that they do. They cry louder, laugh louder, and play harder and longer than other children. Everything is a big deal, and they approach life with gusto. This trait has its ups and downs: while something mildly funny will be totally hilarious to them, something mildly negative will seem like the end of the world to them.
- In demand of constant attention
High need children want and need attention, and they will not be ignored. This is not a child you can leave in the crib to fuss for a few moments to see if he/she might go back to sleep; he/she wants attention. If the child wants you to hold him/her, he/she won’t be put off by books, toys, or someone else’s attention. You will find that this child has no compunctions against letting these demands be known, for he/she will let you know quite loudly.
- In need of physical contact very often
High need children, especially as babies, need a lot of physical contact. This may manifest as fussing when they are put down, needing to eat often and long, refusing to go to sleep, or any combination of the three. High need children will often sleep better in bed with their parents so that they can maintain contact all night long.
- Constantly active
High need children are often in motion, flitting from one thing to another, hardly ever sitting down and focusing on one thing for a period of time. This should not be confused with hyperactivity; rather, it is just “high energy†manifesting itself. As babies, before they can move much on their own, they will probably prefer to be walked, bounced, rocked, and more to fill this need. Make sure they are provided with lots of activities during the day, and during the early years don’t despair when they don’t want to sit still for books or finger games.
- Draining on your energy
All of that intenseness and high energy can be quite draining on the parents who must stay one step ahead of their child at all times. The need for constant physical contact can be very wearing for the father or mother who just wants 10 minutes of time to him/herself and never gets it. It’s hard to believe that a person 1/5th the size of an adult can have 5 times the energy, but it certainly seems that way when you deal with such a child day in and day out.
- Uncuddly
Some high need children do not like to feel “bound†by cuddling or being tucked in. These are the kids who don’t like to be swaddled, don’t like to be cuddled tightly, and certainly can’t stand the car seat. Some may like to be cuddled, but only on their terms.
- Unpredictable
High need children constantly surprise you with new things that seem to be designed to drive you mad. What comforted them yesterday may not work today. Their sleep patterns may vary drastically from week to week. It’s sort of like a daily poker game: you never know what you’re going to draw from one day to the next.
- Constantly feeding, especially nursing
High need children don’t generally fit into the 2 1/2 to 3 hour feeding routine into which most babies fall. Most want to be latched on seemingly forever. Some of this relates to their need for close physical contact; nursing fills that need quite nicely. They may also have a need for sucking (which is a normal baby need) beyond what they get from eating. If they don’t like pacifiers, they may turn you into a human pacifier, employing “comfort sucking†rather than real eating.
- Frequently waking up at night
High need children are often difficult to get to sleep in the first place, and then they will usually wake frequently during the night. Don’t expect them to start sleeping through the night by the average of 3 months, and probably not even by 6 months. While you can work with them to some extent, it may be 2 or 3 years before they totally sleep through the night.
It sounds like it could include your son. Often their behavior is because they don’t know exactly what they want and thus they want up and then find that doesn’t make them happy and then they want down and that doesn’t make them happy either. So, they get frustrated and cry. I read studies somewhere (I’ll see if I can find them) general children like this end up being quite interesting and intelligent (not oppositional/defiant) because they are so busy they take in a lot of input/stimulation. I don’t think your son has a personality problem I think he is just frustrated.