Hello, LS. MY first bit of advice is to stop giving one new food per week! It's too much, too soon. The longer you breast feed this child, the lesser are her chances to contract airborn viruses, sickness, etc. She needs your milk to help build her immune system! And at this point, all she should need if anything would be a small serving of cereal made with your milk before putting her down for the night. If she awakens, it hurts nothing to breastfeed her. She's an infant! Forget what the so-called experts say about equating pain with food. She is an infant! She will equate mom's breast with comfort, perhaps not even drinking much but snuggling for a bit. Honestly I don't know where people get these weird ideas. Babies know mom comforts, sometimes with the breast, sometimes without. Pain/food equations come when they are older if it is consistently used in place of any other form of comfort! Her tiny gums are in pain. I always used Baby Oragel and never Motrim, nor baby aspirins. The Oragel is rubbed onto the aching gums and eases the discomfort. The baby can then relax and sleep peacefully.
I jokingly say my baby girl was an Oragel addict! Of course, she was not. But she would stand in her crib each night (when there was pain in her tiny gums) and point to the dresser with a whining tone in her voice. I'd lift the tiny bottle of Oragel liquid and immediately she'd drop herself down to a laying position with her mouth opened wide! It was funny to see how well she'd learned that the little brown bottle eased her pain. I'd rub her gums with a hint of the liquid, close it tightly so as to keep her from opening it, then hand it to her. Just having that bottle in her hand was comforting for her. She'd fall straight to sleep and sleep throughout the night! Of course, as soon as she was asleep I'd remove the bottle and put it in its place on the dresser.
My point is that meanwhile there is pain going on, nurture your baby with the breast and a hint of gel on her gums! It has a numbing effect on the gums while the sucking of the breast is massaging the aching areas of her gums. Once the teeth are out, you will go back to your normal routine of no feedings through the night and she'll sleep well again!
Follow your heart where your baby is concerned. Nobody knows your child like you do, MOM!
Blessings to your baby girl!
denise maria----mother of 3 grown blessings (25yrs, 27 yrs, 32 yrs)my pride and joy!