Sunday, February 01, 2009

Mommy blogging today: Natasha said I should post about toddler sleeping stuff.

I have a kid that naps and goes to bed willingly and easily. Clearly there is a huge part of sheer luck in this because I've seen little correlation between loving, wise, firm parents and perfect kids, and I'm not always wise and firm. But we did luck out on a few things that have added to his personality to make for the easiest bedtimes ever.
  1. We introduced an attachment toy early on. This toy, known here as "sleepy bear" because his eyes appear closed, is a blanket-with-head style minky toy.
  2. We taught the sign for bear early on (bear hug yourself with arms crossed, and scratch your upper arms with each opposite hand) so he could ask for the toy pre-speech.
  3. We attached a pacifier to sleepy bear with a folded strip of fabric. The fabric loop goes through the pacifier loop and around the pacifier, so it can come off for easy machine laundering of the toy.
  4. We bought a second identical sleepy bear (and attached another fabric loop) when it became clear this was the favourite toy. Usually one remains hidden to be brought out very conveniently when there's contamination events or simply the bear has gotten too dirty from grubby hands.
  5. Since sleepy bear is always "sleepy", he has to stay in the kid's bedroom most of the time. We make exceptions for when he's sick or at difficult times like coming home in the car after bedtime.
So now, when we say "It's bedtime" his response is (whining) "Nooooo...." but the next phase is "Let's go find sleepy bear" and he responds "OK" and follows us to the bedroom. Sleepy bear is closely associated with sleeping and triggers him to lie down and relax.

He is too young to say recognize fatigue and say "I'm tired, I'm ready for a little nap" but he's easily old enough to ask for bear. If we're at home and his hands are clean, we ask him to go into his bedroom and cuddle with bear until he's ready to come out without bear (and if he comes out with bear we bring him back to the bedroom and ask him to say bye to bear before he can go out and play again). So yesterday morning he did this and actually fell asleep, getting a bonus morning nap which he doesn't usually need any more.

When we want him to fall asleep in a new place (traveling or spending an evening at friends') we just bring sleepy bear. We pull out the toy and any old blanket, and that's enough for the kid to sleep in a new room fairly easily.

Finally, this somewhat limits pacifier use without ruling it out entirely. I don't care too deeply, but there's something annoying about a kid that talks through a pacifier all the time. Having the main pacifier attached to a toy limited to the bedroom means that most of the time when he's playing he doesn't have one. We do have a couple extras on leashes for carseat or stroller travel where it appears to seriously improve patience levels.


I don't mean to give advice because all parents are different and all kids are different, but I did agree it was worth explaining how this works for us. Good luck!

2 comments:

Katherine said...

Awwww... he's so big now (and even cuter than when we saw him!) Congrats on having a good sleeper, plus the new job!

Aparna Kadakia said...

Lucky you. My twins are almost 3 now and I am still struggling with their sleep habits. I find this post pretty informative but I only wish I had known about this a few years back :-)
Hope you are doing well otherwise. I am pretty up to date on what you are doing through your blog.

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