Sometimes on the weekends DSs nap schedule get thrown off if we are out doing other things. Today for instance, we went to my sisters to have lunch with my grandmother who is visiting for the weekend. DSs normal nap time is around 1pm but we didn't get home until about 2:30. That would have been fine but because he was so tired, he fell asleep in the car for about 20 minutes. Because of that, when we got home, he refuses to nap. I really needed him to nap because we are going later this afternoon and I didn't want him miserable. Almost 2 hours after we got home, he's finally falling asleep.
Anyone else have trouble getting LO to nap if they take a cat nap in the car? I know he's tired but he's fighting it and I don't how to get him to nap but I can't just let him not nap, ya know?
Any suggestions, ideas, other than always being home for nap time ?
Re: naps on the weekend
I perfected the art of getting him from car to crib without waking him up. It just became a necessity. If he wakes up after the car nap, I just resign myself to a crazy-cranky afternoon/evening.
Before we leave for whatever it is we are doing, I make sure his room is set up for naptime - paci in crib, toys out of the way, curtains closed - and I take off his shoes when we get in the car. That way, I don't wake him up by taking his shoes off when I get him out of his car seat, and I can just quietly carry him to his room and put him straight in his crib without making any extra noise closing curtains, moving toys, etc.
We don't transfer DS either. We let him sleep in the carseat.
On the weekends it is not unusual for him to take both of his naps in the carseat. he'll usually sleep for around 45min each time.
The couple of times we tried to move him did not work out so well. So now we just make sure the air is on in the car, or the windows are all the way down and one of us sits in the car with him.
Every kid is different. You can't force a kid to nap, but if you don't give them an environment they can nap it, you're essentially taking it away from them. And some kids are particularly sensitive to that environment.
After a few months old, DD would almost never fall asleep in the car, no matter how tired. She NEVER transferred (EVER) from asleep in the carseat to asleep anywhere else. And if she missed a nap, she fought sleep even harder (and she already was ridiculously good at that), so the rest of the day wasn't just tough, but a nightmare. It was FAR less stressful for me to make sure she had the right environment to nap and plan our day around that than to wing it and deal with the consequences.
I have many friends whose kids were the opposite, and - at least a few times a week - they could totally wing it. But their kids are different than mine. I respect that, while I can't fathom making the same choice that they did, their choice worked for them just as well as my choice worked for me.
Whatever works best for the family, you know?