I'm 9 weeks pregnant and I maybe sleep a couple hours at night.my 2 year old has been waking up every couple hours... And tonight, he won't go to sleep... It's almost midnight and he is still fighting it!!! I don't know what I can do to get him to sleep through the night. It makes me fearful to have another baby. Ugh what do I do??
Re: I'm going to lose it!!!
My son is 5 1/2 now. He went through stages like that off and on until pre-k. What eventually worked for us was one of two things.
One, reverse psychology. Years ago I learned that because it takes far more energy to stay awake then to try to sleep, I started making myself try to keep my eyes open. Worked like a charm every time I had bouts of insomnia. We tried this with DS and worked. "Don't go to sleep!! You have to finish the book. Look at all the pages!" "Don't go to sleep! You wanted to watch the whole episode!"
Two, ENYA! She was a LIFESAVER!! Half way through "Orinoco Flow" and he was out!
ETA We also, when he got older, realized that just because he is a child doesn't mean he can't determine if he not tired or not hungry. We started respecting his opinions and needs as opposed to forcing what was best for us. If he was just not sleepy, we allowed him to stay up. He had to read, put on an educational TV show, or color. Something calm and relaxing in his room. Overtime this taught him that we understand and respect his wishes( not implying you don't respect your child by any means!) and he realized it wasn't a battle of wills. He didn't have to fight us. So he was okay saying, "hey, I'm tired. I'm going to bed early." Also, he learned to respect us. When we say, "Time for bed," he realizes we aren't the bad guys. We are simply doing what is best for him. We offer some flexibility to him, and in return he shows us that he can also be flexible with us.
Of course, all of our flexibility and teaching of independence was done within healthy reason. It's hard to get passed those stages, but in due time. Just have to determine what works best in your family unit. Hope I could help some! Even if it was just by understanding.
Also, a bath before bed with some soothing diffused oils and music. Classical or mood music while you give them a bath in low lighting (we got the dimmers for our bathrooms and its amazing). With being warm and snugly, then transfer to more warm and snugly-- its been a shoe in for us once we discovered how much of a difference that lightning, sound and snuggles makes.
Also, realize that this type of thing is a phase and that it WILL end at some point. Having two with the night wakings in the beginning is very difficult. I'm not going to lie-- I had 2 under 2 for about 3 months. Thankfully my DD didn't do much night waking, but she did get sick at some point. So I was bouncing between them with very little sleep myself. It sucks, but you make it eventually!
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So when he has not had the chance to wind down yet due to a busy day, homework, baseball, what have you..I understand. He is allowed a bit more time to get to that point. My child most certainly does not stay up beyond a reasonable hour just because he says so. However, I don't believe allowing him to stay up 30 minutes later to chill out is doing him any harm.
We are not so flexible that we have become lazy in our parenting.
After almost 6 years we have determined this works best for us. My son has a very healthy sleep schedule and pattern.
Edited to clarify, this is not a daily ordeal we stuggle with. That practice began when Kindergarten did and he struggled with all the new stimulation of his "big boy" world. Then had trouble getting to a relaxed state with the sun still out. Now he simply goes to bed when told. Some nights he likes to read by himself for a few and does not argue when we tell him lights out. Then sleeps straight through until the alarm goes off.
Demonstrating understanding and flexibility helped us get him into the healthy routine he has now. Good thing since the bus comes at 6:30!
The mom-friends I know that insist on a 7pm bedtime? I hear constantly how their kids are up at 3am or 4am and so they have to be up that early. So-- as always there is no one size fits all for any one family.
I just think most sleep stuff is phases that worked through vs. Something to be hulk-smashed into fitting for a parent. Practical reasons do apply (work/school) but it's been my experience that everyone feels less rested & more frustrated the more you fight to make sleep happen vs. Create at atmosphere that helps sleep.
So, I agree somewhat-- but not completely. I know I'm in the minority on my sleep beliefs, but nothing has saved me more sanity than to stop making sleep a battle (or food).
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