Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Recently our 3yo ends up in our bed every night. She still has to get up to the loo which breaks her sleep and it's then she wants to come to our bed. Always had both kids in my bed at various times but now I'm ready to get her out if I can (I am tired and my back hurts)

Anyone else got any tips? Sticker charts? I am also thinking about putting her in to share with her sibling in the hope she won't get lonely.

She also sucks her fingers whilst asleep which I need help on stopping too!

Pearls of wisdom greatfully received.

How about making her a small bed up on your floor (old cot mattress?) and telling her she can creep in there and sleep quietly if she needs to - sticker in the morning if she doesn't wake you up?

In my experience, trying to 'ban' them just makes them more clingy, but encouraging very gradually separation, 1m at a time, is a good approach (and the main thing for the adult is having enough space to get some sleep!)

I second Fushia's suggestion, my then three year old did this to us and the solution was to make her a little bed on our bedroom floor. She slept well and we slept well. As she explained to us at the time, "I love you so I want to sleep in your room" ...they KNOW just what to say, dont they.. ;)


V

For us it was a combination of bribery and moving him into a big single bed. We bought him a playmobile toy and told him that he would get it if he sleeps in his own bed all night for something like four nights (make it achievable). We kept reminding him during the day and at bedtime and also when he joined us in bed at night. Eventually it sank in and he started staying in his own bed until morning. We still praise him every time he sleeps through the night (and he ia four now..)

snowboarder Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Bribery. My three year old is currently not

> allowed his advent calendar chocolate if he comes

> into our bed. I've only had to enforce it once.

> Not sure what my strategy is post December 24th is

> though...😃


I'm doing this with my son to get him to wear his eyepatch. No idea what I'm going to do after Christmas!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • A quick Google search found this service in Devon including several large print books and a home delivery service for those that can't get to a library.  Might be worth a look if you haven't already considered this.  Good luck.   https://discover.librariesunlimited.org.uk/our-services
    • Visited Dynamic Wines over the weekend. Great place, and good value!
    • Bit over-stated that.  Fully-paved front drives cause same/worse issues.  The hermetically-sealed, boundary-to-boundary hard surfaces you see all over Dulwich prevent natural rainwater from continuing to nourish the dirt/clay under the house.  Houses around ED have very very shallow foundations which is the root cause, frankly.  I just spent a year renovating a house down to the foundations and they barely exist and the brickwork is easily disturbed by any ground movement. Last time I checked, humans can't breathe their foundations can they?  But most humans require oxygen...  This foundations trope is the go-to bogey man.  Defo not having a go at you Dave, I'm sure you'd prefer more trees to fewer trees, but short-term vs long term decisions must be made.  Choices: Do we want a fully-paved, grey, barren landscape or greenery with all the health & beauty benefits?
    • Hi Sue - yes they are, just checked their website and they've received recent recommendations on here   
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...