Five Sleep Tips for Those Troublesome Tots

Let’s face it, it’s not easy being a toddler. After all, they are busy acquiring language; they run, jump, and bounce boundlessly; and they make demands… lots of them! Not surprisingly, their batteries need recharging both day and night. Through age five, most toddlers require 12-14 hours of sleep daily and usually nap until they are between 3 and 4 years old. Even when they give up naps, many 4 and 5 year olds benefit from quiet time during the day to recharge.

Why so much sleep? Here are just a few reasons: getting adequate sleep improves learning and memory, strengthens the immune system, restores energy, improves moods and behavior, reduces injury, and can prevent obesity in young children. The list can go on!

You may be thinking: “I know why my toddler should be sleeping, but the kid is like a jack-in-the-box when I put him to bed. What can I do?” Getting toddlers to sleep can be tricky because they can refuse, protest, demand, run, climb and jump faster than you can say “lights out!”

Let’s get practical!

5 sleep tips for those troublesome tots:

1. Avoid the “crankfest” with a well-timed bedtime. One common problem is a bedtime that is too late. With their bodies in constant motion most of the day, toddlers need adequate time to wind down before an early bedtime. By the time they become cranky, they are already overtired; getting an overtired child to sleep is like trying to nail jelly to a tree. That’s because they get a second wind (when their bodies produce cortisol to fight fatigue.) To avoid triggering this response, make sure your toddler is in bed and sleeping within 4 hours from the end of his afternoon nap. To accomplish an early bedtime, wind down should begin 30 minutes before. Typical toddlers who nap from roughly 1-3:00 should aim for a bedtime no later than 7:00 p.m. If they skip a nap, then bedtime should come as early as 5:30-6pm. Every child has different patterns so train your eyes on their on their behavior to hit the right bedtime.

2. Ignore those “curtain calls”. He’s in bed, the lights are out, you have just left the room with a sigh of relief when the requests begin: “Mommy, I want a glass of water.” But most parents know how fast one request can turn into a litany of complaints: “Mommy, I can’t find my bear,” “Mommy, I’m hungry,” “Mommy, I can’t remember how to sleep.” Each Mommy call makes you hesitate until you give in to “just one”. But the demands continue and may escalate. The best advice is to ignore them. If you can’t resist, go to their door and say “I can hear you, but it’s time for bed, go to sleep” and leave. Let them know you mean business and don’t linger. Unreinforced behavior will eventually disappear.

3. Return the “runner” to bed, silently: As we know, toddlers can be fast, really fast. Just when you think you have successfully managed a calm bedtime routine, your toddler races out of bed. Even toddlers still in cribs can master this feat with the dexterity of a mountain goat on the side of a cliff. The solution is to take their hand and return them to bed as swiftly and silently as possible. Avoid saying anything; instead march them in silence back to bed. I have worked with families who have had to repeat this ritual more than 100 times before their child succumbed. So be persistent; eventually you will be successful.. The key message you are sending is “I mean it when I say it’s time for bed.”

4. Encourage independence so you don’t become “the pillow”: Just as you create a habit by feeding or rocking an infant to sleep, you can become a sleep “crutch” for your toddler if she needs YOU to fall asleep. If you make a habit of staying with her in the room until she falls asleep, then when she wakes up through sleep transitions (as everyone does), she will not fall back to sleep without you. And that’s the last place you want to be in the middle of the night! Instead make a habit of a loving bedtime routine with ample “you” time but then leave your child to fall asleep on her own – with any favorite stuffed animals, who will be more than happy to sleep with her.

5. Manage nap transitions: Most toddlers transition from two naps to one between ages 15 and 18 months. Some toddlers may drop a nap at 12 months or earlier, but don’t jump the gun if you don’t need to! Here are a few signs to look for to know whether your toddler is ready to transition: when they consistently refuse one nap (and consistently means over the course of several weeks, not several days); when one nap becomes much shorter (usually the afternoon one); when the timing changes for a nap (your otherwise predictable nap schedule starts to go haywire with naps throughout the day, and sometimes too late in the day). Transitioning to one nap can take a few weeks, or even longer, for some. One trick is to slowly move the morning nap later by 15 minute increments every few days until you reach a midday nap that begins between 12 and 1 and lasts about 2 hours. During the transition period, your toddler may become more tired as they lose some of that day time sleep so be sure to compensate with an earlier bedtime.

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After graduating with a B.A. in Psychology from Dartmouth and an M.D. from Cornell Medical School, Rebecca Kempton worked for several years as a medical director for healthcare technology and pharmaceutical companies before becoming certified as an infant and toddler sleep consultant and starting her own business, Baby Sleep Pro. With her three children, aged  five and under, along with dozens of clients nationwide, Rebecca has honed her sleep coaching skills. Using a variety of behavioral techniques, she customizes sleep solutions  based on what she learns about you, your child, and your family’s goals; Rebecca works with clients  nationwide by phone, video chats and email. For more information, email rhk@babysleeppro.com; visit babysleeppro.com and follow her on facebook.com/babysleeppro and twitter @babysleeppro

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