Getting Amy to bed
Thursday, 1 January 2009 20:23Getting Amy to bed has been a pretty exhausting and time-consuming process recently; for example, today it took us about 45 minutes to get her to sleep.
What's especially frustrating about it for whoever tries to put her to sleep is that she'll often be on the brink of nodding off, but then resist—by wriggling, sitting up in her bed, or doing something else. Seeing her close her eyes and start to relax, only to jerk up again so you can start over again for another 8 minutes or so, is rather frustrating.
Leaving her alone in her bed is not a particularly good solution, either; she'll either come out several times complaining she "can't fall-a asleep", start playing in her room, or get up to mischief that she can do in her bed, such as ripping wallpaper off her wall. And in any event, she doesn't fall asleep in time for her to get the sleep she needs, leaving her cranky the next day.
*sigh* I wish children came with an on/off switch sometimes.
no subject
Date: Friday, 2 January 2009 04:18 (UTC)Amy's too young to be experimenting with melatonin, but if she's still doing this at age 7 or more, it might be worth a shot.
I know when I was a kid, I didn't want to go to sleep 'cause it was boring. I'd much rather have been reading or watching TV (especially late-night news), even at age 3, than entering into a voluntary period of unconsciousness.
Remember, too, that time is relative. For me, at age 45, 8 hours of sleep is only 0.002% of my life. For a 2-year-old, it's 0.05% of her life; a much larger fraction, and therefore far more significant.
no subject
Date: Friday, 2 January 2009 08:29 (UTC)no subject
Date: Saturday, 3 January 2009 19:37 (UTC)Certainly I found audio-books excellent for keeping Raph out of trouble, in fact all three of mine were soothed by stories or rhymes on tape/cd.
I would suggest avoiding medical "solutions" as it tends to be difficult to predict the results (I have tried, believe me!) and long term not good. (A glass of wine for the parents, on the other hand...can help calm some of the frustration...)
best luck.
no subject
Date: Sunday, 4 January 2009 20:39 (UTC)First the on/off switch
Second the volume button
But until then we will have to wait I fear...
Jakob has tried something new. He has jumped from bed onto a table (next to his bed) all though he had a sleeping bag on, and then had a good look through the cupboard on the wall (with all our medicine in...) Fortunately he only ate a few globuli-pills (?)...