+1 My youngest started joining his older brothers to play instead of coming to our room or crying for us from his room sometime between age 2.5-3. The older ones (7 & 12) know to wake me if anyone needs an adult. I usually wake up when I hear them playing and then go back to sleep for an extra hour. |
My 6 year old is allowed to get herself ready and play in her room by herself until we wake up, but refuses to do so. |
PP here. I leave her a little bowl of cheerios on the kitchen table she can snack on in the morning and put a sippy cup of milk in the fridge drink drawer. She gets everything and has a little morning routine to herself! |
I’m an early riser around 6am so it’s no problem for me to be up before them or with them - they are six and 3. I guess I just like being in the kitchen when they stagger in. If I’m not there they will come into our room so I might as well get up. My husband leaves the house at 6:30 so he’s up early too. |
This. Bowl, cereal and spoon on table; small pitcher with milk on low shelf in refrigerator, TV set to whatever channel you decide. You can't sleep until 11, but definitely until 8. |
Um yeah. I'm the PP you're responding to and we don't allow our elementary kid screen time, and never had, but I can't imagine there's anything to argue with here. Screen access has influence, as does personality-- that's all I'm saying. Perhaps your child can be safe and occupied without screen time, but not all can *at that same age*. Generally (not always) screen time lowers the age of "independent" play for any individual kid, but the age varies among kids anyway. Most kids can be more easily occupied by screens than other activities, IMO. As is implied by the many comments here talking about kids getting up and turning on the TV themselves. |
4 is totally fine! |
I've let my kid play quietly for an hour since he was under 1. It's no big deal. |
But he stays in the crib. |
Your post that I replied to seemed to imply that this was only feasible if screens were involved. I and other pps are saying that we have kids that can do this without screens. Clearly it won't work for every child but it works for some children and that is a good piece of information to have. Yes if you're ok with screen time (which I actually am) it becomes easier but it's not 100% necessary |
I have a dog ok to wake clock that has weekend and weekday settings. |
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Ha! NOW!
Age 4 is plenty old enough to color or play by herself until you wake up. You can leave some fruit or cereal for her at the table if she wakes up super hungry. |
I read PP as just implying that for most kids the age at which they will hang out alone without causing problems depends on whether you're OK w/ screens. I have to say, I think that's true. Most kids can reliably watch a screen for an hour alone before they can reliably do most other activities totally unsupervised for an hour. Not all kids, but most. |
Personality matters. Can she get herself a snack and "play quietly" independently at other times, like lazy afternoons, when you are in another part of the house getting chores done, or when you are making dinner? If so, then leave dry cereal and bowls on a low shelf or on the kitchen table and let her know what's ok until you come down at 7:30 or 8:00. Could be books and puzzles. Could be a screen you have set up in a programmed/protected way you are ok with. Make sure things that you really want off limits like messy art supplies are really kept out of her reach if you don't trust her.
Or if you really don't trust her, then you have to keep her awake and in her room only or awake and quiet in your room. Or you have to get up with her at her early time and work on the skills she needs so that you can work towards trying the go downstairs by herself for an hour thing in another 3-6 months. |