Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsmith123 wrote:I know a lot of kids sleep 11-12 hours over night, but my kids were always more like 10 - 10.5. So if we wanted a 6 am wakeup, we had to put them to bed at 8. We always heard and tried the whole "put them to bed earlier and they sleep longer" thing, but all that ever did was give us an earlier wakeup.
A typical schedule at this age is the "2-3-4" schedule, where kids are awake for 2 hours after initial wake up, 3 hours between naps, and then 4 hours before bedtime. But my kids never slept 15 hours or whatever that works out to, so for us it was more like 3-3-4
One thing I noticed in your schedule is that your DS is going 5 hours in the morning before the first nap. What if you tried to move that nap up to 9? And then the second nap around 1? Maybe he'll do longer naps and then will be able to last a little longer in the evening for a later bed time.
I agree with PP. A 3/3.5/4 schedule is probably more age appropriate. But don’t keep moving nap 1 up to accommodate early wakes or you’ll just keep that cycle going.
OP here. Thanks for the tips!! Yes, the reason I have been keeping him up until 10 is because I read somewhere that you should try to keep baby awake for 3 hours past the desired wake up time, not actual wake up time. Since ideally he would wake up at 7, we have been doing 10 am naps. Obviously not working so I'll start naps a bit earlier and see how that goes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, there are really great books out there by infant sleep experts.
"Happiest Baby Guide to Sleep," Dr. Harvey Karp
Polly Moore, something like "The 90 Minute Baby Sleep Guide"
"The Sleep Lady's Goodnight, Sleep Tight" by Kim West
I really should read some ... but every time I pick up a book, I fall asleep within 10 minutes. Because this is such a discreet question (though maybe it's not and part of some larger problems with our sleep schedule?), was hoping I could get some tips before doing a deep dive.
Anonymous wrote:OP, there are really great books out there by infant sleep experts.
"Happiest Baby Guide to Sleep," Dr. Harvey Karp
Polly Moore, something like "The 90 Minute Baby Sleep Guide"
"The Sleep Lady's Goodnight, Sleep Tight" by Kim West
Anonymous wrote:jsmith123 wrote:I know a lot of kids sleep 11-12 hours over night, but my kids were always more like 10 - 10.5. So if we wanted a 6 am wakeup, we had to put them to bed at 8. We always heard and tried the whole "put them to bed earlier and they sleep longer" thing, but all that ever did was give us an earlier wakeup.
A typical schedule at this age is the "2-3-4" schedule, where kids are awake for 2 hours after initial wake up, 3 hours between naps, and then 4 hours before bedtime. But my kids never slept 15 hours or whatever that works out to, so for us it was more like 3-3-4
One thing I noticed in your schedule is that your DS is going 5 hours in the morning before the first nap. What if you tried to move that nap up to 9? And then the second nap around 1? Maybe he'll do longer naps and then will be able to last a little longer in the evening for a later bed time.
I agree with PP. A 3/3.5/4 schedule is probably more age appropriate. But don’t keep moving nap 1 up to accommodate early wakes or you’ll just keep that cycle going.
jsmith123 wrote:I know a lot of kids sleep 11-12 hours over night, but my kids were always more like 10 - 10.5. So if we wanted a 6 am wakeup, we had to put them to bed at 8. We always heard and tried the whole "put them to bed earlier and they sleep longer" thing, but all that ever did was give us an earlier wakeup.
A typical schedule at this age is the "2-3-4" schedule, where kids are awake for 2 hours after initial wake up, 3 hours between naps, and then 4 hours before bedtime. But my kids never slept 15 hours or whatever that works out to, so for us it was more like 3-3-4
One thing I noticed in your schedule is that your DS is going 5 hours in the morning before the first nap. What if you tried to move that nap up to 9? And then the second nap around 1? Maybe he'll do longer naps and then will be able to last a little longer in the evening for a later bed time.