Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh, man, it was such a bleary time for us. I think what we did was to use the guest bedroom as holding pen for whichever kid wouldn't settle. So, if the fussing got so bad it was waking up the other kid, we would move the crier to the guest bed, and then proceed with the sleep training, etc. with them in separate rooms. That way we did not wind up over-consoling and building bad sleep habits, but the one who was not fussing could get some rest. It was definitely a rough time, but they did eventually figure it out. Hang in there!
+1
Just moved them into bunks at 6 and 3. The naughty or restless child goes into the guest room until they’re settled.
Anonymous wrote:Oh, man, it was such a bleary time for us. I think what we did was to use the guest bedroom as holding pen for whichever kid wouldn't settle. So, if the fussing got so bad it was waking up the other kid, we would move the crier to the guest bed, and then proceed with the sleep training, etc. with them in separate rooms. That way we did not wind up over-consoling and building bad sleep habits, but the one who was not fussing could get some rest. It was definitely a rough time, but they did eventually figure it out. Hang in there!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teach them to get out of bed and come to your room when they need you. If early waking is a problem, try a nightlight with a timer (it's not time to get up unless the light is on.)
Yeah this. Letting your kid cry and then eventually going in just teaches them to cry louder and longer, so it will probably take a while to undo what you’ve taught.
OP here - I realize that what we did while she was sick has created this issue. My question is whether we just let her cry to break her of it (consequently waking her sister) or is there something else we can do that avoids waking her sister.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teach them to get out of bed and come to your room when they need you. If early waking is a problem, try a nightlight with a timer (it's not time to get up unless the light is on.)
Yeah this. Letting your kid cry and then eventually going in just teaches them to cry louder and longer, so it will probably take a while to undo what you’ve taught.
Anonymous wrote:Teach them to get out of bed and come to your room when they need you. If early waking is a problem, try a nightlight with a timer (it's not time to get up unless the light is on.)