Anonymous wrote:7 is very very early. Why not push it back until 8 and she was adjust eventually. By 5 my kids could get up and play at 5:30 am.
Anonymous wrote:Definitely by 5. They grab a yogurt pouch and watch tv until others are up. They loved the independence!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:7 is very very early. Why not push it back until 8 and she was adjust eventually. By 5 my kids could get up and play at 5:30 am.
What’s the point of pushing bedtime back if kid still gets up at 5:30 anyway? OP didn’t say that early bedtime was an issue for them.
The point is the kid will likely adjust if OP gives it more than 2 days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:7 is very very early. Why not push it back until 8 and she was adjust eventually. By 5 my kids could get up and play at 5:30 am.
What’s the point of pushing bedtime back if kid still gets up at 5:30 anyway? OP didn’t say that early bedtime was an issue for them.
Anonymous wrote:7 is very very early. Why not push it back until 8 and she was adjust eventually. By 5 my kids could get up and play at 5:30 am.
Anonymous wrote:7 is very very early. Why not push it back until 8 and she was adjust eventually. By 5 my kids could get up and play at 5:30 am.
Anonymous wrote:My 3 year old gets up and gets dressed, occasionally makes her bed, and can go to the bathroom by herself and brush her teeth.
Anonymous wrote:Well before 5. At one point before DD could really operate the TV we just set it to Disney Junior before we went to bed so she could just turn it on and watch cartoons. She was never that hungry so we didn't set out a breakfast. We did have friends that set out bowls of cereal and room temperature Horizon milk boxes for breakfasts. You could set out granola bars or something. A 5 year old should can be pretty independent.