Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don't need your child to wake up at a set time, how late do you allow them to sleep in. Would it depend on what time they went to bed?
I let them respect their body and sleep as long as they wish, unless there's a real and pressing reason.
I'm not a morning person myself, so I can totally relate to not wanting to get up early. For some people it's torture. We tend to schedule things as late as possible in the morning for this reason.
It is very much a question of not being morning people. No matter how early I go to bed, I still toss and turn till my body feels it's time to go to sleep. And if I have to get up late the next morning, it's very hard on me. Same for my kids. I don't see anything healthy in disrespecting our bodies' rhythms for the sake of a "healthy" routine.
Anyway, whatever floats your boat. You don't have to live my life, I don't have to live yours, and I'm very glad of the latter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don't need your child to wake up at a set time, how late do you allow them to sleep in. Would it depend on what time they went to bed?
I let them respect their body and sleep as long as they wish, unless there's a real and pressing reason.
I'm not a morning person myself, so I can totally relate to not wanting to get up early. For some people it's torture. We tend to schedule things as late as possible in the morning for this reason.
For us, it's not an issue of being a morning person, it's about developing and maintaining a healthy routine. We keep regular hours. We'll sometimes sleep in when we've an a big event the night before just like we sometimes have a lot of sweets/junk food. It's the exception, not the rule.
Poster you're quoting.
It is very much a question of not being morning people. No matter how early I go to bed, I still toss and turn till my body feels it's time to go to sleep. And if I have to get up late the next morning, it's very hard on me. Same for my kids. I don't see anything healthy in disrespecting our bodies' rhythms for the sake of a "healthy" routine.
Anyway, whatever floats your boat. You don't have to live my life, I don't have to live yours, and I'm very glad of the latter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don't need your child to wake up at a set time, how late do you allow them to sleep in. Would it depend on what time they went to bed?
I let them respect their body and sleep as long as they wish, unless there's a real and pressing reason.
I'm not a morning person myself, so I can totally relate to not wanting to get up early. For some people it's torture. We tend to schedule things as late as possible in the morning for this reason.
For us, it's not an issue of being a morning person, it's about developing and maintaining a healthy routine. We keep regular hours. We'll sometimes sleep in when we've an a big event the night before just like we sometimes have a lot of sweets/junk food. It's the exception, not the rule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don't need your child to wake up at a set time, how late do you allow them to sleep in. Would it depend on what time they went to bed?
I let them respect their body and sleep as long as they wish, unless there's a real and pressing reason.
I'm not a morning person myself, so I can totally relate to not wanting to get up early. For some people it's torture. We tend to schedule things as late as possible in the morning for this reason.
Anonymous wrote:If you don't need your child to wake up at a set time, how late do you allow them to sleep in. Would it depend on what time they went to bed?
We want our kids to have healthy sleep habits and routines, not get into the "up until 3 AM" routine.