Anonymous wrote:OP here. Ugh. This is what I was afraid of. I probably wouldn't care as much if my kid could hang with it, but she really can't. She's never been able to cope on no sleep, from infancy on. I don't want to not allow sleepovers, but the no sleep thing is simply so much worse for her than it appears to be for her friends, I really don't know how to handle it.
It seems like a courtesy to me that parents could at least make sure the kids get SOME sleep, but it seems I'm an outlier here.
Anonymous wrote:In middle school, they get a few hours of sleep. In high school, you’re just happy if they’re sober and actually stay where you think they are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you sound annoying.
Yeah. We might not get along. It's OK. You be you.
My only point here was to see what the odds are that I have any kindred spirits on the whole, "my kid needs sleep, is that too much to ask?" thing. Still pretty small sample size, but I think the answer is mostly yes, that's too much to ask. And that's fine.
I'm not trying to change the culture. But I wanted a gut check on this. I just have to adjust accordingly as others said.
I'll still run my house my rules. It's also good to give your kid that out, too. Easier for her to say "I have to sleep or my mom won't let me do sleepovers" then "I can't function as well as the rest of you on zero sleep." So that's one reason to be a hard ass. If it makes anonymous message board people dislike me I can live with it.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you sound annoying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Ugh. This is what I was afraid of. I probably wouldn't care as much if my kid could hang with it, but she really can't. She's never been able to cope on no sleep, from infancy on. I don't want to not allow sleepovers, but the no sleep thing is simply so much worse for her than it appears to be for her friends, I really don't know how to handle it.
It seems like a courtesy to me that parents could at least make sure the kids get SOME sleep, but it seems I'm an outlier here.
You can't make kids sleep even if you take away electronics. They could talk all night long. I make my son and his friend hand over electronics at 11pm but they still talk until midnight or later when I fall asleep. Why not just wait until the summer when your kid doesn't have much going on?
I might have to, but I'm just wondering whether it's fair/reasonable to ask for some sleep to occur. Seems the answer is no. And that's fine, I just need to adjust. Sucks for DD who doesn't want to be left out, but the fallout from the all night party is pretty severe around here. It would be nice if other parents would help encourage some sleep as well, but again, I seem to be an outlier.
As a parent of a tween/teen, I think you would know already that you can't make anyone eat, drink or sleep. How exactly do you want other parents to "encourage some sleep" other than taking away distractions like electronics?