Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like kids need their own rooms if possible. Every kid has their own sleep patterns and sleep is very important while kids are growing. My kids naturally all get up at different times. If they were all in the same room, my early riser would wake the others. Then they’d have less sleep and be cranky. I would never put my kids in the same room if I could avoid it.
I disagree 100%. Sleep patterns change, should change, and change again in children. They should learn to naturally adjust to other siblings. It makes zero sense o me to give kids their own rooms within a family and then thrust them into sharing a room with a stranger in college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m two years younger than my brother and we shared a room from when I was about 3 to when he left for college. We got along for better or worse but once we were a little older we definitely forged a really strong bond. I highly recommend it.
Looking back, obviously there was lots of petty stupid stuff that went between us as a natural consequence of sharing the same space.. I’m sure that was hard on my parents. It didn’t help that part of the reason we shared a room was because we didn’t have the means of a lot of other families where we grew up.
My brother died a month ago after a short and sudden bout with cancer. He was in his mid 30s. I feel like I’ve lost a piece of myself. But I’m more glad now that I had all that time to be so close to him. If you count the hours we were asleep, I spent more time with him than anyone else in either of our lives. That’s tough to beat.
I am so sorry for your loss, PP.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like kids need their own rooms if possible. Every kid has their own sleep patterns and sleep is very important while kids are growing. My kids naturally all get up at different times. If they were all in the same room, my early riser would wake the others. Then they’d have less sleep and be cranky. I would never put my kids in the same room if I could avoid it.
Anonymous wrote:My boys are 19 months apart and we just recently moved into a new house where they will be sharing a room. With everything closed, we haven't been able to buy them a new bed (DS2 was still in a toddler bed at our old house and we gave it to a friend) so they've been sleeping together in DS1's full size bed and have been loving it. They are 3 and 5. They've actually been keeping one another occupied in their room for about 20 minutes or so every morning which buys DH and I a few more minutes of sleep. They're both early risers (have always woken up by 6:15am) so it's pretty nice getting an extra 20 minutes!
Anonymous wrote:I feel like kids need their own rooms if possible. Every kid has their own sleep patterns and sleep is very important while kids are growing. My kids naturally all get up at different times. If they were all in the same room, my early riser would wake the others. Then they’d have less sleep and be cranky. I would never put my kids in the same room if I could avoid it.
Anonymous wrote:I’m two years younger than my brother and we shared a room from when I was about 3 to when he left for college. We got along for better or worse but once we were a little older we definitely forged a really strong bond. I highly recommend it.
Looking back, obviously there was lots of petty stupid stuff that went between us as a natural consequence of sharing the same space.. I’m sure that was hard on my parents. It didn’t help that part of the reason we shared a room was because we didn’t have the means of a lot of other families where we grew up.
My brother died a month ago after a short and sudden bout with cancer. He was in his mid 30s. I feel like I’ve lost a piece of myself. But I’m more glad now that I had all that time to be so close to him. If you count the hours we were asleep, I spent more time with him than anyone else in either of our lives. That’s tough to beat.
Anonymous wrote:I shared a room with my sister (who is four years older than me) until I was in high school. She was very, ahem, fast...? Once I was about 11 or 12 it got really, really hard. Constant personality clashing. She eventually started just sleeping on the couch until she went away to college. Don’t do it to your kids