Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are expecting the child to sleep for 13 hours straight?!? That is a very early bedtime. He is not tired… start bedtime at 8:30. Be firm and follow through.
No - I expect him to go to bed at 730 and get up at 630. 630 is the easiest start to our day and when he gets up when he falls asleep at 7/730. I tried earlier in case he was over tired. I can’t just do later than 730because I have other kids to get to bed and because 645 is the absolute latest he can get up for a not hectic morning (he’s a slow eater, slow to get dressed etc).
Honestly, the problem is you. That time is way too early. He is not going to sleep fast because he is not tired. You expect him to lay in bed for two hours until he finally falls asleep? Put him to bed later and change your routine. He can get dressed with a timer, get dressed the night before and sleep in the clothes, eat a quick and easy breakfast. You just sound lazy.
3yos need 11-13 hour of sleep. He needs to go to bed by 7:30 to be in that range with the logistics of our lives
Anonymous wrote:Do you posters really close the door and leave your 3 year old alone to fall asleep? Even my 8 years does not tolerate falling asleep with the door closed. She wants to hear me nearby and doesn't want to be in the room alone. Y'all have very stoic children to close the door at bedtime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here - yes melatonin seems to fully solve the problem. But it sounds like the side effects of long term use are unknown and concerning in some animal studies. But side effects of him having chronic sleep deprivation is also real. I will do melatonin when he’s sick and particularly struggling then try to wean him off and it all goes back to hell.
I’ve bedtimes between 645-730. He often doesn’t give up to 9pm either way
We were in a similar place with our 3.5 yo and we’ve been using melatonin for a few months now. In that time period we did identify a few health issues that probably stem from allergies (we’re waiting for the allergist appointment now), and sleep through the night seems to have improved. Breathing was definitely an issue, which we didn’t realize. So he was overtired because he wasn’t sleeping well at night.
We’re planning to try stopping the melatonin again starting next weekend now that the health issues seem to be under control. Our pediatrician recommended a sleep study as the next step if the old behaviors return.
We also have an older kid who sleeps fine, and though I think there was some separation anxiety with the 3yo, he did not settle with us in the room and often did not come out of the room - just stayed in and changed clothes a million times, tried to climb the furniture, pulled everything out of drawers and shelves, stripped sheets off the bed…. Anything to not sleep.
All that to say, it might be time to talk to your pediatrician if you haven’t don’t that already.
Also we tried adjusting bedtime later and he just kept himself up later. He was also acting very sleepy during the day, and his behavior was atrocious by late afternoon. He often put his head on the table at dinner. These are things that helped us realize that the issue was not too early bedtime - it was not enough sleep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here - yes melatonin seems to fully solve the problem. But it sounds like the side effects of long term use are unknown and concerning in some animal studies. But side effects of him having chronic sleep deprivation is also real. I will do melatonin when he’s sick and particularly struggling then try to wean him off and it all goes back to hell.
I’ve bedtimes between 645-730. He often doesn’t give up to 9pm either way
We were in a similar place with our 3.5 yo and we’ve been using melatonin for a few months now. In that time period we did identify a few health issues that probably stem from allergies (we’re waiting for the allergist appointment now), and sleep through the night seems to have improved. Breathing was definitely an issue, which we didn’t realize. So he was overtired because he wasn’t sleeping well at night.
We’re planning to try stopping the melatonin again starting next weekend now that the health issues seem to be under control. Our pediatrician recommended a sleep study as the next step if the old behaviors return.
We also have an older kid who sleeps fine, and though I think there was some separation anxiety with the 3yo, he did not settle with us in the room and often did not come out of the room - just stayed in and changed clothes a million times, tried to climb the furniture, pulled everything out of drawers and shelves, stripped sheets off the bed…. Anything to not sleep.
All that to say, it might be time to talk to your pediatrician if you haven’t don’t that already.
Anonymous wrote:Op here - yes melatonin seems to fully solve the problem. But it sounds like the side effects of long term use are unknown and concerning in some animal studies. But side effects of him having chronic sleep deprivation is also real. I will do melatonin when he’s sick and particularly struggling then try to wean him off and it all goes back to hell.
I’ve bedtimes between 645-730. He often doesn’t give up to 9pm either way
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are expecting the child to sleep for 13 hours straight?!? That is a very early bedtime. He is not tired… start bedtime at 8:30. Be firm and follow through.
No - I expect him to go to bed at 730 and get up at 630. 630 is the easiest start to our day and when he gets up when he falls asleep at 7/730. I tried earlier in case he was over tired. I can’t just do later than 730because I have other kids to get to bed and because 645 is the absolute latest he can get up for a not hectic morning (he’s a slow eater, slow to get dressed etc).
Honestly, the problem is you. That time is way too early. He is not going to sleep fast because he is not tired. You expect him to lay in bed for two hours until he finally falls asleep? Put him to bed later and change your routine. He can get dressed with a timer, get dressed the night before and sleep in the clothes, eat a quick and easy breakfast. You just sound lazy.
3yos need 11-13 hour of sleep. He needs to go to bed by 7:30 to be in that range with the logistics of our lives
Anonymous wrote:Do you posters really close the door and leave your 3 year old alone to fall asleep? Even my 8 years does not tolerate falling asleep with the door closed. She wants to hear me nearby and doesn't want to be in the room alone. Y'all have very stoic children to close the door at bedtime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are expecting the child to sleep for 13 hours straight?!? That is a very early bedtime. He is not tired… start bedtime at 8:30. Be firm and follow through.
No - I expect him to go to bed at 730 and get up at 630. 630 is the easiest start to our day and when he gets up when he falls asleep at 7/730. I tried earlier in case he was over tired. I can’t just do later than 730because I have other kids to get to bed and because 645 is the absolute latest he can get up for a not hectic morning (he’s a slow eater, slow to get dressed etc).
Honestly, the problem is you. That time is way too early. He is not going to sleep fast because he is not tired. You expect him to lay in bed for two hours until he finally falls asleep? Put him to bed later and change your routine. He can get dressed with a timer, get dressed the night before and sleep in the clothes, eat a quick and easy breakfast. You just sound lazy.
3yos need 11-13 hour of sleep. He needs to go to bed by 7:30 to be in that range with the logistics of our lives
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are expecting the child to sleep for 13 hours straight?!? That is a very early bedtime. He is not tired… start bedtime at 8:30. Be firm and follow through.
No - I expect him to go to bed at 730 and get up at 630. 630 is the easiest start to our day and when he gets up when he falls asleep at 7/730. I tried earlier in case he was over tired. I can’t just do later than 730because I have other kids to get to bed and because 645 is the absolute latest he can get up for a not hectic morning (he’s a slow eater, slow to get dressed etc).
Honestly, the problem is you. That time is way too early. He is not going to sleep fast because he is not tired. You expect him to lay in bed for two hours until he finally falls asleep? Put him to bed later and change your routine. He can get dressed with a timer, get dressed the night before and sleep in the clothes, eat a quick and easy breakfast. You just sound lazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are expecting the child to sleep for 13 hours straight?!? That is a very early bedtime. He is not tired… start bedtime at 8:30. Be firm and follow through.
No - I expect him to go to bed at 730 and get up at 630. 630 is the easiest start to our day and when he gets up when he falls asleep at 7/730. I tried earlier in case he was over tired. I can’t just do later than 730because I have other kids to get to bed and because 645 is the absolute latest he can get up for a not hectic morning (he’s a slow eater, slow to get dressed etc).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are expecting the child to sleep for 13 hours straight?!? That is a very early bedtime. He is not tired… start bedtime at 8:30. Be firm and follow through.
No - I expect him to go to bed at 730 and get up at 630. 630 is the easiest start to our day and when he gets up when he falls asleep at 7/730. I tried earlier in case he was over tired. I can’t just do later than 730because I have other kids to get to bed and because 645 is the absolute latest he can get up for a not hectic morning (he’s a slow eater, slow to get dressed etc).