Anonymous wrote:Weighted blanket.
Anonymous wrote:No nap and 9:30pm bedtime. Sucks for the parents but only thing that worked for my child. She was an awake baby even in the hospital. They said she was the most awake baby they had seen. At 3 she would be the life of the party at weddings. All the other kids would've crashed out by 10pm, and she'd be going strong having the BEST time until we left at 1 or 2.
Anonymous wrote:I’m
Not OP but my 2 year old does the same.
Honestly none of these suggestions seem that helpful, which makes me think that this is actually a semi-impossible problem to solve.
In my case, I’ve already tried night light/white noise/Tylenol (for molars)/melatonin/etc.
I’m totally open to co sleeping but my child never goes to sleep, he just wants to keep interacting/playing and will literally jump on the bed all night and never go back to sleep.
The sleep ticket or sticker chart would never work on my 2 year old. He’s only recently turned 2 and doesn’t understand consequences or rewards beyond the immediate moment.
So if we go to a doctor, what will they offer us? I’d be surprised if they have any magic we didn’t try yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much screen time are all these kids getting?
I'm OP. She watches about 10 hours of tv a day. Do you think that might be the cause?
What? 10 hours. How?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much screen time are all these kids getting?
I'm OP. She watches about 10 hours of tv a day. Do you think that might be the cause?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much screen time are all these kids getting?
I'm OP. She watches about 10 hours of tv a day. Do you think that might be the cause?
Also, did you breastfeed? And did you have a csection or deliver vaginally? Did you have an epidural?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much screen time are all these kids getting?
I'm OP. She watches about 10 hours of tv a day. Do you think that might be the cause?
Anonymous wrote:How much screen time are all these kids getting?