Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like electronics are causing part of the problem.
I would suggest turning off all electronics at dinnertime. If there are fewer distractions, there will be less pushback for bedtime.
Exactly.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like electronics are causing part of the problem.
I would suggest turning off all electronics at dinnertime. If there are fewer distractions, there will be less pushback for bedtime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A nine year old has become a tyrant and ruling the house at night, which is terrible for her parents, but worse for her. First, don’t give her any options and don’t let her choose anymore. You are the parents and you are responsible to put boundaries in place for your child to live in; going to bed at a reasonable hour and respect for others‘ time and rest are two very basic ones. Second, pick a time (not unreasonably early, maybe an hour before she is falling asleep now) and say: this is bedtime. You may pick a book and read quietly, but you may not leave this bed after this time. If she gets out (which she will), walk her back. Then do it again and again and again and again, until she understands you are no longer negotiating this and it’s not a fun game anymore. You can’t force another human being to sleep, but you can make rules that they stay in bed.
But op said her dd is strong willed. What is op and her dh to do? She is bouncing off their bed at 11pm! Poor people, so tired. Must try CBD, melatonin, Nyquil, Benadryl, Valium, and get an eval for the poor child!
They can not allow her into their room. No bouncing on beds or there are consequences and things taken away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A nine year old has become a tyrant and ruling the house at night, which is terrible for her parents, but worse for her. First, don’t give her any options and don’t let her choose anymore. You are the parents and you are responsible to put boundaries in place for your child to live in; going to bed at a reasonable hour and respect for others‘ time and rest are two very basic ones. Second, pick a time (not unreasonably early, maybe an hour before she is falling asleep now) and say: this is bedtime. You may pick a book and read quietly, but you may not leave this bed after this time. If she gets out (which she will), walk her back. Then do it again and again and again and again, until she understands you are no longer negotiating this and it’s not a fun game anymore. You can’t force another human being to sleep, but you can make rules that they stay in bed.
But op said her dd is strong willed. What is op and her dh to do? She is bouncing off their bed at 11pm! Poor people, so tired. Must try CBD, melatonin, Nyquil, Benadryl, Valium, and get an eval for the poor child!
Anonymous wrote:A nine year old has become a tyrant and ruling the house at night, which is terrible for her parents, but worse for her. First, don’t give her any options and don’t let her choose anymore. You are the parents and you are responsible to put boundaries in place for your child to live in; going to bed at a reasonable hour and respect for others‘ time and rest are two very basic ones. Second, pick a time (not unreasonably early, maybe an hour before she is falling asleep now) and say: this is bedtime. You may pick a book and read quietly, but you may not leave this bed after this time. If she gets out (which she will), walk her back. Then do it again and again and again and again, until she understands you are no longer negotiating this and it’s not a fun game anymore. You can’t force another human being to sleep, but you can make rules that they stay in bed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here... we tried melatonin - can’t tell yet if it is helping. To answer a few questions from other posters -
She is very athletic and she does play a sport 3x a week plus has friends on our street she plays with. Screen time has picked up since the pandemic but honestly, who hasn’t experienced that?
She has always been a strong-willed, independent child. No signs of ADHD.
Translation, op and her dh let dd run the roost, and do not parent. Woman, act like a parent and tell that child to cut the crap.
+1 Also OP and spouse need to wake that kid up at 6:30 am or so and go for a walk or a jog or something. If the weather is too icky then all lights on and the kid MUST get out of bed regardless. They need to change her sleep pattern and they need to make sure she is getting more exercise. Add in some household chores to fill time and tire the kid out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bedtime was a nightmare until we started having DS take a melatonin gummy every night.
OMG. Why didn't I think of this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here... we tried melatonin - can’t tell yet if it is helping. To answer a few questions from other posters -
She is very athletic and she does play a sport 3x a week plus has friends on our street she plays with. Screen time has picked up since the pandemic but honestly, who hasn’t experienced that?
She has always been a strong-willed, independent child. No signs of ADHD.
Translation, op and her dh let dd run the roost, and do not parent. Woman, act like a parent and tell that child to cut the crap.