
Teaching Toddler to Sleep Before New Baby Arrives
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Dr. Laura,
First of all, know how much I appreciate and admire you and your wisdom
and your work. Our only son and daughter-in-love have a 21 month old (as of today) who
is not sleeping through the night and I'd love to impart your thoughts
to them. They are pregnant and due April 1 with another son and would
love to have this resolved sooner than later and are open to
suggestions. They say he has trained them to get up and soothe him in
the middle of the night with a bottle or simply holding him and cuddling
for a while. So now they are letting him cry hoping he'll learn to
soothe, figure it out for himself. I hate to keep asking how it's going
and I am concerned about the two of them getting enough sleep. They
both work full time and he's in a loving home daycare.
Thnx! M.
M,
Thanks for
writing. Many 21 month olds still wake up at night. There are no easy
answers, and your son's choice to have another child so soon when he and
his partner are both working outside the home fulltime has added to the
complexity of solving this problem, because the solution will not be immediate, while the job pressures are and the new baby will add stress to everyone in the family, especially the toddler. I will tell you my opinion, and I
hope it will help.
A 21 month old
is still a baby, and in my view needs parenting at night just as much
as during the day. The idea that little ones learn to self-soothe by being left to "figure it out for themselves" is
wish-fulfillment. Humans learn to self-soothe by being soothed. That's
simply how brain development works. When a baby or young child cries
and is soothed, he experiences soothing biochemicals and begins to develop the neural pathways to deliver those soothing neurotransmitters to himself for the rest of his life. His neurology organizes itself so that he does learn, eventually, to soothe himself. But if he cries and no one responds, it triggers his survival panic. That's because
nature has designed us for survival, and a 21 month old left without
parents nearby is indeed in danger of his life. Naturally, he panics.
If this happens
once in the context of a secure and loving relationship with both of
his parents, I would hope that it would have little effect, although
this is not a question science has yet answered. However, science has
made great progress in the past decade in mapping infant brain
development and forming credible hypotheses on the effects of various
parenting practices on babies. I think most researchers in the field
would agree that repeatedly leaving a 21 month old to cry will certainly
have an effect on the child's neural development. All the brain
research I have read suggests that leaving a little one alone to cry
will make this human more likely to panic in challenging emotional
situations, especially ones that threaten abandonment. (That means that
he would have a harder time than usual dealing with a romantic breakup
or a death, or even the rejection of being fired or not chosen for
something.) His tendency to get upset about little things will be
heightened and his ability to soothe himself will be compromised, which
could make for a more "dramatic" and "difficult" personality.
We know that with children who are preverbal, there
is less continuity in their feeling states, and memories are stored
differently. That means that while a baby who has been left to cry may
seem fine the next morning, he is storing up those experiences of having
been terrified, and they are still affecting him.
We
don't know exactly how, but we certainly know that children who are
slightly older who have experiences of feeling abandoned remember those
experiences as traumatic throughout their lives. We also know that fear
is at the root of much of the acting out that children do, including,
often, their angry and obstinate behavior.
So
while leaving children to cry alone at night may teach them to give up
on calling for us, everything I have learned has convinced me that the
cost is just too high.
In addition, it
has been my observation (and I do not have research to support this,
but I am convinced from hearing this from parents) that when both
parents work fulltime, the little one often needs more parenting at
night to feel secure. Kids whose parents both work full time outside
the home do tend to go to bed later and wake up more often. Many women
who go back to work after time at home report that their child begins to
wake up at night even when he had previously been a good sleeper. Connection is a critical need to a toddler, and he may be making sure he gets enough of it.
Does that mean
that your son can't help his little one sleep better night? No. Many
toddlers wake at night, but there are certainly ways to help them sleep
better. Here's what I'd suggest.
1. Realize that all humans go through various stages of sleep during the night.
As we
transition from one to the next, we awaken slightly. The eventual goal
is to help your grandson find his way from the light sleep stage back
into deeper sleep without needing an outside crutch to make the
transition. Outside crutches are anything that is outside the child's
control, such as a a bottle or rocking. It is true that little ones can
get used to a specific "crutch" and need it every time they awaken
slightly so that they can go back to sleep. For that reason, it is my
opinion that it is a good idea to stop giving toddlers over the age of
about 15-18 months milk at night. That does indeed train the child to
awaken, and it is also bad for his teeth.
2. Go gradual.
A child who
is used to having a bottle at night will be hungry for it at night, just
the way we are hungry at lunch. The best way I know to help him get
used to doing without a bottle is to gradually dilute the milk with
water so he gets less and less milk at night. He will probably begin
eating more during the day to make up for the lost calories, which is
desirable. Within a few weeks, he will probably not be waking at night
looking for the bottle, because he is not counting on it to meet his caloric needs.
3. Help him process feelings during the day.
What if the toddler still awakens, and cries to be held and cuddled, during the night? It is possible that this child -- like most toddlers -- has some big feelings he needs to get out. It's a big world full of new and often scary things that we don't even notice, from barking dogs to other toddlers grabbing his toys to separating all day from his special people. He tries all day to be a big boy and hold those feelings in. At night, he is delighted to see Mom and Dad. There is dinner and bathtime and bedtime, and it all goes so fast. Then, in the middle of the night, he dreams and all of his fears and worries come up. When he wakes slightly, they swamp him. So he DOES need comforting to cry those feelings out. Of course, he doesn't necessarily have to do that at night. Any time the parent sets a reasonable limit is an opportunity for him to tap into that backlog of feelings and let them out. Parents who understand this phenomenon and give their child a safe, supportive, empathic place to express his feelings by crying or raging in their arms during the day are often rewarded by a child who sleeps better at night.
What
if the toddler has plenty of other safe opportunities to cry, but still
wakes up at night calling for his parents?
4.Look at how he falls asleep.
It should be obvious that most little ones who are rocked to
sleep will want to be rocked to sleep when they wake up at night.
Similarly, there is nothing wrong with lying down with him and cuddling
him to sleep, but naturally when he awakens slightly during the night he
will look for the parent who has vanished. Gradually help him learn to
fall asleep in his bed without you holding him. Being in the room is
fine, incidentally, it is the physical contact that seems to serve as a
sleep "crutch" to help the child to the next sleep cycle. Fair
warning: this process takes a couple of months to do gently. It is,
however, well worth it, because the child develops the ability to put
himself back to sleep. All kids do develop this skill eventually, of
course. Parents who do this are simply helping their children develop
it sooner. Like any other time we push kids to do what we want rather
than what they want, we have to understand their point of view and be
patient as they get used to the idea.
In
my view, a 21
month old is young for this lesson. It's a lot to ask of him,
especially when he is about to have a new sibling. But as long as his
Dad stays present, patient, and understanding, your grandson will learn to go to
sleep in his own bed without sucking or
rocking or being held. There's a whole article on my website about how to do this:
Helping Your Toddler Learn to Put Himself to Sleep
5. Consider the Family Bed.
Let's presume the child has learned to put himself to sleep without the
parent holding him at night, and he has no other no physical "crutches"
outside his control
that he depends on to go back to sleep, such as a pacifier or bottle. If
he continues to awaken at night, then he is asking for parenting.
Parenting doesn't stop just because it is dark. Many parents solve this
challenge by moving the child into the parents' room so that it is not
a problem for them to parent him at night. He doesn't have to sleep in
the same bed, if the bed is too crowded to allow everyone to sleep
well, but most toddlers who sleep with their parents wake up LESS at
night, because they feel the security of the parents' presence. When
they waken slightly at night, they reach out and touch the parent, and
go right into the next sleep cycle knowing all is right with the world.
(This only pertains once the toddler is no longer waking to nurse or
have a bottle; those kids awaken more because they depend on the sucking
to put them back to sleep.) Even being close by on a mattress on the
floor usually helps the toddler sleep better because he knows the
parents are available, although he may want them within arm's reach.
6. Improvise to offer reassurance and still get some sleep.
If there is some reason they can't have the child in their room, I would suggest
that your son sleep in the room with his toddler for now. This allows the parent to respond before the child wakes fully so it is easier for the child to go back to sleep. It also eliminates the parent having to wake fully, so he gets a better night's sleep. Often knowing his dad is right next to him on a sleeping bag and a
camping pad (or some other temporary, comfortable arrangement) is so reassuring to a little one that he sleeps much better.
If his child does call out for him in the night, often a soothing word
will be enough to reassure him. This is a temporary solution, but it might be all your grandchild needs to get over this hump of learning to sleep securely in his own bed all night.
7. Think Night-time Parenting.
I understand your concern about your son and partner getting enough sleep. Unfortunately, we have done a disservice in this culture by letting them think it was normal for both to work full time with children at home. It is personally challenging, and there is no way something is not sacrificed. Many sacrifice their relationship, at least for a time; others sacrifice sleep; others, the children's needs, or they give up some money (or preferably both) by working less. My vote is for sacrificing housekeeping and money, but every family is different and has different circumstances. Spacing children closer together than two years is a risk factor for a reason; you simply can't do it all with each child. Luckily, I spaced my babies farther apart, but having little ones is a challenge for any family, much bigger when they are outside. It's also "usual" for the older sibling to regress and awaken more often.
Above all, make sure you are meeting the kids' needs now that they've got a replacement. That's the bad news. The good news is that kids can learn to sleep better following the advice above. Also, other than addressing the issue now, before everyone in the household is adjusting to the new baby, it's best if this stage lasts, meeting the kids' needs during those tough, sleep-deprived nights pays off. They feel loved and lovable, even on the darkest nights. I hope this is helpful to you and your partner.
Warm regards, Laura