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14 answers

My wife and I had this problem and thank God we nipped it in the bud. Many of our friends did not.

Just ask yourself, when your son is 16, do you want him sleeping with you? Obviously not, so you have to break the habit sometime. Now, do you think it will be easier to break after 1 year or several years?

The time is now. Children learn to eat with utensils, they learn how to tie shoes, and they learn how to put themselves to sleep. Your child has learned how to put himself to sleep in your bed. You have to re-teach him how to fall asleep in his own bed.

If you know how long it takes for him to get up and come to your room, say it's 10 minutes, go to him after 7 minutes, rub his back, sing him a short lullabye, or just sit with him a while. Before he gets up to come to you for comfort. Make his bed the place he gets comfort from you, not your bed. Read to him before bed also, with him lying in bed under the covers all ready for sleep.

If he still comes to your bed needing comfort, take him back to his room and put him right back to bed. If he stays 5 minutes, go to him and give him a bit of comfort as described above.

In short, you know he's after comfort, he needs it to get to sleep. Nothing wrong with that. Just retrain him by always giving him that comfort when he's in his own bed, and never ever give it to him in your bed.

2006-07-20 03:06:54 · answer #1 · answered by ? 2 · 0 1

Don't let him. Allowing your child to sleep in your bed is a hard habit to break.

Put him back into his bed and leave him there.

My son had a horrible habit of waking up in the middle of the night and would only go back to sleep if you held him. Actually, he would only go to sleep if he was held. We were getting no sleep, so finally one day we decided we had to do something about it. We put him in his crib and would leave him alone, even if he started to cry. Within a few weeks, he started sleeping on his own, and would actually sleep through the night. To this day, he rarely wakes up anymore. The trick is not to go to him everytime he calls for you.

It was really hard to do, but totally worth it.

2006-07-20 06:31:51 · answer #2 · answered by Chewie 7 · 0 0

I suspect it could be a management problem. I m asian. I have kids too. To train them to sleep on their own, u have 2 start from young and very young. They are trained, not suggested, imposed upon or forced to. U put them to sleep, stay with them 4 a while 'til they doze off, and u leave a small light on. Leave the door ajar with a hall light on and when he opens his eyes, he'll see some light n go on back to sleep.

If u encourage him/her 2 continue like what he wants, trust me, u r going 2 c the start of your marital problems. Juz imagine what happens if u r in the middle of your conjugal activities and he/she comes in n say, "I wanna sleep in the middle".

2006-07-19 22:26:35 · answer #3 · answered by The Jungle Taipan 2 · 0 0

nicely i've got not got any relatively solid information for you... and that i'm beneficial you're already conscious that via waiting until eventually your son became into 2.5 years previous, you positioned your self up for a conflict. We bumped off the evening time bottle at 13 months previous, and we had approximately 10-14 days of "settling" and getting used to the thought. the terrific suggestion is to be consistent! you could no longer falter, you could no longer cave, you could no longer sense undesirable and supply in. You be the parent and don't enable your son pull your strings. It sounds cruel and tough, yet its the only way... the very 2d you provide in, you may initiate another time. My husband and that i've got been given greater sleep as quickly as we took turns. One evening, he became into completely in value... and that i slept. the subsequent evening became into the different. i think of it relatively is important via fact neither of you will do a solid activity once you're the two drained. solid success!

2016-10-08 03:01:55 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

He is probably seeking comfort and warmth.Isn't that what we parents are supposed to do?Love them,comfort them and protect them?Maybe he is having bad dreams.Let him fall asleep in you bed and move him back once he is asleep,if at all.This is probably just a phase and will wear out.In India most families share a family bed and this is probably why more families are intact and closer to one other than in our country.Closeness leads to bonding.Besides,this is the only age they will want to sleep with you.Trust me, when they are 18 and you never hear from them,you will have only these memories to hold on to.So,hang in there and cuddle up.

2006-07-20 02:06:10 · answer #5 · answered by abracadabrateapot 1 · 0 0

We all love our babies...but I'm afraid you are setting yourself up for some heartache if you don't address this right now...and it will require your strength and patience...but you must return him to his bed immediately...soothe him first...reassure him you aren't far away...and then take your leave of him...if he gets back up, then do not engage him in conversation, and put him back to bed...and repeat this until he finally stays there. Remain clam through the process. One word of caution...make sure something isn't going on of a medical nature first...or if he is troubled by something disturbing his sleep...once you rule out these factors...then you can proceed. He will adapt very quickly. I am sure you are a very loving mother.

2006-07-19 22:25:18 · answer #6 · answered by riverhawthorne 5 · 0 0

Tell your child he or she is a big kid now and the have a big kid bed you may try puting
a night light in the room if the child comes back in the bed with you just take the child back in their bed their may be some crying but don't give in

2006-07-20 00:51:03 · answer #7 · answered by Lisa V 2 · 0 0

Give him incentives for sleeping in his own bed.
When he tries to climb into your bed, get up and walk him back to his own room. You might have to keep on doing this, but it'll break him soon
Make a big deal when he sleeps in his own bed. Brag, brag, and brag. (He's a male so he'll love it.
If all else fails
Lock your door, and tell him he's a big boy who has to sleep in his own big boy bed.

P.S.
He might need a night-light

2006-07-20 02:54:40 · answer #8 · answered by The Urban Princess 1 · 0 0

mine does the same, if i have the energy i'll take him back to his room, if not i just sleep (a very uncomfortable sleep, with feet everywhere) with him, i try not to make a big deal of it. make sure he is not to cold or hot, ive noticed that if he kicks the blanket off, he gets cold and comes to our room, sometimes i wake to go to the bathroom and cover him and he doesnt wake up to come to our room.

2006-07-20 03:08:45 · answer #9 · answered by Girl 2 · 0 0

He's probably just scared. I would take him back to his bed and sit there until he falls asleep again. It will develop into a very bad habit if you let him stay in your bed. Good luck to you and the little guy.

2006-07-19 22:21:24 · answer #10 · answered by gentlemanfarmer 3 · 0 0

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