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She will lay in her bed for an hour and she will be so tired but she will not go to sleep. I have tried everything I can and I don't know what else to do.

2006-10-03 04:11:45 · 19 answers · asked by sara w 1 in Pregnancy & Parenting Parenting

19 answers

The fact is you can't make her. My daughter has always been the same way. Some kids just won't take a nap, and some don't need it regardless of what people say. Every kid is different. My son loves his naps, When I say it's nap time he runs to his room and tries to climb into his crib and he's almost 2. Same with bed time But it's always been like pulling teeth with my daughter to get her to take a nap or go to bed, she'll be 4 next week. It's good that she will lay ther at all, my daughter won't even do that. It's good that she is getting that quiet relax time even if she won't sleep. Don't stress out, you're not a bad mom if she won't sleep and your child is not going to suffer for it. She may be tired but in the long run it will not hurt her. If you've got the structure down and she does lay there then you already have accomplished something. Some kids take naps until they're 10 others only for the first year. Every kid is different, so don't ever feel that you have to bend to what society says is the right thing to do. the only thing that has ever worked for my daughter if I really wanted her to sleep was if I put her in my bed with me and laid down with her. Hope this helps at least a little.

2006-10-03 04:38:31 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I found with my son that a constant schedule works best. Bedtime 7PM and nap after lunch and exercise. Take your daughter for a walk before her nap. That will tire her out. Also roll a ball back and forth. Be the one who does not know how to roll it right. Make sure she has to go retrieve it several times. My kid always thought I was the worse ball player...but there was a reason.

Another thing is if she stays in bed do not worry too much about if she sleeps. She will if she needs it enough.

2006-10-03 04:19:30 · answer #2 · answered by The_answer_person 5 · 0 0

some children do not nap mine didnt no matter what i did ........but if she does not nap when you lay her down dont let her then fall asleep later around 4 or 5 though make her stay up keep her interested untill at least 8 so she is ready for bed when its bedtime.....or she could begin to develop bad sleeping habits that will continue into adulthood.

2006-10-03 04:27:57 · answer #3 · answered by funkyk 3 · 0 0

Let her lay there. She'll fall asleep if you leave her alone. Make her room more soothing but closing the curtains and putting some really soft music on. She doesn't sleep now because she knows "If I just lay here and not sleep, mom will come and get me". She knows that and that's why she's not sleeping.

2006-10-03 04:14:15 · answer #4 · answered by BeeFree 5 · 0 0

Let her just lay there if that's what she wants to do. You can't make her take a nap. Some kids stop napping when they hit one, I know my 2 kids didn't want to nap anymore and I didn't try and make them. Just make sure she's going to bed early enough.

2006-10-03 04:17:12 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i do not recognize what the conventional age is for dropping to one nap an afternoon, yet 3 of my 4 toddlers have carried out it round 8 months, and the finest became at 11 months. yet, i recognize that it truly is on the early aspect. one 12 months sounds about proper, yet each toddler is diverse. My first 3 all took their one nap at about 2 contained in the afternoon, yet my fourth regularly takes hers contained in the previous due morning. Regardless, it feels like your DD is able to drop her second nap. If it style of sounds like she nonetheless desires somewhat better sleep than that first nap, you've some different issues to attempt. a million) you may want to placed her to mattress somewhat formerly contained in the nighttime. 2) you may want to placed her down for a previous due afternoon nap at 4:30 or so, and wake her up after 0.5-hour to an hour. Now for some toddlers the latter would artwork, yet for some that they had only be cranky and groggy. For evaluation, my only-became-a million-12 months-previous receives up round 7 am, naps from about 11-12:30, and then is going to mattress round 8:30. So, it truly is about 12 hours of sleep an afternoon.

2016-11-26 00:34:07 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

my daughter stopped napping at 18 months. She felt like she was going to miss out on something all day long. I put her to bed at 8:00, she's now 4 years old. It works for us.

2006-10-03 04:33:00 · answer #7 · answered by jevic 3 · 0 0

What worked for me is putting my daughter in bed, and lightly rubbing her back. After 15 minutes if she was not asleep I would leave the room without talking to her. If she came out I would put her back in bed without talking to her, and continue this until she falls asleep. It takes some diligence, but it does work.

2006-10-03 04:35:41 · answer #8 · answered by j3572h 3 · 0 0

Play with her. till she cannt take it anymore.
or
leave her alone in the room. make the room as comfortable and relaxing as possible. dark, so that nothing around her attracts her.
+
dont leave her to play with anything. donnt talk to her during her nap time.or she wonnt sleep to get your attention. tell her that the sooner she goes to sleep, the sooner she can wake up and then play.

2006-10-03 04:38:47 · answer #9 · answered by Ewnet 3 · 0 0

Without screaming and crying? She's already going to be a little fussy from being tired. Put her down with something to snack on or play with, maybe. My sister used to put her 1 year old to sleep with a no-spill sippy cup of milk and a stuffed animal. It kept her quiet drinking her milk, and then she'd play with the stuffed animal or toy, then fall right to sleep.

2006-10-03 04:18:12 · answer #10 · answered by pretty_razorblade 1 · 0 2

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