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Coping With Bedtime When The Clocks Change | Tommee Tippee
We know how it is, you’ve just got your baby into a lovely bedtime routine, they snuggle down to sleep without fuss and wake at a reasonable time in the morning. Then the clocks change and your toddler’s sleeping pattern goes out of the window.
Don’t stress. Here are some top tips to help you cope with baby bedtime when the clocks change.
We suggest delaying the start of your child’s bedtime routine a few weeks before the clocks change, settling them 15 minutes earlier or later than usual every few days, until their bedtime has moved.
By the time the clocks change forwards or backwards, your toddler will have altered their sleeping pattern and hopefully stay in bed until the correct wake-up time the next morning. If your child is having daytime naps you will need to adjust these in the same way, along with meal and milk times.
A dark room is invaluable to promote sleep, so using a Gro Anywhere Blind can make all the difference.
Try to keep your baby’s bedroom at a comfortable temperature of between 16-20C and keep the noise down.
Using a nightlight or playing soothing music or natural noises can sometimes help reassure a child who is afraid of the dark or easily unsettled at night.
Check out our adorable penguin nightlight or our cute and cuddly sleep aids if your little one needs a bit of reassurance at night.
Encourage good sleeping habits by sticking to a regular sleep-wake schedule, especially a regular time of getting up in the morning. Try not to change bed time and wake up time by any more than an hour from day to day including the weekends.
The Groclock is a great way to show children who can’t tell the time when they should be asleep and when it’s okay to wake up and play.
When the clocks change, don’t forget to set your Groclock back or forwards an hour before you go to sleep.
Encourage your child to enjoy some wind down time prior to sleep. Change their activities to something relaxing and non stressful in the half hour before bedtime. Turn off the TV and computer and read or listen to a story tape for example.
For many children saying “go to bed” may no longer mean “go to sleep”, but rather “go to your bedroom to amuse yourself”. Make bedtime mean sleep time by removing things not associated with sleep such as toys, TV and computer from your child’s bedroom.
Have clear and consistent boundaries at bedtime. When you say 2 stories mean 2 stories. Lack of setting limits at bedtime can lead to delayed bedtimes and bedtime battles.
Aim to carry out the same series of steps every night, about 30 minutes before your child goes to bed:
A warm relaxing bath lasting about 10 minutes, a pre-bed bath should not be a play time.
Go straight from the bathroom into the bedroom – do not go back into the living area.
Dim the lights – this will help with the production of the sleep hormone melatonin.
Read 1 or 2 stories with your child.
Say good night, then leave the room.
Your child should be asleep about 15 minutes later.
A bedtime snack of foods such as banana, warm milk, oat biscuit, and whole grain cereal can help to encourage your child to feel drowsy. That’s because these foods contain an amino acid called tryptophan that encourages sleep.
For more advice about foods to choose and foods to avoid before bedtime, check out our guide to foods that aid sleep and encourage your baby to sleep better.
It’s not normally a problem to encourage your little one to run around and play but research has shown that increased physical exercise can encourage sleep. For your toddler this means regular physical play for 20 -30 minutes three or four times a week.
But don’t encourage too much energetic exercise within 3 hours of bedtime. Use the time to start winding down to sleep.
Children love to hear that they’ve done something well. So reward your little one with praise every morning when they have kept to your sleep and waking rules.
The most common things that disrupt a child’s bedtime routine are:
Coming back late from an outing or visiting friends
Friends staying over
Clocks changing
School holidays
Family upset or illness
Something on TV the kids want to watch
Eating the wrong food too close to bedtime