"Nap Time" is turning into a nightmare! PLEASE HELP!?


My son is two, he has a sister, she is a year old. He have been really stubborn lately, about taking his nap. I will rock him in the recliner, and he will just try to bring back down. This also happens at night, sometimes, I hold to rock him for three hours before he goes to sleep. If I put him within his bed, he will make himself throw up. Just now for instance, I be cleaning the kitchen went in to check on the kids, after almost ten minutes of cleaning and he was asleep on the floor. Then at night he get in bed with me and my husband and this is the singular time I get with my husband because he works really long hours. If my son took a doze this late, how long should i let him sleep and what is the commonplace bedtime for a 2 year old? Anything I can do to make this better? Thanks for replies!

Answers:    Okay. There is a foundation the 24 month birthday marks the beginning of the "ghastly twos" - and while it's really hard on you, it's just a conventional part of your son's development. He's instigation to feel his independence and is no longer going to be the tractable toddler that he once was. However, you have to guide him that while it's great for him to become independent, he is not alone in the universe and he has a responsibility toward other member of the family.
So - when it's nap time, don't rock him contained by a recliner. Put him in his bed. If he howls, let him howl (as long as nil is wrong with him). Once he learns it doesn't receive your immediate attention, he'll stop. If he falls asleep on the floor, you can try putting him in his bed (if you can do so in need waking him) but if lifting him up wakes him up, give up your job him on the floor and cover him with a blanket.
If he crawls into bed with you and your husband, don't engineer a fuss, just pick him up and put him back within his own bed. He'll holler, because he wants to snuggle up with both of you - but that's not where on earth he belongs and sooner or later he has to cram that. It's easier all around if you make it sooner, fairly than later.
This is a dose of 'tough love' but it's very exceptionally necessary, or your life is going to miserable. And surrounded by another year, when your daughter hits the two-year old stage, she'll follow his lead.
Just establish the rules and stick to them. The first few days are going to be miserable. He'll howl, he'll complain, he'll speak 'no' more times than you can count, but don't lose your temper, don't get angry, don't spank or slap or any of that stuff. Just put him where on earth he's supposed to be and leave him there.
Rocking him for 3 hours? You must be exaggerating.

Also, he may be over the powernap thing. My cousin's kid stop taking naps at around 2 1/2 years.

Normal nap time is about 2 hours. I put my 2 year aged to bed at 8 p.m. and she gets up at 6:15 a.m.
be sure he is tired I'm sure with a one year dated sister he may not get to be as loud and rowdy and run and play out that energy. be sure to tire him out he'll siesta. My daughter just turned two in May. My routine beside her is to get up around 6:30-7:00am, then nap-time after lunch (usually 2.5 hours), and next bedtime at 7:30pm.
i have a newborn and just agree to them get 10 hours of sleep if possible and pinch him to the doctor to see if he could recomend somethin,good luck i dont really have a agenda for my daughter she will be 2 in july, but usually she wakes up around 8 to 8:30 she will purloin nap time at 3 or 4 then get up up at 6 then go spinal column to sleep at 9 or so, sometimes she does not take naps and will be in motion to sleep early like 6:30 -7 till subsequent day, i dont really make her filch naps just when i see her tired i will try to clear her take naps. try also relating him to stay in his own bed even if he cries he will eventually get it my daughter be like that for a few weeks but not no more.
You have to put your foot down. I know you'll discern really mean for a couple days but it's the only style. Lay him down when he's sleepy but not asleep yet, and just agree to him cry it out. Go in and check on him every once in awhile but don't stay long, and if he throws up merely clean it up without adage much give him a drink of water and lay him posterior down. You'll both sleep better if you get him to go to sleep on his own. My son take a 1-2 hour nap everyday after lunch. I lay him down before he falls asleep, and even if he doesn't spill out asleep he still has to stay in bed and rest for an hour beforehand I'll go get him. But he still sleeps surrounded by a crib, and he hasn't figured out how to get out nonetheless, so that helps. It took me about a year to bring back my son to sleep by himself, but I kept on giving up and letting him sleep with me, but once I stuck with it it be only about a week. I'm not clich¨¦ it's easy, but it's alot easier now next when they're 4. I hope I helped. You are setting yourself up in "lockdown" by rocking him for so long. It may brand it difficult for him to go to sleep on his own. Make sure he gets some morning playtime within the decide on a good naptime, untimely in the day, resembling say just after lunch. Lay him down - he will face-off you - but it will take some repitition and determination. Be firm, even if you get to a point of "dormant time" not necessarily napping but stays in bed laying at hand for a spell, this is an accomplishment. Don't let him nap belatedly in the day, and if it's a must next only let him siesta for like 20 minutes - or he'll be up late, and so will you :(
He may be getting to an age where on earth he no longer needs a nap. That age is different for every child. It does nouns like a power struggle though with your son. It's probably not a honest idea to rock him for 3 hours. When you do this he's "winning". When my son was that age he took a powernap sometimes (usually only in the car) but his bedtime be 7:00. Without a nap during the day he be usually pretty tired by then and was competent to get a really good darkness of sleep. Putting him to bed was sometimes a struggle, but you have to prolong the upper hand. You're the parent, not him. It sounds harsh, but if he insists on throwing up tolerate him throw up. It can be cleaned. It may be a bit messy, but it's not going to hurt him and after he realizes you're not going to give within, I guarantee he'll stop. I promise it won't take long. He'll realize it's no fun to have a fit if you don't foot attention to it. I'm guessing that when he throws up you go comfort him and rock him to sleep right? He wins again.

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