flipflopmom
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2009
- Messages
- 2,902
I'm going to totally rock the boat here. No flames, just my personal experience. Monster spray = bad idea in my book. You are affirming there are monsters. I have severe nighttime anxiety, which has carried over into adulthood. Not a night goes by that I don't visualize someone breaking into my house, my house on fire, etc. I've learned to read myself to sleep to keep all thoughts away. Still have nightmares, but I deal.
My DD slept with us until she was 7. She slept-walked, had night terrors, all the same stuff I did as a child. I PROMISE I did not project my fears onto her, she started at 1 year with scratching at the walls and screaming during her sleep.
We tried bribing, redecorating her room, music, "lovies", night lights, fish tanks, sitting outside her door, letting her sleep in hallway outside our door, you name it.
Was it comfortable for her to be with us? NO. Did everyone sleep more? Yes. Around age 7, it got tooo uncomfortable. Several nights of knock-down, drag out fights, sleep in your room at all costs. Everyone was crying, no one slept. Made the nights worse. She was reading a little at the time, but not enough to be interested. We let her watch a movie, and she would crash while it was on. We set the sleep timer, so it turned off after she went to sleep. We let this go on for a while, then turned her on to magazines, American Girl, etc. that she could look at without having to read. Helped most nights. Now she reads herself to sleep at age 10, but not without coming to give us goodnight kisses at least twice in the interim.
For us, the objective was learning coping techniques. We took a serious backslide when my dad died in September, but she is on her way back now.
My DD slept with us until she was 7. She slept-walked, had night terrors, all the same stuff I did as a child. I PROMISE I did not project my fears onto her, she started at 1 year with scratching at the walls and screaming during her sleep.
We tried bribing, redecorating her room, music, "lovies", night lights, fish tanks, sitting outside her door, letting her sleep in hallway outside our door, you name it.
Was it comfortable for her to be with us? NO. Did everyone sleep more? Yes. Around age 7, it got tooo uncomfortable. Several nights of knock-down, drag out fights, sleep in your room at all costs. Everyone was crying, no one slept. Made the nights worse. She was reading a little at the time, but not enough to be interested. We let her watch a movie, and she would crash while it was on. We set the sleep timer, so it turned off after she went to sleep. We let this go on for a while, then turned her on to magazines, American Girl, etc. that she could look at without having to read. Helped most nights. Now she reads herself to sleep at age 10, but not without coming to give us goodnight kisses at least twice in the interim.
For us, the objective was learning coping techniques. We took a serious backslide when my dad died in September, but she is on her way back now.
I feel for you. We have not had this problem with our daughters, but I did do the cry it out thing when dd was about 15 months. It was hard for the first few nights, but she figured it out and has no problems now.
I will just keep at it. I did lay down with her last night and she slept in her bed (of course then the problem is I fall asleep too)....I did wake up and go to my bed, but then she called for me and I went back in and laid down with her again. She was not happy that she just didn't get to go back to bed with me.....but eventually went back to sleep and I went back to my bed. We don't have a routine exactly, but we do always read before bed. It makes it harder that two days a week DH & I get up to go to bootcamp at 4:15am so the nights before that I have a hard time dealing with the fight. I guess I will look at it as a work in progress....but wouldl love to hear more stories of what worked for you guys.