"The
Early Bird: Waking up too early"
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I
don’t need an alarm clock. Every day my daughter wakes
up early – usually before 6:00. Is there any way to
get her to sleep longer, or is she just an early bird?
It
is true that some children seem to be natural early
birds, but only about 10% to 15% actually have a
biological tendency to be a complete lark. Another small
percentage is somewhat larkish, but most early-rising
children are simply waking up early for outside reasons
that affect their rising time, and these can be changed.
You
may be able to tell if your little one is really
a lark is if she:
·
wakes
up on her own -- cheerful and chatty
·
is
most active and energetic in the late morning to early
afternoon
·
sleeps
soundly
·
gets
tired after dinner
·
goes
to bed early and easily
·
wakes
up early no matter what time she goes to bed
If
this describes your child, you may indeed have a little
lark on your hands. Even so, you might be able to
squeeze a bit more sleep time in the morning if you make
some changes in your child’s routines by applying the
ideas that follow. If your early-riser doesn’t fit the
previous description it’s likely that she’s not a
natural-born lark and you’ll have good luck
encouraging a later wake-up time.
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First
things first
One
of the common reasons for early waking is simply that your child
has had enough sleep! Take a good look at the sleep chart
and add up your child’s night and nap hours of sleep. If your
two-year-old is napping for two hours and then getting an
average amount of hours of sleep at nighttime, that would be 11
night sleep hours. If she is going to bed at 7:00 P.M., guess
what? Eleven hours later…it’s 6:00 A.M.! (Remember, too that
“early” has a different definition for everyone; many people
arise at 5:00 A.M. or even before that, without considering it
too early.)
Even
if your child is getting less than the sleep hours on the chart
she may be one of those rare children who need a bit less sleep
than the average. In either case you can’t expect her to sleep
longer in the morning simply because you went to bed at
midnight or were up all night with her baby brother, and
you’re still tired. (Oh, but if it only worked that way!) If
this is the case in your house, you have two options. Gradually
move her bedtime later by about 10 or 15 minutes until she’s
going to bed an hour later and (hopefully!) waking an hour later
in the morning. If you’ve already read the first part of this
book you know that an earlier bedtime is often best for a child,
and sometimes a bedtime change won’t affect awakening time,
but you certainly can experiment with this to see if you can
find a happy medium that works for both of you.
The
other choice, of course, is to make your own bedtime earlier so
that an earlier wake up time works for you. This may be nicer
than you think, since most larks are cheerful in the morning and
grumpy in the late evening, so by adjusting your family hours
you’ll have more time in that happy place together.
Other
reasons WHY your child may be waking up early
If
you’ve added up your child’s sleep hours and have determined
that an excess of sleep isn’t the cause of early awakening you
should be able to add more sleep time in the early morning.
Before we get into the general tips for encouraging longer
sleep, it may help to figure out why your child wakes up early,
and how to address those issues. Here are a few things that
might be waking her up:
·
Light.
Daylight, street lights or house lights can cause a light
sleeper to wake up.
Solution: Cover the windows, keep the room dark.
·
Noise.
Some children are easily roused when they hear voices, traffic,
pets, plumbing sounds, or neighbors.
Solution: Use a radio set to a classical music or talk show
station, or a white-noise machine to mask outside noises. You
can set it like an alarm to go off on a quiet volume about an
hour before your child’s typical awakening time so that other
noises don’t rouse her. (Don’t worry – if you are using
white noise or keeping the volume low this won’t wake her.)
Another option, if you can, is changing your child’s sleeping
place to a quieter room.
·
Nature
calls?
Perhaps her diaper, training pants, or pull-ups are wet, or she
has to use the bathroom.
Solution: Give your child less liquid in the hour or two before
bed. Provide several pre-bedtime potty visits. Use diaper
doublers or extra-thick nighttime diapers. If she’s totally
potty-trained, teach her how to use the bathroom by herself
during the night and leave a nightlight on in the hallway. She
may not even realize that she’s able to do this on her own if
she never has!
·
Comfort.
Her covers have fallen off, the house has cooled down and
she’s chilly, or the heat has come on and she’s too hot.
Solution: Adjust the heat level of the house, use a fan (keeping
it and cords out of reach) or change what she wears to bed or
the types of blankets on her bed.
·
Hunger.
Her tummy rumblings wake her.
Solution: Give her a low-sugar, high-carbohydrate snack before
bedtime. Provide her with a bowl of crackers and a cup of water
on her nightstand.
·
Habit.
She’s been waking up early for a long time and now her
internal clock alarm goes off at that time.
Solution: Gradually adjust her night and nap sleep schedule
until she is sleeping and waking at a better time.
·
Nap
routine.
She’s napping too early, too late, too often, or too long.
Solution: Reorganize her nap schedule according to the
information in the chapter about naptime issues.
Mother-Speak:
“I
put a piece of cardboard over the window and set a clock-radio
to early morning classical music. Sebastian is sleeping about
an hour later in the morning than he was – and it hasn’t
affected his bedtime at all!”
Candice,
mother of three-year-old Sebastian
More
tips for encouraging longer sleep
Very
often an early waking child is doing so out of habit, and it may
take a few weeks of consistent changes before you see a new
wake-up time emerge. Be patient and use the following tips in
conjunction with the previous list and the general ideas in the
first part of this book:
·
Apply
the concepts covered previously and re-set your child’s
biological clock. Do this by keeping the hour before bedtime
dimly lit, sleeping time dark, and breakfast time brightly lit.
·
Keep
your child’s room dark during all the hours you want her to
sleep. Use blinds, curtains, or even a blanket or big pieces of
cardboard to keep out unwanted light. Do your pre-bedtime
reading by the dimmest light possible, and finish it up with
story-telling in the dark.
·
Schedule
playtime in the afternoon or early evening outside when you can.
When you can’t get outside keep the play area brightly lit.
You may even want to invest in a natural sunlight lamp which
emits a yellow sun-like glow.
·
Try
treating the early morning awakening as if it’s 2:00 A.M. and
respond to your child as you do with a night waking. If the
windows are covered and the room is dark your child may accept
that it’s the middle of the night and not the morning.
·
Children
who wake early often nap early, too, going for a nap within an
hour or two of waking up. This is actually the end of their
nighttime sleep! Try holding off the morning nap by 15 to 30
minutes every day until it falls an hour or two hours later in
the day than it is now. After a week or two you should see a new
pattern emerge.
·
Hold
off breakfast for thirty minutes to an hour after your child
wakes up. She may have set her “hunger alert” to go off at
6:00 A.M. By holding off breakfast in the morning you may be
able to re-set the time she gets hungry. If she can’t wait
that long, try a small snack, like a few crackers, and delay a
full breakfast for a bit.
·
Maintain
a consistent bedtime and awaking time seven days a week.
Changing the schedule each weekend will likely prevent you from
finding success at getting a reasonable wake up time during the
week.
What
to do if your lark continues to wake up early
If
you’ve tried these ideas, and kept with them for a few weeks,
but find that your little rooster continues to wake up early,
you may want to accept that it’s her natural waking time and
approach the problem differently. Here are some tips:
·
Every
night, after your child goes to sleep put a box of toys next to
her bed. Rotate these so that there’s always something new and
interesting in the box. Tell her that when she wakes up she can
check her box and play with whatever she finds in there. Be
creative, but make sure the toys are safe, and of course,
nothing noisy! (If your child is still sleeping in a crib you
can leave toys at the foot of the crib.)
·
Set
a clock-radio to a pleasant music station and have it turn on at
your acceptable wake up time. Tell your child that she can’t
leave her bedroom to wake you up until she hears the music.
·
Leave
a sippy cup of water and a snack, such as crackers, on her
bedside so that when she wakes up she will have something to
eat. (No choking hazards.)
·
Make
a tape recording of your child’s favorite songs or stories and
show her how to operate the machine. Let her listen to her
special tape when she wakes up.
·
Invite
her into your room or your bed. Tell her that if she wakes up
she can come quietly into your room. Let her climb in bed and
snuggle with you, or create a little resting area with a
sleeping bag on the floor for her. You might even create a fort,
such as using a blanket over a card table, and call it her
morning nest. Put a few toys and books inside and see if
she’ll play quietly for a while before waking you.
·
Shhh.
Don’t tell anybody I gave you this idea, but as a last resort
it can be a lifesaver: Set up the DVD player with her favorite
movie and teach her how to push “play.” Leave a sippy cup of
water and a bowl of dry cereal for snacking. This will buy you
an extra hour of shuteye.
·
Childproof,
childproof, childproof! Make sure that your entire house is safe
for your early riser so if she’s wandering around while
you’re still asleep she won’t get herself into trouble.
·
Practice.
Once you’ve established some ideas for what you’d like to
have happen in the morning, let your child show you exactly what
she’ll do when she gets up. By role-playing a few times
she’ll be comfortable doing as you wish when she wakes up so
early in the morning – playing with her toys, climbing in bed
with you, playing in her fort, or listening to her music.
Will
my lark EVER sleep later?
Oh,
yes. Your lark will begin sleeping later in the
morning….once she starts school and is required to
wake up at 6:00 AM. Frustrating, but true! As children
get older many of them go through an Owl stage –
finding it hard to fall asleep at a reasonable bedtime,
but easy to sleep until noon. (Look for my next book –
on school age sleep issues!)
For more information from Elizabeth
Pantley go to her website.
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This article is a
copyrighted excerpt from The No-Cry Sleep Solution for
Toddlers and Preschoolers by Elizabeth Pantley
(McGraw-Hill, 2005)
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