15 answers

Transitioning My Son to Sleep in His Toddler Bed

I am a 21 year old active duty mommy of a wonderful 1 1/2 year old. He has been sharing a bed with us since he was an infant. It hasn't had an effect on our sleep, sex life etc... It actually started when I was breast feeding because he would not stay asleep in his bassinet. Well we put away his crib (that he has never slept in except for a few naps) and put up a toddler bed. My husband is currently overseas for a few months and I like the comfort of him being in bed with me. I also want to defeat the tasking of him sleeping in his own bed! Any suggestions and any advice on coping with this transition. Our house is a split floor plan so it's nerve racking to think about him being so far away incase he needs help.

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

okay so I have been trying to "tough love" route for a few weeks and it has seemed to be going good but the night before last my son threw up by the door of his bedroom from crying so hard so I thought I try to add a little more into his bed time routine to soothe him to sleep so I bought a night light and a calming naturistic lullaby CD... I tried it last night and my son hated it. He seemed to cry longer so it was a little discouraging but he still slept in his bed for the whole night. So I guess I have to give him a little more time because he has slept in the bed with us since he was born.

P.S. My hubby should be back soon and is proud that I have helped transition Isaiah to a toddler bed.

More Answers

I got the best advice from a book called 1-2-3 Magic. It is kind of tough at first but......stick with it. When you put your toddler down at night in his bed, set a chair outside his room with you back to him. Tell him he had to stay in bed and tell him not to get up. He will get up a couple of times so about the 2nd or 3rd time tell him if he gets up you will shut the door. I'm sure he will get up again so, shut the door. Stay on the other side of it and tell him if he goes back to bed you will open it back up. My little guys through toys, books anything they could get their hand on but I did not open the door until they were back in bed. It seems like it will be a long night and that it is never going to work but......afet 7 or so days it get easy. It has been about 6 months for me but I still set by his door. It takes about 5 minutes now

Only in the contemporary Western world do people think that designing a home with something like a split plan to keep our children as far away as possible is a good idea! Listen to your instincts and keep him close to you as long as this feels right. Just because it is not the cultural norm does not mean it is not the biological norm to keep children close during the night. The suggestion of putting the toddler bed in your room is a good one. He can gradually start to spend a bit of time sleeping there and you can both feel secure in the knowledge that the other is close by. Letting children cry does not teach them to be independent: it just teaches them to give up because no one is responding to their needs. Needs that are met are outgrown; unmet needs may go underground but they will surface again. Trust your heart and his desire and ability to grow and develop. Just think how much he has grown since he was born and you will realize this issue does not have to be forced.

Good luck!
J.

It depends on the child, but he may be just too young for a toddler bed. My pediatrician recommended to me to keep my son in the crib as long as I could (until he was at least 2) and not to move him to a regular bed until he was constantly getting out or asked to sleep in a big bed. He's still in a crib actually at 2 1/2 and we plan on getting him a "big Boy" bed for his 3rd b-day.
The safety issues alone would scare me to have moved him to a toddler bed in their own room at 18 months, not to mention just trying to keep him there.
If you are co-sleeping now, I would actually just continue to do so until he is two. If you are having sleeping issues and need him to sleep in his own bed, i would first try a crib if this is at all possible. You will have the security to know he can't get out and hurt himself! If it's not possible, I've heard of moms transitioning them out by putting a toddler mattress on the floor by the bed in the same room.

First. send our love and prayers to your husband for keeping our freedom alive. Put him in his bed, soft music and read a book to him. If he gets up send him back. ""won't this be a big surprise when Daddy comes back?"Big Boys sleep in their own beds" If you have one maybe a dog or cat would sleep with him.

We did the same thing with our son who is now 2 1/2, who now sleeps in a big bed but still gets up every night to find me. Try putting the toddler bed in YOUR room at first. When he gets used to the bed, then move it to his room. Use the words big boy bed often. He's not going to understand why you don't want to sleep with him anymore, so sit by his bed on the floor until he falls asleep for the first week or so, but don't change once you start the new routine. You'll only mess him up. Hope that helps. Oh and buy a book called "The Sleep Lady System".

I think you might want to do it in phases. First maybe put the toddler bed in your room so he still feels close to you. After a couple successful weeks move the bed farther away, like outside of your room. Then get him excited about his own room. Every child resists, you just need to have that in the back of you head. Then remember to be firm but in a soft voice and know when to walk away. Because he will want you to keep coming back to tell him to get in bed...like a game. So just be firm and walk away when you notice is is more about attention then anxiety.

Hi N.,
well, when my son turned 2 last december '07, he decided to put him to sleep in his own room before the baby comes. It's been so hard!!! My house is big, my room is on the left side and his room all the way down in the right side of the house. The good thing is that i always made sure that he slept in his own crib/now toddler bed at night, if it happened that he didn't want to fall asleep in his bed i let him sleep in our bed(not to often) and then pass him to his bed, as well as it happened during the night, so he knows that is where he is suppose to be. And now, he is sleeping in his room, but for now we are sleeping in a small mattress next to him, because of course we are still scared! Or until the next baby is born..ha!
N., i would advise you to start by training him in your room to sleep in his own toddler bed. It's not going to be easy or fast...believe me and when you feel more comfortable, put him in his own room and do as we did, until you feel better and he is okay to by himself. Good luck!

Dear N.,
I am a G. now, however, when my youngest daughter was little, I had the same problem. The best advice I can give you is to transition gradually. Always, with love and support. Give the precious little one his favorite thing to sleep with, cuddle with him, and sing him to sleep. Repeat, repeat, repeat. It takes lots of patience and perserverance.It will pay off. Also, buy a monitor and put in his room, with audio and video. Prayer, is the key. May God bless you and your precious family. love in Christ, G. Kathy

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