Read The No Cry Nap Solution Online
Authors: Elizabeth Pantley
about being put to bed. And, of course, when he’s unhappy, he
cries, fusses, and complains—making each try-to-nap episode an
unpleasant one for you, too. So, review this list to determine if it
really is time to switch to one nap:
• When you put your child down for a nap, he plays or fusses
for thirty minutes or more before falling asleep and then
takes only a short nap or never falls asleep at all.
Shifting Schedules: Changing from Two Naps to One Nap
109
• Your child can go for car rides early in the day and not fall
asleep in the car.
• When your child misses a nap, he is cheerful and energetic
until the next nap or bedtime.
• Your child naps well for one of his naps but totally resists
the other nap.
How to Make the Transition When Signs
Point to Change
Instead of thinking in terms of
dropping a nap
, it’s better to think
in terms of a
schedule change
, as, in most cases, the new singu-
lar nap is really a melding of the two naps into one nap in the
middle of the two previous times. Often this one nap is longer
than either of the two previous naps but not quite as long as the
two together.
The change from two naps to one nap is rarely a one-day
occurrence. Most often there will be a transition period of several
months when your child clearly needs two naps on some days but
one nap on others, and on some days you’ll have absolutely no
idea if it’s a one-nap day or a two-nap day! You have a number of
options during this sometimes complicated transition time.
• Go with the fl ow, watch for your child’s sleepy signs, and
put your child down for a nap when those indications fi rst appear.
(Don’t launch into a long prenap routine, as your child might pass
though the sleepiness and get a second wind.)
• Keep two naps but don’t require that your child
sleep
at both
times; allow quiet resting instead (see “The Hush Hour,” on page
120). This often works best as one longer late-morning sleeping
nap and a shorter afternoon quiet-time rest period. If occasionally
your child falls asleep during the second naptime, you can either
let him sleep as long as he does—then be prepared to move bed-
110 Solving Napping Problems
time later—or gently wake him after an hour’s sleep to preserve
his usual bedtime.
• Choose a single naptime that is later than the usual morning
nap but not as late as the afternoon nap. Keep your child active
(and outside when possible) until about thirty minutes before the
time you have chosen. At that time, give your child a healthy
snack and begin a wind-down period and prenap routine. It may
help to break lunch up into two parts, serving half of her lunch
before her nap and half when she wakes up. For a few weeks she
may be fussy or whiny that last hour or so. It’s not her fault, so be
patient as she adjusts to the new schedule.
• On days when a nap ends up being early in the day, move
bedtime earlier by thirty minutes to an hour to minimize the
length of time between nap and bedtime. Make sure your child’s
bedroom windows are covered so that early light doesn’t wake him
up too soon the next morning. Once your child is up for the day,
keep the morning bright and busy until your child’s usual midday
naptime.
Sample Schedules
Every child is different, and every family functions in a unique way.
Yet you may be wondering what your schedule should look like, so
here are a few actual samples for you. I am not suggesting that you
adopt any of these (unless they work for you and your child), but I
have learned from experience that my readers like to have samples
to help them fi gure out how their own child’s day might look. Keep
in mind that every day is different, so there is some fl exibility in
setting a schedule: watch the clock
and
your child.
Here are a few routines of children who take one daily nap and
get an adequate amount of the important components of naptime,
meals, snacks, and nighttime sleep. In between these cornerstone
events, but not shown here, are hours of playtime and usual daily
activities:
Shifting Schedules: Changing from Two Naps to One Nap
111
Samples of Toddlers’ Daily Schedules*
Ryan
Daisy
Siobhan
Preston
16
19
22
23
Charlene**
months
months
months
months
25 months
Awake
7:30
7:00 6:45
8:00
9:30
Break fast
7:45
7:30
7:30
8:15
10:00
Snack
10:15
10:00
9:45
10:30
None
Lunch
11:30
12:00
11:00
12:30
1:30
Nap
12:15
1:00
12:45
1:30
2:30
2¾ hours
2½ hours
2 hours
1½ hours
2½ hours
Awake
3:00
3:30 2:45
3:00
5:00
Snack
3:30
Dinner
3:30
3:15
5:15
5:00
Dinner
5:50
Snack
5:30
5:30
Dinner
6:30
7:30
Snack
8:30
Prebed-
7:15
7:30
6:15
6:45
9:00
time
routine
Asleep***
7:45
8:00
7:30
7:45
9:30
11¾
11 hours
11¼
12¼
12 hours
hours
hours
hours
Total
14½
13½
13¼
13¾
14½ hours
sleep
hours
hours
hours
hours
hours
(nap plus
night)
*All times are rounded. (Life with children is not as exact as this chart appears!)
**Charlene has a later bedtime than is best for most children at this age, but she is able to sleep in late in the morning. This works with her family’s schedule. She gets ample nap and night sleep and is a happy, healthy child, so it is perfectly acceptable.
***The number of night sleep hours shown does not necessarily mean unbroken sleep, since brief awaking between sleep cycles is normal, and because 47 percent of toddlers and 36 percent of preschoolers wake up at least once per night and need an adult’s help to return to sleep. But that is another book . . .
Shifting Schedules
Time to Give Up Naps?
See also: Catnaps: Making Short Naps Longer;
Shifting Schedules: Changing from Two Naps
to One Nap; The Nap Resister: When Your
Child Needs a Nap but Won’t Take One
My three-year-old never wants to take her
nap. It takes me more than a half an hour
to settle her down before she fi nally falls
asleep. Is it time for her to give up napping?
Children approach life with boundless energy and enthusiasm.
They don’t understand the biological benefi ts of sleep, so they
see naps as an interruption to life—they don’t feel naps are neces-
sary. If it were up to them, they’d never sleep—day or night—until
they simply keeled over. Leaving the decision to nap up to your
child, then, is like allowing her to choose between vegetables or
ice cream for dinner—just as ice cream would win hands down,
your little one is unlikely to choose
sleep
over
awake
. Which leaves
the decision entirely up to the grown-ups in the house.
There is a difference between a child who
needs
a nap and
a child who would benefi t from a nap. If your child falls in the
“need” category, then I recommend you do everything you can to
preserve that daily sleep. (For more tips read the chapter “The Nap
Resister: When Your Child Needs a Nap but Won’t Take One.”)
If a nap is no longer a necessity for your child, then you might
consider switching to a daily quiet time or Hush Hour (see page
112
Shifting Schedules: Time to Give Up Naps?
113
Nadine, two years old
Approximately 85 percent of two-year-olds, 65 percent of
three-year-olds, 25 percent of four-year-olds, and 15 percent
of fi ve-year-olds take a nap every day or almost every day.
Biologically speaking, children are ready to give up daily
naps sometime between the ages of three and fi ve if they
get an adequate amount of nighttime sleep. Regardless of
the statistics or the averages, if your child needs a nap, he
falls into the 100 percent category: 100 percent of the chil-
dren who need a nap should take a nap.
Even if your child does fi ne all day without a nap, new
research points to the fact that naps continue to be benefi -
cial for human beings throughout their entire lives. So when
you wonder, “When should my child give up naps?” The
best answer may be “Never.”
114 Solving Napping Problems
120). This will set up a restful environment in which your child
can sleep on those days when she needs it or simply rest and reju-
venate on days when sleep isn’t required. A Hush Hour can set up
a healthy ritual that may serve your child for life.
Professional-Speak
“My belief, which is based on many years’ experience, is that
the single most signifi cant contributing factor to early child-
hood social/emotional/behavior/learning problems is sleep
deprivation.
“On any given day, a hugely disproportionate percentage
of the children in most classrooms appear visibly exhausted.
An exhausted child has less tolerance for frustration, less
impulse control, shorter attention spans, and depressed cog-
nitive abilities. They do not learn as easily or as much as a well-
rested child learns, nor do they retain what they have learned.
And they are just plain grouchy and hard to live with.
“I believe that children would perform better academi-
cally and develop stronger social skills if they continued to
have midday nap/rest times until they are seven or eight
years old.”
—Linda Crisalli, professional early childhood educator and
contributor, Child Care Exchange
How to Tell If Your Child Needs a Nap
If you watch carefully and if you know what to look for, you will
be able to tell if your child
needs
a nap. The three lists that follow