All posts by Janelle

Is it ok to leave your baby to cry?

Listening to your child cry can be difficult.
Listening to your child cry can be difficult.

Crying is a sensitive subject and is often the topic of strong debate over social media amongst parents and professionals. I often avoid entering into it as I feel that the topic of crying is a multifaceted one and there is never the perfect answer.

I wanted to write about my personal experience with children who cry when they are learning to sleep independently. I am writing it to provoke thought and discussion, not to add fuel to the fire.

I am regularly asked by concerned parents, “do you use ‘cry-it-out’ methods?” This is a difficult question to answer because one person’s idea of CIO can be completely different to another person’s idea. My response is always this, “when you make changes to any child’s sleep habits there will always be some crying as the experience is different and unfamiliar to them. I use a variety of gentle techniques and will always work within your comfort level of crying.”

Asking parents to work within their own comfort level of crying is important but the main drive of this blog post is to explore not only how parents feel about crying, but also how the child feels about it. I will share with you two very different scenarios that happened recently.

 

Family 1 – Thomas was 15months old and he was taking a really long time to fall asleep at night. Mum and Dad were very comfortable with leaving Thomas to cry and would leave him for quite some time on his own until he finally fell asleep. Unfortunately after many months of leaving Thomas to cry, there was no reduction in the length it took for him to settle at night. Once I assessed Thomas’ sleep issues, I decided to not only amend his daytime nap to avoid overtiredness at bedtime, but I implemented a strategy where Thomas was offered regular reassurance from his parents as he was falling asleep. Leaving Thomas to cry was not necessarily wrong; it was just the wrong strategy for him.

 

Family 2- Henry was 8months old and he had many sleep associations that were hindering him becoming an independent sleeper. Henry’s parents were clear that they wanted a very slow and gentle process for him with minimal crying. Taking that on board, I wrote a sleep program where Henry would be offered lots of reassurance (like Thomas), and with very reduced periods of time where Henry was to be left alone to cry. What was interesting was that it became very clear early on that Henry became more upset and hysterical each time his parents tried to reassure him. Henry was telling his parents that he wanted to be left to figure it out for himself. This was a difficult situation for his parents but they soon realised it was important to attend to Henry’s needs the way he wanted it, not necessarily the way they wanted to give it. Once Henry was given some space to figure it out, he began sleeping independently.

Here I have presented two very different scenarios where parents had different comfort levels of crying. It is important to work within YOUR comfort level of crying, but it is essential to use a strategy that is right for your child. What works for one, may not work for another.

So if you are looking at helping your child to sleep independently, it is important that you not only choose a strategy that is perfect for your child, but find a sleep consultant who has a range of techniques because if you try to apply a ‘one size fits all’ approach like many books offer, it often doesn’t work and you end up with a distressed child and frazzled parents.

 

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Janelle Jeffery

Child Sleep Consultant for Sleepytime

Toilet Training and Sleep

It is such a momentous time in your child’s life when they become free of nappies and are learning to toilet train. Unfortunately this huge change in your child’s life can really affect sleep.

Toilet training can really affect your child's sleep.
Toilet training can really affect your child’s sleep.

1. Increased night wake ups

Just like any other developmental milestone, the brain is very active at night making sense of all the new information it has learnt. A very active mind can cause your child to wake up more frequently. If your child could sleep independently before toilet training began, then they can during and after – as long as you are consistent with your approach. You may need to attend to your child more frequently during the night, but once you know they are fine, then leave them to fall asleep on their own without your help.

2. Toilet requests at bedtime

Always include a trip to the toilet before a nap and before bedtime in your standard sleep time routine. For a while your child may call out and request a visit to the toilet. This can be difficult for parents as it can feel like a stalling technique. I am sure your child will eventually realise it can be used as one so your judgement here is crucial. If you have had 3 visits to the toilet with no success, then ignore any other requests past that point. You may have a few accidents in bed, but that is part of the joy of toilet training.

3. Requests during the night

So your child is now waking up during the night to go to the toilet. This again is part of the process of learning those toileting cues. Yes you may have a few months of getting up during the night, but again, once your child has been to the toilet, leave them alone to fall asleep independently.

4. Milk at bedtime

If you are still including a bottle or cup of milk during the bedtime routine, I urge you to cut this out of the routine once toilet training has commenced. This will reduce the midnight visits to the toilet.

A child learning how to use the toilet can be a fast or slow process. Not all children are the same so the more relaxed and chilled out you are about it, the better it will be all round. Yes your child’s sleep will be disturbed for a while, but if you are consistent with your approach and you continue to encourage independent sleeping habits, the easier it will be for everyone.

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Janelle Jeffery

Child Sleep Consultant for Sleepyime

No Gender December – Has the world gone mad?

Ok, I heard about this ‘no gender December’ quite a few weeks ago and it really made my blood boil, then I calmed down. As I was putting the finishing touches on Christmas wrapping for my daughter, my mind started to tick over again so I decided to put pen to paper (or fingers to keys!)

Greens Senator Larissa Waters has a major issue with gender targeted toys saying, “While the starkly separate aisles of pink and blue might seems harmless,” Senator Waters said, “setting such strong gender stereotypes at early ages can have long-term impacts, including [on] self-perception and career aspirations.” Senator Waters said that “outdated stereotypes” about girls and boys perpetuate gender inequality, “which feeds into very serious problems such as domestic violence and the gender pay gap”.

Has the world officially gone mad? Let me set the scene for you at my house. I have read and read about the importance of not pigeon holing our children into gender specific play, so as soon as my daughter was born I bought toys of neutral colour and at times she quite frankly looked like a boy due to my husband’s fashion choice. I remember even buying a teething ring that was clear as I thought buying a pink one was evil.

Miss E dressed in a full English Football kit playing with a non-gender specific toy.
Miss E dressed in a full English Football kit playing with a non-gender specific toy.

Over the years my daughter was given Thomas trains, Lego, cars, dinosaurs, a pirate water play table, a marble run, balls of every description and guess what she plays with? – Barbie. She also loves her dollies pretending they are her sisters. This week one is called Allegra. She loves craft and pretending she is Elsa from Frozen.

Movies. Her first ever movie in the cinema was “Planes”. She wasn’t that thrilled. We have Yogi Bear, Babe, Rio and many other non-gender specific DVDs to choose from yet her favourite (apart from Frozen) is “The Little Mermaid”.

Clothes. My daughter refuses to wear anything other than a dress. This winter a mountain of warm, fluffy tracksuits went unworn. Whenever my daughter was forced, yes forced to wear one there were tears and tantrums. I tried to clothe her in shorts at school because dresses were supposed to restrict outside play – well good luck explaining that to her. She would and continues to play outside, climb and run, all achieved in a dress. She rarely leaves the house without a tiara on.

The final straw or pure acceptance from me was her bedroom. For many years I made it perfectly clear “she is not having a pink bedroom. No way!” well guess what? It is now wall-to-wall pink.

Adults are really crap at looking through the eyes of a child. We over complicate matters, put pressure on ourselves to be fair and perfect. We look at the worst-case scenario and fight our point of view to the bitter end.

Children are children. It is natural for girls to like pink and boys blue. Mind you my daughter likes blue more now seeing it is the colour of Elsa’s dress! My daughter tries to breast-feed her dolls, swaddles them and nurtures them. Why try and stop her playing with things she enjoys and force her to be something she doesn’t want to be? Don’t get me wrong, we still provide many opportunities for her to play with other things. In fact my husband has great joy teaching her how to use the drill, create things out of wood and build rocket launchers. It’s all just done with a ‘girly twist’.

Come on everyone, lighten up a bit. Give our kids the freedom to choose what interests them and give us, and them, enough credit that they will grow up to be balanced, intelligent individuals that will make the right decisions when they are adults. Senator Waters, do whatever you want to do at your house because I am off to play Barbies with my daughter. Now where did I put that tiara?

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Janelle Jeffery

Child Sleep Consultant for sleepy time.

 

Excerpt from Essential Kids here.

The End of Year Grump

Are you a parent of a child at school or do you have a child attending childcare? Have you noticed a change in their demeanour recently?

Kids pouting in the kitchen

My daughter started Kindergarten this year. She loves school but I have noticed a change recently. Miss E has started to complain of a tummy ache in the morning. Now these tummy aches do not seem to appear on non-school days, just school days. When I try to leave her classroom, she clings onto my leg and simply will not let go until her teacher peels her off me. At drop off today, I mentioned it to a few mums and their kiddies seem to be feeling the same way. Is it simply a tummy bug doing the rounds? Perhaps.

At the primary school I teach at, I have noticed there have been increases of arguing and nastiness amongst the children. I work at a school where the children are genuinely loving and caring towards their peers, so this behaviour has really caught my attention. This got me thinking, is there such a thing as “the end of year grump?”

With the days getting warmer, children become worn out faster. Add on the ever-increasing pressure of end of year parties and gatherings; nights during the week are becoming full with social engagements and weekends are fully packed. This all adds to children becoming tired and grumpy.

The last thing to add is that these children have been spending a lot of time in situations where they have to concentrate for long periods of time, negotiate the use of shared equipment plus navigate their way through social circles. Quite frankly, they have had enough and they need a break.

So as the end of year approaches like the speed of light, take stock and be extra gentle with your precious ones. If they need a day at home in front of the telly, then go with it. If they need a mummy day, offer it. If they require a swim at the beach, enjoy!!

You may be experiencing “the end of year grump” too. Take my advice and indulge in a “me day”. Go on, you deserve it!

 

Sleep Well, Janelle Jeffery

Child Sleep Consultant for Sleepytime

5 Hot Tips to Summer Sleep Success

Summer is fast approaching so before we know it we will have our aircons on full blast and sweat dripping down our faces, legs other??? Ewww. Summer also means a very full social calendar and longer days filled with endless daylight. Have you already noticed a change in your child’s sleep? I sure have!

So this got my brain ticking and my fingers typing. Here are my 5 hot tips for summer sleep success.

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#1 Consistent and Predictable Routines and Schedules

It is so important that you approach bedtime they same as you would any other time of year. If bedtime is 700pm, stick to that time. (Note – if you have daylight savings, then move to the new time as quickly as you can then stick with that schedule.) With social events filling the diary, it can be tempting to stretch out bedtime or forgo daytime naps. Once and a while this is okay, but the less sleep your child has, the more difficult sleep will become overtime.

 

#2 Dark, dark, dark

Whether you have daylight savings or not, at the end of the day we are all trying to get our children to sleep when there is daylight. Make sure your child’s room is super dark. Darkness helps to trigger the pineal gland to release melatonin into the body. Melatonin makes us sleepy. If you do not already have block-out curtains, purchase a blackout blind like the “Gro Anywhere Blind”. These are removable and can be taken with you wherever you go.

 

#3 Drink lots of water

When our bodies are dehydrated, it can interfere with sleep. If you are flying, drinking lots of water reduces the effects of jet-lag. Adults should reduce alcohol consumption and children should avoid sugary drinks.

 

#4 Keep an eye on the temperature

Before bed, make sure your child is engaged in quiet activities. If your child is running around, their temperature will increase making it harder to fall asleep. It is just like exercising before bed.

As the temperature during the night dips, if you run a fan or air-conditioner in your child’s room, they may wake from feeling cold. Set a timer if you can and stop it before midnight.

 

#5 Do not engage in the battle of the wills

Older children will question “Why do I have to go to bed, the sun is still up?” Yep it sure is. Sticking to your guns and not engaging in an argument is important. Referring back to Tip #1 and Tip#2, if you are 100% consistent with your routines and schedules, and you darken the room as much as possible, this will help your child to fall asleep.

School age children may go to bed a little later over the summer holidays but 2 weeks before school returns, begin to transition them back to their usual bedtime.

 

So enjoy these summer months. I love this time of year as it is all about spending time with love ones, being outdoors and BBQs!! Yummy!! How about you?

 

Sleep well,

Janelle Jeffery

Child Sleep Consultant for Sleepytime