Trouble Sleeping - Riverside,CA

Updated on June 30, 2010
C.L. asks from Riverside, CA
6 answers

Hello Ladies,

I need some advice on what do to about recent events. My daughter will be 2 in September. She has been sleeping in her own crib since around 4 months old. On occasion she would wake up and cry, and almost always would go back to sleep on her own. It has never been a problem. For the last 2 weeks my daughter has been having a hard time sleeping in her crib. When she falls asleep at bed time, I put her in ther crib and she wakes up, usually around 3 in the morning, sometimes earlier and sometimes later, screaming her lungs out. She isn't crying, she is screaming. The first few times it happened we thought she was in pain and my fiance and I woke up scared! We let her sleep in our bed the rest of the night not thinking that this was going to be a continued occurence. Everynight she has been screaming at the top of her lungs. We wake up and watch her on the monitor and let her scream, but after 10 minutes or so she starts to attempt to crawl over the side of her crib. So, for the past couple of weeks Mia starts in her crib (in case you were wondering - it is a huge crib, so I don't think she feels cramped) and then she ends up in our bed for the rest of the night. I am at a loss. I do not know what to do. If I let her scream and hope she falls back asleep she just attempts to crawl out of her crib which is dangerous. Does anyone have advice? I know she is probably doing this because she wants to sleep with us, but I can't let her scream at the top of her lungs all night, and she can crawl out of her crib. Maybe turn her crib into a bed with rails? (Her crib turns into a full size bed) we are thinking she may just sleep more comfortably in a bed. Any advice please? We have a king size bed and even so she still manages to drop kick me in my face during the night because she sleeps like a helicopter (which is not pleasant). Most of all I know it is NOT a good habit for her to get used to sleeping with us. Please help.

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A.C.

answers from Houston on

Based on my own experience I am also going with night terrors. A two year old, that has previously slept through the night, isn't waking up without reason. There is a difference between not going down and waking in the middle of the night.

True, they do usually occur within 3 hours of so of going to sleep BUT my daughter has definitely had night terrors and has had them at all times. However, I know if she has one early on she will have several in a night.

The sound of her screaming scared you because it was probably nothing like you've heard come out of her before...lol. My daughter has acutally chased me through the house screaming once when I had to use the bathroom after being awakened by her terror...my otherwise rational mind actually considered that she might be possessed.

There actually isn't that much information available, so I'll tell you what has worked for us.

Triggers are:
major disruption in schedule, environment, etc. (like when we changed daycares and she had at least one every night for two weeks)

come medications--noticed them a lot when we tried some allegy medications at different times (singulair and zyrtec)

the occasional random one

overtiredness--an unusually active day combined with a late bedtime (too much sugar...lol)

her two year old molars

Dealing with:

Keep a notebook by the bed and mark down the time(s) when they occur. If they occur more than two days in a row, you can try a sleep interruption technique. You'll find that they often occur nearly at the same time all the time. You can set and alarm to fifteen minutes before go time and just jostle your child until she starts to wake up--you may notice that she is already restless. Now that my daughter is potty trained, I just carry her to the bathroom, let her go and put her back in bed. She can pee without really waking up, but it is enough to "re-set" her.

While she's having one. Turn on the lights to avoid scary shadows. Hold her if she'll let you. Repeat something soothing over and over again--a favorite song or just reassuring words...just be repetitive.

We've had them last 5 to 45 minutes. They generally end as quick as they start and she will just lay down and go back to sleep. I would be willing to bet that if you go to her and soothe her, she'll go back to sleep.

Her eyes will be open, she will seem awake, she may or may not respond directly to your advances. Shaking her or trying to wake her up pobably won't help and may prolong the episode--at least it does in our case. She won't have any recollection of waking. You SHOULD make her crib into a bed. Sleepwalking is associated with night terrors and she could hurt herself trying to get out during her panic.

Good luck. This is developmentally normal and usually resolves itself relatively quickly. We had about 6 months that were really hard, but hardly have any now that she is three. I expected that she would have them. I was and still am a very vivid dreamer and sleptwalked as a child.

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B.

answers from Augusta on

I don't think the screaming is a habit I think she's awaked from a nightmare and she's scared. You need to go to her comfort her and put her back in her bed.
don't let her just scream. Do you like to be left alone when you're scared?
if it was a night terror she wouldn't be lucid enough to try to climb out of her crib. If it was night terrors she'd look like she's awake but not recognize where she was or who she was with.

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H.B.

answers from Chicago on

My experience...both my boys during their 2 year old year started wanted to sleep with me. Sometimes I let them, other times I put them back into bed telling them they need to sleep in their bed. They found comfort in allowing them to sleep on the floor sometimes. I was/am also pregnant during these times, so I use my big belly as my excuse saying I'm too hot. Unfortunately when you're so tired you must stay consistent. I took the side off the crib and put a rail up at 2 years old.
P.S. My oldest around 3 years old had a fear of octopuses. It tool a couple weeks I think to figure it out. Everything he described didn't make sense. Once we figured it out, then we were able to help him. Both my boys also had growing pains that made them SCREAM in the middle of the night. Lots of rubbing helped. Unfortunately my youngest gets it more : (
Best of luck, hope you can get some sleep soon.

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S.H.

answers from Honolulu on

Instead of having her in YOUR bed... put a mattress on the FLOOR of your room... and she can be there.
That is what we do. It works. Its fine. For us. For me and my Hubby.
In some cultures, it is normal.
In our culture... detaching the child/baby as soon as possible... is the point. "Attachment" is not looked upon well.

At this age, they get like this sometimes. It is also a different manifestation of "separation anxiety" and they also as Peg M. mentioned, have night mares and such. It is developmental based. And they also begin to have emerging night time "fears"... which is also an age stage etc.

So with that in mind... you then conduct her as you feel fit.
Picking your battles.

When I was that age and until about 3-4 years old.... I would in the middle of the night, wake up (I had my own room), be scared and lonely... and I would creep down our LONG DARK hallway... and go to my parents room. Then I would crawl in between them. They let me. I grew out of it. It was no biggie.
My sister on the other hand, was the opposite... never wanting cuddly moments with my parents. I thought SHE was strange and "cold."

So you see, it is how you see it.... and a child's age stages.... and what you will allow or not... and what is a battle or not.
Each parent/family being different.
Most things, a child will outgrow. Naturally.

At each age stage as well.... "bonding" needs still occurs in the child... it being manifested differently per the child's age.

Next, instead of yelling.... teach her that she CAN call you... but to "call" you... not yell. But she is young.. they don't have full-impulse-control, yet.

all the best,
Susan

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S.T.

answers from Washington DC on

check on her. rub her back. sit with her. do not pick her up, or talk to her, or interact with her verbally. do NOT take her into your bed unless you want to be a co-sleeping family.
if you do something over and over it becomes a habit. if it's not a habit you want, stop doing it.
sounds like she may be outgrowing that crib too.
khairete
S.

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