What's Normal
- •Stalling is often a sign a child wants connection, control, or a delay in separating.
- •Bedtime is a boundary moment—kids test what stays the same.
- •Some nights are harder after transitions, missed naps, or big emotions.
- •Short, calm consistency usually works better than new consequences.
Routine Steps
- 1Connect
Get close, breathe, and say one calm sentence that names bedtime.
- 2Set the plan
Give one simple boundary and one choice you can repeat.
- 3Close the loop
Use a calming cue and the same ending phrase each night.
What To Avoid
- •Long negotiations or adding new rewards mid‑routine.
- •Big reactions (anger, long lectures) that add energy.
- •Changing the plan repeatedly once lights are low.
What Helps Tonight
- •Schedule a short ‘talk time’ earlier (5–10 minutes) to empty the mind.
- •At bedtime, switch to a quiet script: “We can talk tomorrow. Now we rest.”
- •Offer a notebook ‘parking lot’ for worries or ideas (older kids).
- •Use a calming story or audio cue that replaces conversation.
- •Keep responses short and warm—long chats wake the brain up.
- •If it’s connection-seeking, add 2 minutes of special time before the routine.
When To Get Help
- •If sleep issues happen most nights for weeks and your family is exhausted.
- •If there are safety concerns (leaving the house, dangerous climbing, choking risks).
- •If you suspect pain, breathing problems, or you’re worried about health—check with a pediatrician.