Blog » Moving to a Bed (from a Crib)
Moving to a Bed (from a Crib)
Posted July 28, 2010
This is absolutely the way/time I like the transition to a big bed to happen. By waiting until age 3 (+-) it gives the child time to become interested and curious about the transition and feel in charge of it. Her timing is good and I see no big reason to make her work around the moving time. So my advice is to follow her lead. Two important things:
- Let her know that in order to keep her safe and for you to know where she is, only parents will be in charge of when her door closes or opens. I suggest you find a method you are comfortable with (white door-knob cover? hook and eye lock on outside?) so you can stay 100% in control of where she is, just as if you have turned her whole room into one large crib. (I would leave the crib up for a week or so, just in case she needs to make a few trial runs...)
- I suggest you leave the soother in place, for now. After the move and once she is a good sleeper in her new bed (glitches do arise, occasionally, even at this age), it will then be a good time to take the soother away. To do that, you can tell her "Tonight is the night you will be able to fall asleep without the soother, just like you do at daycare. (warning her ahead only creates anxiety) If she tries to talk you out of it, let her know it's OK if she needs to cry because crying will help her get to sleep faster." Then, you just do it. Give her something new to suck on (she probably won't use it) and tell her you know she can do it. In the meantime, you can let her know that if she loses her soothers in her big bed, she can get out of bed and look for it. Let her know that her soothers are up to her, now. (put an extra in a box on a shelf and let her know the location?)
- Generally, I do not recommend a child participates in the "loss" of soothers. When/why they go should be an adult decision, and if you can avoid feeling sorry for her (hard!) she'll feel more confident in the long run.
Filed under: Sleep
Comments
As far as the soother goes, something that worked really well for me was to tell my child (prewarn) that the soother fairy is coming tonight and is going to take your soother to other babies that need it and leave you something instead, so at night time we had our child place the soother under the pillow and we replaced it with a toy that our child really wanted.
By Kristi on July 29, 2010
My son is 13 months and has the soother only at bedtime/naptime, however he is VERY attached to it. When is a good time to get rid of it and by what point should a child be rid of it at the latest?
By natalie on August 6, 2010