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Jacob, 2 years old |
Seeing what someone's schedule is with their children can be super helpful. Please leave a
comment with your child's schedule so others can benefit from your experience. Let us know how old your child is and feel free to include as little or as much information as you'd like.
For a look at
Jacob's schedule at 2.5 years, look here.
Hi thanks so much for your blog it's wonderful and so helpful! Do you include the amount of time it takes for him to get himself to sleep? My son is 25months and his routine is.
ReplyDelete640am wakes
12/1pm sleep 1 hour only have to wake him it seems if he sleeps longer he wakes at 550am the next morning which is a shame as we would all like for him to sleep longer during the day.
7pm bed time settles in 15-30min although is we didn't have a video monitor we might think he was alsleep
I don't normally include the amount of time it takes for him to get to sleep.
DeleteThe old schedules got erased for some reason -- ahhh! I'm looking into changing the commenting system again-- so I'll add what I can find in my email below.
ReplyDeleteMikely says:
ReplyDeleteMy son's schedule 2.5 + years
7:30 wake and eat
9:30 snack
11:15 lunch
12 nap
2:30/3 up from nap
3:00 snack
6:00 dinner
7:30 bed
Mary says:
ReplyDelete2 years
8:30 wakes up and has breakfast
12:00 lunch time
1:00 nap
4:30 nap over
6:30 Dinner time
8:00 bedtime
Sharon says:
ReplyDelete2 years and 3 months old
7:30 wakes and eats
10:00 or around that time has a snack
12:00 Lunch
12:30 Nap
3:00 wakes and has a snack
6:00-6:30 dinner
7:30 bed
Rachael says:
ReplyDelete2. 5 years
7:00 Wake and breakfast
9:00 Snack
11:30 Lunch
12:00 Nap
2/2:30 Up from nap
2:30 Snack
6:00 Dinner
7:15 Bed
Amanda says:
ReplyDelete2 years
8:00 Wake
8:30 Breakfast
12:30 Lunch
1:30 Nap
3:30 Up from nap
4:00 Snack
6:30 Dinner
8:00 Bedtime
Nataliew Says:
ReplyDelete2 year old (almost :)
7 am wake, 8 am out of bed
8:15 am breakfast
11:30 am lunch
12:00 pm nap
2:30 pm up from nap, snack
6:00 pm dinner
6:30 pm bedtime
Jacob 2.5 years
ReplyDelete7:30 Wake up. Read/Play
8:15 Breakfast
11:30/12:00 Lunch
1:30 Nap
3:00 Nap ends
3:15 Snack
5:30/6:00 Dinner
7:15 Get ready for bed
7:30 Reading with mom or dad
8:00 Bed
RachelStella @ My Baby Sleep Guide
ReplyDeleteJoshua at 2 years, 3 months old
7:00 Wake
11:30 Nap
2:00 Get up from nap (usually by me)
7:30 Bed
My daughter 23 months has always been a fantastic sleeper. She still goes to sleep every night with no issues, however is waking up around 10-10:30pm every night crying. We have tried cuddling her, comforting her, letting her cry (once for 2 hours) and in the end the only thing that stops her crying is bringing her into our bed to sleep which means not a great night sleep for us. Has anyone else been in this situation before? I am really at my wits end and tired and exhausted and really over it but don't know what else to try. Open to any suggestions!
ReplyDeleteMy daughter 23 months has always been a fantastic sleeper. She still goes to sleep every night with no issues, however is waking up around 10-10:30pm every night crying. We have tried cuddling her, comforting her, letting her cry (once for 2 hours) and in the end the only thing that stops her crying is bringing her into our bed to sleep which means not a great night sleep for us. Has anyone else been in this situation before? I am really at my wits end and tired and exhausted and really over it but don't know what else to try. Open to any suggestions!
ReplyDeletePut her to bed later. Stop making other people happy by putting her to bed at a "good bed time" only to have her wake up in the middle of the night.
ReplyDeleteOther "bad parenting" advice that works, on Netflix there are ambient videos like a babbling brook, when my son can't sleep I keep him in his crib (which is in my room [I also recommend]) and I lay in my bed and put one of those videos on. It usually works. Sound very low. Pretend you're asleep.
Put her to bed later. Stop making other people happy by putting her to bed at a "good bed time" only to have her wake up in the middle of the night.
ReplyDeleteOther "bad parenting" advice that works, on Netflix there are ambient videos like a babbling brook, when my son can't sleep I keep him in his crib (which is in my room [I also recommend]) and I lay in my bed and put one of those videos on. It usually works. Sound very low. Pretend you're asleep.