ChatterBank1 min ago
Toddlers napping!!! What would you do?
I am at my wits end! My 18 month old's routine is set in stone, she is a happy girl. She has never napped much (1 x hour nap after lunch) and would go to bed at 7:30 no problems and not wake up till 7:30 next morning. However she seems to want to stop napping completely (the naps just got shorter and shorter) but my health visitor says she's too young to go without a nap (apparently they're supposed to have 2-3 hours nap a day and 12 hours at night!??) but even if I enforce a short 20 min nap it eats severely into going to bed time! She can go without a nap, but she sorta lulls around 3-4pm, but if I keep her awake she sleeps from 7-7. If she naps she won't sleep till 9-10 at night, still waking at 7! . . . Do I listen to my health visitor and lose my evenings or not? . . . What would you do?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Listen to yourself - you know your daughter far better than the Health Visitor. If she can get through the day without a nap and sleeps well in the night then cut out the nap. My youngest children (twins) haven't had a day time nap since they were about 18 months although the girl will sometimes nod off about 4 o'clock (I give her a tip top/ice pop thing and it wakes her up enough to keep her going till bedtime).
If your little girl doesn't want a nap, then don't make her have one. You will probably find that some days she will want one and others she won't. I think it is best not to upset the bedtime routine. All children vary, my kids at 18 months probably slept for about 1hr max. Don't worry about the health visitor, she is young by any chance?
Many thanks to you all for confirming my thoughts! :-) she will happily stay awake with snacks and fresh air, and I feel that seeing as she sleeps so well at night it would be wrong to upset the bedtime routine! My HV just wants an easy run of it, reciting pamphlets verbatim! I would much rather lose the nap, than lose easy bedtimes and quality time with my husband :-)
Hi Alba, please don't worry about it as you haven't offended me at all. I just found it easier to have a strict routine with the two little ones and it kind of overtook everything else. I find I have loads of time to do stuff with them all because I am so organised (almost to the point of obsession!) yet I am not stressed out trying to get everything done.
let her stay up. We had this with my youngest who has a seriously high IQ - she isn't hyperactive or anything, but from about the same age, she didnt require the afternoon nap and, yes, if she did it would impact on her night sleep. Our Doc (in the States) backed our view to keep her awake but to have quiet time and she could read a book - she was reading at 3 - at 18 months she would quietly play (pigs being a huge thing) or look at books, a Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) book on shapes being one of her favourites.
We had a big punch up with her first school about this and led a rebellion of like-minded parents and the schoopl did, eventually, accept that there were a number of kids like her, again the solution being quiet time but no nap.
We had a big punch up with her first school about this and led a rebellion of like-minded parents and the schoopl did, eventually, accept that there were a number of kids like her, again the solution being quiet time but no nap.
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