Life

Courtesy of Steph Montgomery
10 Signs Your Kid's Bedtime Routine Is Too Complex

by Steph Montgomery

It's not uncommon to feel as if your child's life revolves around sleep. And as a new mother I was told I needed to establish a bedtime routine right away, so I did. Unfortunately, as a result, my kids now relies on that carefully crafted routine to get even an ounce of sleep. Unless certain things happen in a particular order every night at bedtime, my kids won't go to bed. It’s ridiculous.

It didn't take me long to consider the possibility that their bedtime routines are too complex. Like, maybe they don’t actually need hours (and I literally mean hours) of baths, bedtime stories, drinks of water, snuggling, relaxing music, and my physical presence to fall asleep. It definitely seems like my partner and I have created a monster in the form of a complex bedtime routine that's starting to eat into my evening routine, too. I used to be able to spend time with my husband at the end of the day. "Used to" being the important part of that sentence.

I'm partly to blame for my current predicament, don't get me wrong. It's easier to give into their demands (no matter how unreasonable), or even let my kids sleep with me. But choices that seem easy in the moment aren't always good for the long-term, and I guess I knew bedtime was getting out of hand long before it started to become the most dreaded part of the day. If only I had stopped and looked for the following signs, then adjusted accordingly before it was too late:

You Dread Bedtime

I used to look forward to bedtime, especially because once my kids went to sleep I could focus on myself. Post-bedtime was my time to enjoy some needed silence, a glass of wine, or an episode of Grey's Anatomy. I was able to actually feel like a person again, and not just somebody's mother.

Now, I never know if bedtime will take a few minutes or a few hours. It sucks not knowing if I will get "me time."

It Takes Hours

As an insomniac, I totally understand not being able to fall asleep at night. Having said that, it feels overwhelmingly horrible to spend hours trying to help my kids relax at bedtime. Something breaks inside me after about 20 minutes or so of doing everything my kids actually need, and still not managing to lull them into dreamland. I don't like the parent I become after an hour of bedtime. Not at all.

It Interferes With Your Romantic Life

Our complex bedtime routine has also started to interfere with my relationship with my spouse. More often than not, the time between the kids' bedtime and our bedtime is the only time we have to spend with each other. So believe me when I say it sucks to feel like you don't have an opportunity to connect with your spouse at the end of a long day.

Your Kid Calls The Shots

Courtesy of Steph Montgomery

It's easy to give up and let your kids control bedtime. I wish I could refuse to negotiate, take charge, and tell them it's bedtime, but the more I try to control the routine the more demanding they seem to get. So, more often than not, I find myself giving in to avoid a fight.

It Stops Working

My kids' overly complex bedtime routine doesn't always work. Even when I do everything "right" they still don't always fall asleep at a reasonable hour. It's exhausting to engage in a battle of wills with tiny humans every night, and even more exhausting to realize that they are winning that battle by staying awake past their bedtime.

It's Stressful For Everyone

Bedtime is stressful, and I know it takes a toll on everyone involved. I try to set my expectations low and hope for the best, but I can't help but feel disappointed in myself. Mom guilt usually gets the better of me and I wonder what I'm doing wrong, how I'm failing my kids, and how I've made things so much harder for myself.

You Fall Asleep Before Your Kids Do

I'd be lying if I said I don't sometimes fall asleep with my kids — in the baby's bed, on the bottom bunk, or on the floor in their room. When I manage to shake myself awake and try to sneak my tired, stiff body out of their room like an exhausted ninja, one of my children will inevitably notice and ask, "Mommy, where are you going? I can't fall asleep without you."

Sweet, but also... ugh.

No One Can Handle Bedtime But You

Courtesy of Steph Montgomery

My kids expect certain people to do certain things during their complex bedtime routine. For example, my husband has to be the one to read bedtime stories and put the baby to bed, while I'm the one who has to snuggle with the big kids in their room. We can't have a night off from our designated duties, otherwise it all goes to hell. In other words, my husband and I can't enjoy a date night if it means staying out past the kids' bedtime, otherwise they'll simply refuse to sleep.

Someone Almost Always Cries

When I'm at the end of my proverbial rope I tend to delay bedtime for as long as possible. That's a mistake, my friends, because I've learned that when kids are over-tired they tend to meltdown. The same goes for parents, by the way. Everything is worse when you don't get enough sleep. Everything.

You've Given Up

I hate to say this, but at times it feels overwhelming to think that my partner and I have a few more years of sleep deprivation to look forward to before all of our kids will be capable of simply going to bed when we ask them to. I know logically that it will happen, I just don't know how much more I can take.