Business Insights
  • Home
  • Pregnancy Tips
  • Baby Tips
  • Baby News
  • Baby Health
  • Adoption Tips
  • Videos
  • Mom Tips
  • Baby Accessories
  • Contact

Archives

  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025

Categories

  • Adoption Tips
  • Baby Accessories
  • Baby Health
  • Baby News
  • Baby Tips
  • Mom Tips
  • Pregnancy Tips
  • Uncategorized
  • Videos
Subscribe
Baby Inter
Business Insights
  • Home
  • Pregnancy Tips
  • Baby Tips
  • Baby News
  • Baby Health
  • Adoption Tips
  • Videos
  • Mom Tips
  • Baby Accessories
  • Contact
Why is it so hard to get your kids to fall asleep at night?
  • Baby News

Why is it so hard to get your kids to fall asleep at night?

  • November 28, 2025
  • Baby Tips

By Cayla Solomon, sleep and parent coach

It’s not just your imagination: bedtime is a conflict of interests that leaves parents frustrated and children latching on like barnacles. Here’s why, and what you can do to make it easier for everyone.

If you were to ask most parents of young kids what time of day is consistently most difficult, it would be a pretty safe bet to assume most would answer with bedtime.

The reason is actually quite straightforward, when you think about it: bedtime is a conflict of interests between a parent’s needs and a child’s needs.

When bedtime rolls around, parents are spent – either from spending an entire day parenting, or from working, followed by cramming a few hours of parenting into the short window between the end of daycare/school and bedtime. Counting down the minutes until there is time to clean up, pack the next day’s lunches, and maybe catch up on the latest Netflix drama; the endless cries of ‘mommy mommy daddy mommy” can feel like nails on a chalkboard.

If you were to ask most parents of young kids what time of day is consistently most difficult, it would be a pretty safe bet to assume most would answer with bedtime.

Conversely, kids approach bedtime knowing that they are entering the biggest separation of their day: 10-12 hours where they are expected to be on their own, in a dark room, without those they love most close by. It’s a lot to ask of them, even for the best of sleepers.

Realistically, we don’t even expect that from most adults.

Add in the fact that, if they are in any kind of childcare, they’ve had to cram all of their daily connection with you into just a few short hours, and we have a perfect storm for bedtime battles. We are pushing them away, anxiously awaiting a few child-free hours before we go to sleep, and our kids are simultaneously pulling us in, holding onto every last minute with us before they finally cave and drift off to sleep.

Some may ask why this battle still exists with children who are home all day with their parents, and I would argue that even children with the most secure of attachments find bedtime to be onerous, maybe more so than their ‘independent’ counterparts. After all, we miss the people we are closest to the most.

And, children who have been conditioned into ‘independence’ (i.e. those who have been sleep trained) will either fight tooth and nail because they anticipate the separation of bedtime and are fearful of having no connection until morning; or conversely won’t fight at all, because they know it is futile and have long since bothered to ask for support knowing it will not be answered (Gabor Maté and Gordon Neufeld speak about this at length in their many resources on separation and childhood trauma).

Some may ask why this battle still exists with children who are home all day with their parents, and I would argue that even children with the most secure of attachments find bedtime to be onerous, maybe more so than their ‘independent’ counterparts.

If you are finding that this is happening in your home, and you are looking for solutions to make bedtime more seamless and less stressful for everyone, here are two suggestions:

Look for opportunities for connection in the hours leading up to bedtime. Even if all you can find is 5-10 minutes of uninterrupted connection time, it will go a long way to filling your child’s connection cup, and then asking them to pour from it again in order to gain the separation of bedtime. This may mean snuggling with them and talking about all the parts of their day; it may mean having a bedtime bin of activities that offer a deeper level of connection; it could be simply playing with them or offering a massage (both great ways of adding sensory input if they are a sensory seeking child, who needs that added rough play before settling to sleep for the night).

See next page for more…

Source link

Baby Tips

Previous Article
3 OUTDATED Pieces Of BABY ADVICE!
  • Videos

3 OUTDATED Pieces Of BABY ADVICE!

  • November 27, 2025
  • Baby Tips
Read More
Next Article
Struggling to Wash Your Baby Girl's Hair? Try the Foldable Baby Hair Washing Recliner! #baby
  • Videos

Struggling to Wash Your Baby Girl's Hair? Try the Foldable Baby Hair Washing Recliner! #baby

  • November 28, 2025
  • Baby Tips
Read More
You May Also Like
Timeless Merino Babywear for Those Precious Early Days
Read More
  • Baby News

Timeless Merino Babywear for Those Precious Early Days

  • Baby Tips
  • March 2, 2026
Amaati Aria Pushchair Review
Read More
  • Baby News

Amaati Aria Pushchair Review

  • Baby Tips
  • February 28, 2026
Primary vs. Wearable Breast Pumps: A BabyBuddha Comparison
Read More
  • Baby News

Primary vs. Wearable Breast Pumps: A BabyBuddha Comparison

  • Baby Tips
  • February 26, 2026
Preserving Liquid Gold: Freeze-Drying Your Breast Milk
Read More
  • Baby News

Preserving Liquid Gold: Freeze-Drying Your Breast Milk

  • Baby Tips
  • February 24, 2026
iCandy Core 2 Pushchair Review
Read More
  • Baby News

iCandy Core 2 Pushchair Review

  • Baby Tips
  • February 22, 2026
Haircare Services That Fit Around Family Life
Read More
  • Baby News

Haircare Services That Fit Around Family Life

  • Baby Tips
  • February 20, 2026
Creative Toys, Crafts And Activities To Keep The Kids Amused
Read More
  • Baby News

Creative Toys, Crafts And Activities To Keep The Kids Amused

  • Baby Tips
  • February 18, 2026
Ready to Snap? How to Catch Yourself and Get Back on Track
Read More
  • Baby News

Ready to Snap? How to Catch Yourself and Get Back on Track

  • Baby Tips
  • February 16, 2026

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADS

Recent Posts

  • Timeless Merino Babywear for Those Precious Early Days
  • Real Mom Stories: My baby needed more nutrition
  • Health Insurance Policy For New Born Baby – Newborn Baby Health Insurance
  • Amaati Aria Pushchair Review
  • newborn baby gift ideas | baby accessories | baby care | baby dresses #viral #satisfying #shorts
ADS
Categories
  • Adoption Tips (4)
  • Baby Accessories (1)
  • Baby Health (6)
  • Baby News (77)
  • Baby Tips (8)
  • Mom Tips (4)
  • Pregnancy Tips (7)
  • Uncategorized (1)
  • Videos (242)
Baby Inter
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Terms of Use
Baby Tips & Advices

Input your search keywords and press Enter.