Yeah, the "bed is only for sleeping" rule is really more of a result of struggling to find something that worked for my crazy bad sleeper. It's probably not necessary for most kids.
DS was the same way with his naps until he went down to 2 naps per day. Then his morning nap was about an hour, maybe longer if I was very lucky, and his afternoon nap was about 30-44 minutes. If I didn't have anything to do, when he woke up after his short afternoon nap, I could go in and hold him for about another hour, and he would doze. I could doze or play on my phone, but if I tried to put him down, he'd be wide awake.
Does she fall asleep on her own, or do you rock her? Is she napping in the same place she sleeps at night? For DS, we tried to make it exactly the same - he even still wears pajamas for his nap. How dark is her room? We have blackout curtains that we fastened to the wall around the window so no light would come through. I put a sheet over the top of the window to block out light above it. Do you use white noise?
Do you have a naptime routine? If so, maybe you can try making it longer to really let it set in that it's time for sleep. It could be something like feed, read a story, put on pajamas, sing a song, then nap.
Those are things to try, but really all I read about the short napping was that some kids just have to grow out of it. If/when you want to try cry-it-out, some people have had luck with just not going into their room until naptime is over.
Here are some good sample schedules to look at: http://www.babysleepsite.com/baby-sl...ing-schedules/
Originally posted by TulipsAndSunscreen
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Does she fall asleep on her own, or do you rock her? Is she napping in the same place she sleeps at night? For DS, we tried to make it exactly the same - he even still wears pajamas for his nap. How dark is her room? We have blackout curtains that we fastened to the wall around the window so no light would come through. I put a sheet over the top of the window to block out light above it. Do you use white noise?
Do you have a naptime routine? If so, maybe you can try making it longer to really let it set in that it's time for sleep. It could be something like feed, read a story, put on pajamas, sing a song, then nap.
Those are things to try, but really all I read about the short napping was that some kids just have to grow out of it. If/when you want to try cry-it-out, some people have had luck with just not going into their room until naptime is over.
Here are some good sample schedules to look at: http://www.babysleepsite.com/baby-sl...ing-schedules/
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