T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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137.1 | you must be tired.... | BUSY::DKHAN | | Mon Jul 16 1990 14:57 | 22 |
| Sleeping on the floor sounds like a good idea. It might get him
used to not being in his crib before his bed arrives. Just make
sure you take everything suspect out of the room or put it up where
he can't reach or climb to get. Plug up all the outlets (you can
put dressers in front of them if he takes the safety plugs out).
Mkae an adventure out of it. And you can put the baby gate in his
door so he can't wander around if you are worried about it.
With the gate in the door you can say to him, "It's o.k. if you
don't go to sleep yet, but you have to stay in your room now, and
when you get sleepy, lie down on your sleeping bag." Just so he
knows that after he is put to bed, that is it, he has to stay in
his room. I know alot of people will hate me for saying this, but
he may cry at the gate for a while, but he will probably give up
eventually. Hopefully he can't climb over the gate! You might want
to try without the gate first, and then if he keeps coming into
your room, tell him you will have to put the baby gate up. This
works with my 2.5 yr old.
Good luck. I know how you feel.
Dottie
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137.2 | lower the side? | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Mon Jul 16 1990 15:07 | 15 |
| You can also consider lowering the side of his crib, if it's
adjustable, to make it easier for him to get out. He may be feeling
trapped for some reason.
You mention he does this when he's feeling hysterical. Is there any way
you could help (without giving in :-) before it reaches the hysteria
level? Perhaps some of the ideas going on in the recent discussion
about putting to bed -- Ferber's book on sleep problems can be quite
helpful. Generally, you want to reassure him that you're there by going
in every 5-10 minutes, but only stay a minute. Be firm and polite and
then leave. They soon get the hint, believe it or not.
Best of luck,
Lynn
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137.3 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Jul 16 1990 15:32 | 4 |
| Is it not possible to remove the front side from the crib? (maybe
detach the rods that allow it to slide up and down?).
- Bruce
|
137.4 | Strange, but it helped my nephew | SMAUG::RLAMONT | | Mon Jul 16 1990 17:55 | 20 |
| Perhaps he is having some sort of anxieties when he's going to bed or
something that causes his hysterics. If he's anxious or nervous try
some sort of mood music as he's going to sleep. My sister's child is
about the same age, she too had to lower the crib to the lowest setting
since Steve was becoming "adept" at climbing out.
I agree with the other repliers about trying the sleeping on the floor
routine, etc. He definitely would hurt himself less if he rolled off
the matress while it was on the floor, etc. However, I'm wondering why
he gets hysterical.
My sister had more of a problem not so much with climbing out and she
did with his anxiety and she said the new tapes help....they are
relaxing and so far he hasn't woken up in the night again.
It's a strange suggestion but with kids it's hard to guess what'll work
and what won't. Perhaps it's worth a try?
R.
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137.5 | | COOKIE::HOE | Sam, dad said DITCH, not B-itch! | Mon Jul 16 1990 17:59 | 8 |
| Bruce,
It depends on the price of the crib. Ours was a medium priced
crib and the side does not remove. We dropped the side and tied a
two-stepped stool on the side of the crib so that Sammy can crawl
out.
Cal
|
137.6 | My son exactly!!!! | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Tue Jul 17 1990 06:27 | 17 |
| That could have been my son exactly at that age. We went on vacation
and he slept in a bed with a sleeper keeper (that was for 8 weeks).
When we came back I have planned on keeping him in his crib, which has
a removeable side finished so no sharp edges or bolts stuck out - this
was the reason we bought this crib; to extend it's lifespan. We'll Berk
wanted nothing to do with that. He flipped out of the crib at all hours
of the night. We tried the gate in the door to keep him from wandering
but he would even flip over that to let us know he wasn't happy. So we
put a spare king size mattress on the floor and never had a problem. He
knew when he wanted to be in the bed and no one or nothing was going to
keep him in that crib or his room.
In the meantime waiting for bed to come in, try putting the crib
mattress on the floor. My son wouldn't sleep on his but we did try. Or
maybe a mattress from a sleep sofa. Also remember that hot air rises so
if the weather is hot, sit in the floor for a while to see how cold it
is down there before blasting the room with fans.
|
137.7 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | treasures....most of them dreams | Fri Jul 20 1990 18:16 | 13 |
| When my oldest son started climbing out of his crib we moved
him to a low bed and stuffed rolled towels under the bottom sheet
(it was a fitted sheet) that made enough of a 'lip' to keep
him from rolling out of bed.
I recall when I was growing up, people delt with the problem of
kids climbing out of cribs by putting extenders on the cribs to
raise the sides and putting a top of netting on the crib, essentially
making it a cage.
Times do change.
Bonnie
|
137.8 | Just moved to bed | FSHQA2::DICRESCENTIS | | Mon Jul 30 1990 12:30 | 20 |
| I moved Erica (19 months) into a twin bed last week after her jumping
out of the crib and she started climbing into my bed for her afternoon
naps. She did fine for a few days but this weekend she was a horror
story...any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Erica needs her nap in the afternoon but I'm having trouble getting her
to stay in the bed for them and at night too. The bed is low enough so
she can get out very fast as soon as I leave the room she is at the
door banging to get out. I close the door until she falls asleep. We
do the same things every night...dinner, bath, play, read, sleep???....
but now she screams when I leave the room. I've gone in and given her
a hug but she holds on for dear life. Last night after and hour of going
in and out I just let her cry (scream) and she fell asleep at the door
(talk about guilt!). Has anyone had this problem and how did you deal
with it? Once she is asleep she if fine and stays there until the morning
when I go get her.
Any suggestions/experience is appreciated.
Darlene
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