T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1181.1 | Just curious . . . | SOLVIT::FEBONIO | | Mon Oct 21 1991 14:35 | 1 |
| Have you asked your son why he's bringing his socks to bed?
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1181.2 | | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Mon Oct 21 1991 15:07 | 7 |
| He did change schools recently though, right? Anyway, it seems
harmless enough to me. I'd probably take an amused stance while
reinforcing that you do NOT intend this to expand to other garment
categories in the future! Then I'd expect the novelty to wear off in a
few.... weeks?
Leslie
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1181.3 | don't know why! | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Mon Oct 21 1991 15:22 | 11 |
| It's BEEN a few weeks already, and we have asked but can't get a real
answer why, or what he's doing it for. He just say "cause he wants to"
Now you do realize this kid has got so many toys in his bed, it's tough
at times to find the kid for them! Not to mention the kitten, our
just barely one year old half siamese cat who takes up residence at night
on the bookcase headboard, among the stuffed animals, like the kid in the
Dimetap commerical who hides the same way among the stuffed animals
Lyn (who's convinced she's loosing it!)
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1181.4 | What's the problem? | NOVA::WASSERMAN | Deb Wasserman, DTN 264-1863 | Mon Oct 21 1991 15:31 | 4 |
| Why do you have to do anything about it? Is it that big a problem?
Also, does putting socks in his bed have anything to do with him
objecting to going to bed in the first place?
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1181.5 | Frustration, big time! | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Mon Oct 21 1991 15:38 | 10 |
| Like I said I haven't a clue WHY he's doing it, it may have something
to do with a form of protest.
You just have to understand my point of frustration. I spend many
nights and a good chunk of the weekend doing laundry, and after
spending much time sorting, mating and folding sox I get real
frustrated finding most of the sox unfolded and scattered in and among
the bed clothes. At least one of the sox each night ends up missing!
(and I'll bet you all thought the Dryer ate the sox! :-) !! )
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1181.6 | Just buy white socks! | TLE::MINAR::BISHOP | | Mon Oct 21 1991 16:07 | 4 |
| Our solution to this was to buy only white socks, so they all match.
That way you never have to sort or mate or fold; just dump them loose
into the drawer!
-John Bishop
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1181.7 | | A1VAX::DISMUKE | Kwik-n-e-z! That's my motto! | Mon Oct 21 1991 17:00 | 7 |
| Can't be any stranger than my 4 yr old who likes to sleep with books
under his pillow (if only "osmosis" would work here...)
Just ask him to put the socks back in the morning.
-sandy
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1181.8 | I think its kind of cute . . . | KAHALA::JOHNSON_L | Leslie Ann Johnson | Mon Oct 21 1991 18:24 | 13 |
| I use a method of folding socks that keeps the two in the pair connected by
folding the socks into the top "tube" of one of them. Keeps the pairs together
when they got tossled around in a drawer, might keep them together when they
get tossled around in a bed too. I've been doing this ever since I saw a
college roomate do it and thought hey, that makes sense. It doesn't stretch
the sock out either.
Or maybe you get a package of socks that are his to take to bed, and set the
rest off limits ? Anyhow, it seems to me to be more somehthing to chuckle
over than to get worried - except maybe for the annoyance factor of loosing
socks.
Leslie
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1181.9 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | Daddy=the most rewarding job | Tue Oct 22 1991 08:09 | 13 |
| I wouldn't worry about it at all. I am sure there is a reason for it,
one that only he knows. This shows that he is thinking for himself, I
wouldn't worry about it at all. If someone from another planet came
down and observed what we adults do as part of our routines, I'm sure
they would find them fairly peculiar.
RE: Toilet training-If the problem is only at night, it may be a
biological thing. I read somewhere that they have found that
bed-wetters do not produce a chemical (I believe in the brain) which
shuts down our systems when we sleep. This is just in case you have
not heard of it.
Mike
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1181.10 | "Mom, do you want to sleep with me?" | TELALL::NELSONK | | Mon Jan 13 1992 15:46 | 14 |
| Lately, 3.75-year-old James has been asking me to sleep with him.
Not every night, but often enough that I'm a little concerned.
What he usually wants is for me to lay down next to him and cuddle
him till he falls asleep. The nights that I do it -- not every
night -- I only stay for 5 minutes, max. Then I tell him that
I've got to get up, that I have my own bed that I like to sleep
in, and that if he needs me for anything, all he has to do is
call me. We put a night light in his room and that helped a bit.
The nights that Mike isn't home (more frequently than before, now
that he\s in business for himself), I may keep James up another
20-30 minutes so we can play a game together and have some time
to ourselves after the baby goes to bed. Anything else I can do?
This isn't a problem yet, but I don't want to turn it into one
by my reactions, either.
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1181.11 | good luck :) | TLE::RANDALL | liberal feminist redneck pacifist | Mon Jan 13 1992 16:09 | 32 |
| We've been hassling this one off and on since Steven was about the
same age as James. It has more to do with loneliness and fear of
the night (monsters, fire, ghosts, noises, thunder, insects, etc.
etc. etc. ) than it does with anything Oedipal.
Often letting him have a comfort object that belonged to one of us
would help get him calmed down and to sleep. Fortunately I have
my own collection of stuffed animals that I could loan to him. In
your case, something that belongs to or was given to him by his
father might work better.
Could his father call at bedtime, or could James call him to say
goodnight?
Really bad nights, such as when there was a thunderstorm
approaching at bedtime, he'd go to sleep on the floor of our
bedroom -- and he would be perfectly happy to go to sleep in our
room alone in the dark when he wouldn't even let us leave him in
his own room with the nightlight on. And if the storm came
through later, it didn't usually bother him even if it was so bad
it woke him up. It was something about the transition from light
to dark, and the change of perception, that frightened him.
We didn't really get a satisfactory solution until last year, when
Steven decided he wanted to share a bunk bed and a bedroom with
his little brother. I was dubious, figuring they'd be keeping
each other awake all the time, but it's worked out very well. Now
bedtime is a snap -- the few nights when he isn't ready to hop up
cheerfully into his secluded private little loft, a quick, "Hush,
you'll wake up David!" calms him right down.
--bonnie
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1181.12 | | POWDML::SATOW | | Mon Jan 13 1992 16:49 | 32 |
| re: .10
> The nights that I do it -- not every
> night -- I only stay for 5 minutes, max. Then I tell him that
> I've got to get up, that I have my own bed that I like to sleep
> in, and that if he needs me for anything, all he has to do is
> call me.
Does that work? Does he fall asleep in that five minute span?
If so, then we've gone through phases like that, and ended up handling it in a
very similar manner. In fact we had to work to get to the point that you are
now, with our daughter. It started out as one of us lying down with her until
she fell asleep. Then we got to cuddling for a specific length of time (and
typically our presence was sufficient to calm her enought that she went to
sleep). Then it became sitting in a chair next to the bed holding her hand (a
big improvement, since she has a water bed, and it's hard to get out of bed
without waking her up). She doesn't have any unusual sleep problems now --
unless she is sick.
Based on our experience, if he either falls asleep in the five minutes, or
doesn't object when you leave, then you don't have a long term problem. If
it's more comfortable for you, you might try negotiating just being in the
room, or holding his hand rather than lying down with him. I think you're
handling the situation well -- it's far preferable to letting him start out in
your bed. I think your explanation of why you want to leave, and the night
light are both good ideas.
Of course I don't know how often "often enough that I'm a little concerned"
is.
Clay
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1181.13 | Music for an allocated time? | MCIS5::TRIPP | | Tue Jan 14 1992 09:27 | 14 |
| We have, of late, tried rubbing his back for 5 minutes, then he gets to
listen to either the little portable radio or a cassette tape (both of
which were Christmas gifts) until he goes to sleep. We have
established a rule that if he's not asleep in 10 to 15 minutes whatever
is playing goes off. Generally he is asleep within the allowed time,
and there's no problem.
Would this be an option to laying with him for 5 minutes, or until he's
asleep? I don't think kiddos understand the concept that we as adults
have things to do, nor do they seem to fully comprehend how long 5, 10
or any time frame is. We really have found the music to be a great
help.
Lyn
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1181.14 | Me too!!!! | DEMON::CHALMERS | Ski or die... | Wed Jan 15 1992 13:47 | 36 |
| re: last few
I'm very interested in the views on this subject, since Nick (27 mos)
has been wanting one of us to sleep with him virtually every night for
the past 2 months. We've had mixed success in trying to dissuade him.
I agree with an earlier reply that felt this was more driven by
'aloneness' than by anything Oedipal, since in our case, Nick doesn't
seem to care who sleeps with him. In fact, if one of us refuses, he'll
simply ask the other, his complaint being: "But I'm all by myself!" (in
that pitiful voice that only a child or an Acadamy-award-winning actor can
muster...)
His (our) routine is to read two or three short books (Goodnight Moon,
etc) either in his bed or on the couch, and then it's time to sleep.
He'll then ask whichever one of us read to him to stay in his bed.
Sometimes we will, and less often we won't. I'm much better than Kathy
at getting away after a few minutes, by explaining that I'm going into
the kitchen (or bathroom, or living room, etc), and that I'll be back
to see him before I go to bed. As long as he can hear me nearby, he
seems OK with this. He'll often ask me to not go downstairs (to the
basement family room), and I typically agree, which also seems to work.
Sometimes, though, Kathy or I are so tired that we end up falling
asleep in his bed, and wind up staying there longer that we had
intended...(can you say 'Mixed messages'? Sure ye' can...)
Usually he'll wake up in the middle of the night (3 or 4 am) and
attempt to crawl into bed with us. One of us will then bring him back
to bed, at which point he'll again ask that we stay with him. And
again, I'm usually better than Kathy at working thru the situation with
him, but our success is usually inversely proportional to how tired we
are. Often it's easier to give in in order to get a good stretch of
sleep than to repeat this process a few times between 3 and 6 am.
Again, time for me to sit back and read the replies.
Freddie
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