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Comments

Pamela

How do get dad on board? I have tried many times to be firm but he just tends to give up before i do.
Do you recommend doing this over a vacation period as we both work very long hours?

Thank you very much

Alyson Schafer

Hi Pamela,

It sure helps if you can make a plan to do the training over a long weekend or holiday. Shouldn't take more than a few night though. Best to have your husband on board BEFORE you start training though. If he is NOT on board and WANTS to sleep with her, perhaps suggest he sleep in the child's room and respect that YOU deserve to have a good night sleep in your own bed. The decisions he makes for himself and daughter don't have to impact you. Of course done in the wrong spirit - this will just lead to a power struggle between the parents, so try your best to find a solution that meets EVERYONE's needs in the family.

Hope that helps.

Alyson

Pamela

Thank you Alyson.

We actually have a little boy sorry forgot to mention that.
Actually after reading parts of your blog it gave me the perfect excuse to get talking with the hubby.
I kind of intuitively wanted to do the lock the door plan and had discussed it with him before but we thought it to be cruel. I agree it makes sense now and i convinced him it would be better even so for our libido!

So we are taking some time off in a few weeks and decided to take our bed back at that point!

One more question though, Raphael might opt for his sister or brother's bed if he can't make it to ours should they lock their doors too?

Thank you again for a very useful tool.

Best regards.

Pam

sadie-may

I had a problem with my ten year old sleeping in my bed. She is an Aspie, which means that change is hard for her. Because Aspies absolutely have to have things a certain way or psychological dammage can ensue, since they do not perceive the world the same as we do, I had her take part in the process of making the change. I did the following when I decided it was time for her to sleep in her own room.

1. I took her to the store and allowed her to pick out a favorite warm fuzzy, as I like to call it. She picked out a baby doll.
2. For a few weeks, i still allowed her to sleep in my bed to give her time to get closer to the doll. When she did, I took the next step.
3. I then started talking about how wonderful it would be for her to have her own room. Like any other Aspie, she strongly opposed, but I did not give up. I told her she could decorate it in any theme she'd like. She chose SpongeBob. So, we went and got everything SpongeBob. Aspie's like to choose everything, so I let her have as much of a choice as possible. She even wanted to pain her room like she was living at the bottom of the sea, so we all did that together and made it fun. She got a SpongeBob TV set to watch also when she felt nervous.
4. I did not start making her sleep in there right away. I told her that it would be very nice to go in there in play in her new room that she decorated. She loved the idea. A week later, I suggested that she sleep in there, too. Since I slowly eased her into being in there alone, she was fine with the change. For a few nights, she needed reassurance, and I gave it to her. Then, I did my next best thing.
5. I told her that there was a SpongeBob chart and SpongeBob stickers. Each time she stayed in her room the entire night, she could put stickers on the chart. If the entire week was completed, she was able to choose a fun activity or a prize. I told her that if she felt scared, she had her doll there (This is the reason I had her get the doll in the beginning because it was a familiar object that would remind her of being in my bed and receiving my comfort.) And it worked.

She now wants nothing to do with me at bedtime. If I intervene at all, she gets really angry. She has her own routine and wants no disturbances, and she still has and loves her SpongeBob themed room. when she gets into bed, she wil not talk to anyone. She will tune everyone out. As you well know, with an Aspie, it is one extreme or the other, and there are no gray areas. I do not care. My goal was achieved.

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About Alyson

  • Alyson Schafer is a psychotherapist and one of Canada's leading parenting experts. She's the author of the best-selling "Breaking the Good Mom Myth" (Wiley, 2006) and the new "Honey I Wrecked The Kids" (Wiley, 2009). Her popular TV call-in show The Parenting Show is now in its sixth season.

    The media relies on Alyson's comments and opinions. You can find her interviewed and quoted extensively in such publications as Cosmopolitan, Readers' Digest, Canadian Living, Today's Parents, and Canadian Families and on TV shows like CBC's The National, TVO's Agenda, and Montel Williams.

Alyson's Books

  • Ain't Misbehaving

  • Honey I Wrecked The Kids

    Breaking The Good Mom Myth

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Contact Alyson

  • Contact Alyson
    Check out my new website at www.alysonschafer.com Alyson Schafer 3219 Yonge Street Suite 341 Toronto ON M4N 3S1 905-503-1354
  • 3219 Yonge Street, Suite 341
    Toronto, ON M4N 3S1
    905-503-1354

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