Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Bedtime Battles
Episode Date: January 10, 2023At the end of the day all we want as parents is for our kids to go to sleep and it's a cruel irony that all they want is to spend more time with us. This week, Dr. Becky speaks to a mom about how to h...andle her daughter's bedtime battles and how to advocate for her own needs with her partner.Join Good Inside Membership: https://bit.ly/3cqgG2AFollow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinsideSign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletterOrder Dr. Becky's book, Good Inside: A Guide to Becoming the Parent You Want to Be, at goodinside.com/book or wherever you order your books.For a full transcript of the episode go to goodinside.com/podcastToday’s episode is brought to you by Lovevery: As parents, we are exhausted and overwhelmed, and thinking about playing with our kids can feel more stressful than fun. This is exactly what The Play Kits by Lovevery were made for. They tap into what your child is hungry to learn and provide play ideas and activities for parents - so you can have those great connected moments with your kids. Designed by child development experts for kids ages 0-4, each play kit comes with stage-based toys for your child AND a play guide for you with ideas about how to use the toys to play with your kids. Go to lovevery.com to learn more.Â
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I'm Dr. Becky and this is good inside.
It's stressful. I don't like bedtime. It's not fun.
And what I want most is just for them to go to sleep so I can rest.
I need that break and it just seems never ending.
So a lot of anxiety is around that time of day.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back. Hey Sabrina.
Hey.
So I've been thinking about toys recently.
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I want the toy to inspire my kid to do the work.
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I have a six year old and a three year old.
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So I have these wooden blocks from Melissa and Doug.
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I'm Dr. Becky and this is Good Inside.
I'm a clinical psychologist, I'm a mom of three,
and I'm on a mission to rethink
the way we raise our children.
I recently spoke to a mom of two young kids,
and she was struggling with some things
that I think a lot of us parents can relate to.
The struggle of double bedtime with two little kids.
The struggle of being a working inside the home parent.
And the struggle of not advocating for her needs in her partnership.
Let's listen.
We recently moved and the girls are sharing a room.
And the biggest struggle we have with our four-year-old
is when she doesn't want to go to bed
or essentially doesn't want to do what we're asking her to do.
And she just says no.
And at some point, there's just no convincing her other
than to basically force her in some way. And my husband
tends to fall back on a trick of just saying, okay, then I'm, because we lay with her until she
falls asleep. And so he tends to fall back on, okay, then I'm leaving. And he leaves the room and
closes the door. And she gets upset. And I have also done this in the past.
I try very hard not to because I don't like it.
It makes it feel like, you know, if you don't do what I say, I leave you.
And I don't like the message that is sending.
But there is a point where like we don't know what to do
and how to get her to do what she needs to do, which is go to sleep.
She doesn't do it very often.
It's not like in every week situation.
It's probably once or twice a month.
So let's start with that, maybe the baseline.
So what does bedtime in your house look like on a good night?
On a night that you're like, whoa, that one went, you know,
pretty well.
I should say on a good night, we get that one went, you know, pretty well. I think it's a good night.
We get our pajamas on, brush our teeth, read a book, or two.
And I usually will hold my 14-month-old standing up
kind of rocking, getting her to fall asleep,
and we'll let my four-year-old listen to a book on my phone
and audiobook, usually just like a short
seven minutes. And hopefully by that time the baby has fallen asleep, I can put her in the crib,
and then I lay with my four year old until she falls asleep. And my hope is that that doesn't take
long, you know, maybe 10, 15 minutes. And as you're hearing yourself recount this,
15 minutes. And as you're hearing yourself recount this,
what's the feeling?
What comes up for you?
I mean, definitely anxiety.
It's stressful.
And for me, I remember anxiety would turn into dread.
I was like, oh, like nighttime.
Especially if I was alone and my husband wasn't home
and I'd had a long day
and I do feel like there's this cruel irony at night where all a parent wants to do is be
done caretaking. You're like, I have been in the parent part of me for 12 hours, 14 hours,
10 hours, whatever that day has been. And the parenting caregiving part of me has taken over most
of my body.
And there are other parts,
the part that wants to sit on a couch and watch TV
or read a book and does not have someone touch me
and not of anyone need anything from me.
Those parts are just like waiting to come out at night.
And the irony is I think at night,
our kids want nothing more than additional time with us.
And nobody's wrong.
It's not wrong to want to be done caregiving.
It's not wrong for a kid to want a parent.
It's just a really, really unfortunate mismatch, I find.
So let's just start with that.
Like you're not alone for going into bed time being like this kind of stinks.
I just want this time to be as short as possible.
And then when our kids don't, in some ways, like comply,
it's trickering.
So, okay, so what does one of those nights look like
where you're like, yeah, this is not going according to plan?
What is a bedtime battle night like in your house?
Well, it just happened actually a couple nights ago, I think.
I had gotten the baby asleep and it was time for my four-year-old fall sleep.
And she was just tossing about and talking and, you know, not whispering, being loud and,
you know, talking to herself, talking to me, saying things. And it's just like,
I need you to whisper. Let's stop talking. It's time for bed. Please stop talking and she was just
Not having it and she's like no, I don't want to I don't want to go to sleep. I'm not tired
I don't I can't fall asleep. I can't fall asleep
kicking and being loud and eventually she woke up her sister and you are
I'll give you like a menu.
And you know, check as many as apply.
Are you sad?
Are you frustrated?
Are you feeling helpless?
Are you angry?
Are you fast forwarding to the future?
Are you an aspiral of nothing today
when the way I wanted it to?
You know, which of those resonated?
I'm frustrated.
I'm angry.
I'm just over it.
Very over it at that point, especially when she wakes up her sister.
I'm just like, now, now, everything starts over.
Yeah.
And so it seems like the ending point in the kind of pathway we don't want to go down
is now Nashuaqa persistar.
Okay, now it's like back to square one.
Okay.
The pieces tell me at this rate is like,
oh no, we're on this pathway.
It's like she starts to be loud or she starts to kick
or what?
I think often as parents, we think about
how can I act differently in that moment
where the whole thing is about to overflow
rather than where can I notice that we're like starting to fill up this picture that I don't
want to fill up? What's the first part of this road? So what are the first signs that this
night is not going to be smooth? It's probably just not wanting to put on her pajamas in the first
place, not wanting to start the bedtime situation, wanting to play or watch to be
Often now she'll so say I want to play I want to play when it's time for bed
It's like well you had your time to play yeah
So I think it's it's that is is usually when I I know that she's like no, no
I don't want to go to bed and then I'll be like okay
Well you have five more minutes to play and then we're gonna get ready.
And then she usually does it after that,
after I get for that time,
but then once it's time to move into the room
and be quiet, that's when she really struggles.
Okay, so a couple ideas right then and there, right?
So again, going back to that baseline kind of gap
in nighttime realities,
the gap between our reality of I just want to be done parenting,
and our kids' reality is I want more time with my parent.
Those really are very, very different planets to be on.
So if you picture yourself on one planet,
the planet of I want to be done caregiving right now,
and your daughter is on the planet of I want more time with my parent right now,
those planets are a little bit far apart.
And anytime we're far apart with a kid or a partner
or a colleague on a different planet,
most of us have the instinct to lead with convincing
that person to come to our planet.
I do this, right?
So my kid's like, I want more time and I'm like,
it's bedtime.
I want more time, you're gonna be tired tomorrow.
I want more time, oh, you already had five minutes time. I want more time. You're going to be tired tomorrow. I want more time.
Oh, you already had five minutes.
And all of those visually, Emily, are kind of a way of saying like, no, no, no, no, like
come off your planet and come to my planet.
Does that visual make sense?
Yes.
And the irony again is the more anybody in our life convinces us why our planet like isn't
so right and their planet is more right.
If you're like me, you're like,
no, no, no, I'm like really gonna stand my planet now
because I know need to prove my point.
And so what makes someone else on a different planet
come to our planet ironically,
or be more likely to, is the process of bridge building
from our planet to theirs. And there's just an inconvenient truth that as a parent
are actually anyone who's just interested in being
effective in a relationship and kind of set of being right,
is we have to build that bridge to theirs.
But if you imagine that Emily, if I build a bridge
from my planet of can I just be done parenting
to my kid's planet, if I want more time awake,
now I have a bridge from my kid to walk over with me
back to my planet of it really is bedtime.
So let's make that another level kind of more concrete.
Oh, I want more time to play.
Oh, you wish you could stay up later.
Or going to bed is a little tricky, right?
Oh, you wish you could have more time with mom.
Mm, you're not so sure you want to go to bed right now.
All of those statements, and I think the tone matters too,
which is why I always like to model things,
because I know when I say to my kids,
I go, okay, you really want to stay up later?
It does not build any type of bridge, right?
They just feel kind of mocked or more alone.
Yeah.
But the combination of kind of, yeah, validating words
and maybe even more so, like a validating tone,
which just says to someone, like, you're real,
I get you, you're not ridiculous.
You have something very true happening for you
and I understand.
Really builds a bridge.
And at night, we really do ask kids
to do something they don't wanna do.
Most kids do not wanna go to bed and end their day.
Most kids do not wanna spend 10 to 12 hours
away from their parent in the dark.
They just don't wanna do that.
And so leading with validation in the beginning,
and I have some other ideas too,
is one kind of in some way simple shift that I actually think is gonna have a bigger payout than you might imagine.
So tell me, what would that be like for you? Like maybe let's walk through a moment and even practice. Like, if I'm your daughter, right? And I say, no, I don't want to put my PJs on. No PJs. No, no, no, no. What might be something a little different to say back to me, that builds that bridge?
Something like, I hear you,
you don't wanna put your PJs on,
you wanna keep your other clothes on.
Great, and just pause, right?
Sometimes I'm like, we work really hard, that's it.
And sometimes the simplest thing is when you don't know
is like, what if I just said back
with an actual understanding look
and tone the exact same thing?
I do that cheat all the time,
and I'm just like too tired to come up with something
more deep, because I don't want to put PJs on.
I'll just be like, oh, you don't want to put PJs on, huh?
Like, and maybe I'll add a huh at the end
to get like really fancy, but that's it, right?
And we often do see our kids soften in that moment.
And in that softening to me,
what I always imagine is,
oh, now I have an alliance.
And also, we get out of emergency mode.
Because if you're like me when your kid protests,
you kind of go into like, oh no, like everything's awful.
And I need to make this happen even more quickly.
I have to happen now.
And then there's another irony that now I'm just pouring
in my own frustration
and urgency into my child. I'm actually lengthening bedtime for myself by trying to shorten it.
Does that, does that ever happen in your house? Oh, yeah. For sure.
And so I always think alongside any strategy we come up with for our kid and we kind of come up
with that. Okay, what if I start as soon as she resist bedtime, I'm just gonna lead with validation.
And if I don't know what to say,
I'm literally gonna say,
oh, you, and then just kind of repeat what she says,
and then say, huh, at the end, that's the whole thing.
But alongside any strategy for our kid,
I really think as a parent,
we need a strategy for ourselves.
And I think this is what a lot of us miss
when we're struggling with our kids.
We're like, okay, I know what I want to say.
I know what I want to say, but then the moment comes,
she's like, I totally didn't say that.
I said, basically, the opposite.
I said, you have to go to bed right now.
And then we go into, what's wrong with me?
Why can't I be the parent I want to be?
And it's not because we need to memorize that script again.
It's probably because our body needed some type of validation
in order
to show up in that softer, more connected, or even more boundary way to our kit.
And so I can share with you what I say when I have bedtime stalling to myself.
I just put my hand on my heart and I always say, Becky, this is not an emergency.
I have time.
Emily, this is not an emergency. I have time because it kind of speaks to what's
going on in our body, which is like there's a three alarm fire because our child doesn't want
to put on their PJs and don't get me wrong, it is so annoying. But we all know it's not
an emergency. And if I react like it's an emergency, I'm just adding fuel to the fire that's already started.
So I think that would be really helpful
in the beginning stages.
Yeah, that makes total sense.
Hey, good inside listeners.
So sometimes with parenting, a podcast does the trick.
And sometimes with parenting, we need a bit more.
And I wanted to be sure you knew that we're set up to help you in those trickier times.
The good inside membership platform is your parenting and psychopedia, coupled with a community
of parents and experts you trust, which means that no matter what you're going through,
we've got you covered.
And then we take it a step further, because I know that we're people who don't just want
to solve a problem and return to baseline.
We want to raise our baselines, right?
And this is what we really do, together.
Reduce triggers, learn to set boundaries, and access that sturdy leader that I know is inside
all of us. It's all there when you're looking for that next step.
And until then, please do check out goodinside.com slash podcast.
Scroll down to the Ask Dr. Becky section at the bottom and let me know what you want to
talk about in future podcast episodes.
So let's move on to some other things. I am a huge fan, actually, of a really repeatable
bedtime routine that's also accompanied by a visual kind of schedule of that routine
you've come up with. So, for example, PJss brush teeth, one book, one song, I think, you know,
at the end of the day, going to sleep for a kid. It's really about separation. It's about
separating from your parent. And I think a lot of us think about separation at the daycare
or school, and we prepare our kids for separation. But if we think about it, a kid who separates a daycare or with a teacher at school
separates during the daytime, so it's light,
which is just inherently kind of a time
that feels safer for us because we can see more.
And they then get to go to an adult or two
and a bunch of other kids who are probably playing.
And it's probably for, I don't know,
three hours, six hours, maybe eight hours.
At night, our kids separate from us
with no other adults in their room in the dark
and with no other children who are awake ready to play.
And so separation at night for sleep
actually is a lot scarier than separation during the day.
And so what that means is if separation at night
is kind of full of unease, maybe some
anxiety with our kids, then the more we add routine and familiarity and something kind
of predictable where they can build mastery, our kids are going to feel safer separating
because all of us feel safer doing something a little tricky when we can also access feelings of capability.
And so having a schedule to me, it's not just so you can say to your kid, oh look, you know,
this is our schedule and we have to do it this way, it's actually almost a sneaky way of
building in familiarity and mastery and capability right before a child has to do something a little anxiety producing.
And I'd also think for you, Emily, given your other child is sleeping in the room,
how many of those things occur inside the room and outside the room?
And I'd actually write that on the schedule.
So maybe in your kitchen or in your hallway, there'd be PJs.
And it would then kind of even have a location, right?
We put on PJs in the living room,
so it's not to wake up your sister, okay.
And then after that, it's pressure teeth.
And we brush your teeth in my bathroom.
So, again, we don't wake up your sister, okay.
Then we do one book or we do two books, right?
Whatever you say is the routine.
And we can decide because too often parents tell me
around books, yeah, well, they read three books
and then they want eight songs, really prolonging that routine.
And some ways communicates to our kids
that we're not ready for them to separate,
that we're anxious.
So we want the routine to be dependable and fairly concise.
So our kids feel our confidence in their ability to separate.
And the one other thing about the routine, that's really, really powerful,
is you can start practicing it during the day.
Hey, let's play a game.
Let's go through this routine during the day because it's kind of new.
And maybe even we'll notice where it feels a little tricky.
And then we can practice kind of taking a deep breath
and getting to that next step together.
And then you're really getting ahead taking a deep breath and getting to that next step together.
And then you're really getting ahead of these moments
where she might be allowed or she might say no
when it gives you practice also Emily
in practicing that mantra, connecting to her
and moving it along.
I always feel like in the day we can get kind of some good reps
of like a new muscle, we're trying to build.
So then when the nighttime comes and the stakes are higher,
a kid is kind of building on a skill
instead of building a brand new skill.
I also to add context to this conversation,
I'd love to hear about your day and your sleep
because I think how we're sleeping,
how exhausted we are, our sleep patterns,
kind of a day in our life.
It really impacts, you know, what's going on
with our kids as we approach separation.
So give me a little insight into that.
Well, currently my sleep is non-existent
because I must say at home, mom,
and the 14-month-old is home with me.
And she is having a lot of sleep struggles of her own
and currently is sick. So there's
a lot of no sleep happening for me. So that's obviously not helpful to the situation.
So let's just pause on that for a sec because that's that's so real. I mean that like you're
saying I am completely depleted. So when I to nighttime, it's not just that I want that time
where I'm not caregiving.
I also am completely exhausted.
I haven't slept probably for days by that point.
And so of course, your tolerance for this,
your need for time on your own
is that much more extreme.
So what happens at night?
Are you up with your 14 month old?
Yeah, I'm up with her often. She often ends up in our bed to give some relief. So I can't sleep.
She is very, she's just a needy baby who wants to be held and wants to be touched while she's sleeping.
Walk me through like last night, so just to get into the specifics.
Last night, I think that she woke up about an hour
after I put her to bed, and I went and got her,
and I had to hold her for a while,
and then I put her back, she woke up,
like 10 minutes later, held her for a while,
I put her back, she woke up again.
So then I decided, okay, you're sleeping in our bed
for a little while, because she is sick.
So I know that's a big part of it currently.
So fell asleep with her in our bed.
She did not sleep well.
She was tossing, turning, not feeling great.
Then the four year old comes in,
wants me to come in her bedroom for a little bit.
So I take the 14th month old,
go lay next to the four year old,
and what's your husband doing?
Sleeping.
He, so tell me,
yeah, like tell me about that.
What's up with that?
Well, he's,
he is working and I'm not.
So I'm kind of in charge of the nighttime situation
because of that.
He sounds like you're working a lot to me.
I definitely agree with you on that.
Did you mean that he works outside the home
and you work inside of the home?
Yes, exactly.
He works outside the home and he's working a lot as of late.
Is that arrangement that the two of you have around nighttime given you work inside the home
and he works outside the home? Like is that working for you?
I mean, not currently because sleep is not going well with the 14 month old so much,
it's not working great, but it's an understanding we have in the moment
because of his work schedule.
Well, let's even just, I'm just curious
like how this works with today.
So last night you were,
it sounds like you're basically up all night
with both of your kids.
And so going in tonight, like how does that work
between you and your partner?
Does he know that?
Do you want a different arrangement tonight?
Do you want more help?
Do you need a certain amount of uninterrupted sleep?
I think he does know that.
Have you told him?
Told him that I need more help?
I don't know, some version of.
I really didn't sleep for more than 90 minutes
at a time last night.
Really, really tired.
And I can't do that again.
So if our kids have trouble sleeping
tonight, I'd like to come up with a different arrangement. Now that doesn't lead to me having
that same uninterrupted very little amount of sleep. I don't know. And that's just one example
of being, you know, I don't think I've said anything close to that. What comes up for you
when I model that, it's very easy for me to model it. It's just me and a podcast studio.
I'm not talking about my own partnership, but it is just for the sake of, I think,
we learn a lot about ourselves when we think
about communicating super directly with someone
about our needs, even if we don't do it.
I think it's a really important experiment
because we notice what's going on in our body,
we notice how terrifying that might be,
or uncomfortable, or different,
and that's really worthy data just to have about ourselves.
I think that's something I definitely struggle with
is being like direct with my needs.
Yeah.
I think that's a struggle for me for sure.
I mean, I know this is complicated.
And I know there are so many things involved
around who gets up at night, who works in the home,
who works out of the home, who, you know, has this bulk of kind of childcare, who brings in
a concrete paycheck and all types of value and meaning assigned to that.
That's a large sociological kind of dynamic that unfortunately I don't think we'll be able
to fully unpack right now, though I think is clearly a play.
I guess just right now what I hear from you Emily is, is I need to sleep. Like, I need to sleep tonight. I need
that. It is like a basic body need. And the current setup I have, and this either spoken
or unspoken agreement, my partner and I have, you know, kind of contracted for at some
point around the nighttime, it's really not working for me.
And it's definitely not working for me today
on the heels of not sleeping.
And look, one of the things I've learned is,
we can't go from zero to 100 in a way, right?
But I think as a star, I wonder what it would be like
for you to just connect to yourself, even right now.
And tell yourself, I deserve sleep. I deserve rest. No amount of, you know, working in the home versus out of the home
versus no paycheck versus paycheck. None of that is related to my right and my deserving of this basic human need.
Right. Well, what's coming up for you around this topic?
I think that's all true and I think it's just a hard thing to communicate and a hard thing to
It's a hard thing to communicate and a hard thing to set boundaries around when you don't have the
delay of like having to be somewhere with people during the day. You know.
I hear you, I hear you. And look, we've all taken in this narrative around the value of parenting. It's the thing that I'm most invested in changing.
I swear more than a script or more than sleep or more than tantrums,
which I really care about helping parents with.
I really care more generally about changing the narrative about this really important
and difficult job that we have when we're a parent and the support and resources
we deserve and the rights we have, you know, even the right to sleep, right? You have a job
where you have to be at a certain place and be with people too. They're the people that you're
raising and it's the place that's inside your home. And I think it would be powerful for you to
consider that. And the other thing I'll say before we end is I think as we kind of come into a stage of speaking up for our needs when we haven't traditionally done that.
Remembering that we need other adults cooperation, but not approval is incredibly empowering that I might need my partner to get up with my kid in the middle
of the night, but I don't need him to approve of the fact that I am now sleeping.
I don't need him to say, you are right.
You deserve it.
If I know I deserve it, then I just need him to go be with our kid.
I actually don't need him to applaud me on the way or give his stamp of approval.
Yeah.
And I think when we practice a little bit noticing what we need considering that maybe we
have the right to have some of those needs met at least more often when we're able to communicate
that directly.
And then when we realize in the aftermath, especially if that's new, people will push back.
But remembering, I'm not looking for this other person's complete agreement or approval,
I'm looking for a solution where I can get my needs met more often.
That's a framework I'd love to kind of leave you with.
And I really mean this Emily.
You are so not alone.
You are not alone in not sleeping. You are not alone in how hard it is to manage
parenting and sleep routines of toddlers and babies and you are definitely not alone in
Kind of knowing on some level. I know I need to sleep more. I know I need more help and
you're not alone in
feeling uncomfortable
and thinking about asking for those needs to be met.
So thank you for sharing,
and I know so many people are nodding along with this,
and we will all be cheering you on.
Thanks for listening.
To share a story or ask me a question,
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Good inside with Dr. Becky is produced by Jessie Baker
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Our production staff includes Sabrina Farhi, Julia Nat, and Kristen Muller.
I would also like to thank Eric Obelsky, Mary Panico, Ashley Valenzuela, and the rest of
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And one last thing before I let you go.
Let's end by placing our hands on our hearts and
reminding ourselves even as I struggle and even as I have a hard time on the
outside I remain good inside.
you