So you thought your sleep struggles were behind you and now your baby is suddenly fighting naps.
First, a caution that around 12 months of age most babies experience a regression that causes them to temporarily fight naps. Be careful not to assume they are ready for this transition in that 12th month. Making the switch before they are ready will more than likely trigger additional struggles in other areas. So how do you know whether baby is truly ready?
5 Signs Your Baby May Be Ready For the Single Nap Transition
* Your baby is between 13 and 18 months (This can vary, but is a good guideline.)
* Your baby takes longer and longer to fall asleep for either or both naps or for bedtime
* Your baby takes a super short morning nap and/or won't nap again most or all afternoons
* Every day is totally different and unpredictable making you (and your baby!) feel a bit crazy
* You recognize a gradual pattern developing, rather than an occasional and sudden occurrence
Remember These 4 Important Points
Keep in mind that a two or more week adjustment period might be necessary, even when things go smoothly. During this adjustment, baby may be cranky and need a slightly earlier bedtime and may wake overnight. be cautious not to introduce new habits or let old ones creep back in.
There will likely be days when baby still needs two naps and others where you can get by with just one. You may feel as if neither schedule fits: two naps is too much sleep too close together while one nap is too little sleep, spread too far apart. Much like being stuck between clothing sizes that are too loose or too tight! The good news is that with age and time to adjust, they will eventually fit into the new schedule.
Avoid making the switch too soon simply because your baby refused a nap once or twice. Don’t mistake normal age and milestone-related nap disturbances as a sign that baby is ready to drop a nap.
The afternoon nap is the one you will keep and shift earlier, so don’t allow baby to develop a habit of taking a long morning nap and then fighting or skipping their second nap. Control the length of the morning nap to ensure your baby can go down again in the afternoon. That may mean waking them from nap one to protect nap two and the timing and ease of bedtime.
When You Are Ready to Make the Transition
Most babies aren't able to jump from two naps to one that falls mid-day. If that is the case for your baby, consider a more gradual transition. This can be done by choosing a mid morning naptime that falls between where their two naps used to fall. For example, you might nap them at 11:00am for a few days, then 11:15am for a few days and so on. Continue shifting the nap later incrementally until your baby has adjusted enough to make it to a midday nap (likely 12 or 12:30, depending on when they wake each morning) without growing overtired and fighting sleep.
Move bedtime earlier to match the early single nap. For example, if nap is falling at 11:30am, bedtime may need to fall at 6:30pm. Then, as you nudge nap later, bedtime should nudge along with it, by the same increment. Try to avoid exceeding a five hour window of awake time from the end of the nap to bedtime, so long as that doesn't place bedtime before 6pm. Be sure to avoid getting "stuck" on that early schedule - it is just a temporary starting point you need to move later incrementally.
Expect the nap to be too short at first. If so, decide whether to wait a week or so and reevaluate or give baby time to try to return to sleep whenever the nap is too short. It takes time for the body to recalibrate and realize the single naps needs to be longer than each of the previous two naps were. You should eventually get a nap that is 2-2.5 hours long although some only need 90 minutes.
Finally, take solace in the fact that this too shall pass. Once this transition is complete, your own schedule will become much more manageable. One daily nap makes planning and fun much easier. Congratulate yourself – you are well on your way!
If you need support to navigate this transition, or any other sleep challenge, our team is here to help. Learn more and schedule your discovery call at the button below.