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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

OK, so AIBU to lock our bedroom door at night?

142 replies

FunnysInLaJardin · 07/09/2013 21:43

DS1 is nearly 8 and never wakes us or comes into our bed. DS2 is 3.5 and comes into our bed every night and has done for the last few months. We are both too asleep to get up and put him into his own bed so DH either shoves up or gets into DS2's bed for the night. Suffice to say we haven't had an unbroken nights for ages.

I suggested that tonight we should lock our door in the hope DS2 would find it locked and go back to bed. DH was firmly against this idea and sees it as cruel. So AIBU or is DH?

We really should get up and get him back into his own bed of course, but at 2am this seems an impossibility!

OP posts:
Talkinpeace · 08/09/2013 17:00

HUG HIM
really really tightly, when he climbs into bed, wrap yourself around him so that you swaddle him
he won't be able to wiggle and he'll overheat
three nights tops and he'll stay in his own bed within 20 minutes
(worked with mine and those of several friends I suggested it to)

candycoatedwaterdrops · 08/09/2013 17:40

To all the people who are slating the OP, have you never had a really stupid idea that seems like a good idea until you sit and think about it or tell someone else?

BlackholesAndRevelations · 08/09/2013 18:50

talkinpeace- really?! Hmm

Ps op if your reading comment was tongue in cheek, I was well and truly suckered so I apologise.

OneUp · 08/09/2013 18:56

Funny if you're too tired to get up in the middle of the night have you considered making a nest on the floor of your bedroom for your three year old to sleep in so he's close to you and then over weeks moving it slowly out of your room?

pugglefan · 08/09/2013 19:23

I haven't read the whole thread but my DS did this and I used a technique where I slept next to his bed, on the floor, one night, the next night I was in his doorway and the third night he could just see my feet. Then for about 2 nights I just returned him back to his bed. He hasn't been a problem coming into our bed since. It is a bit of a faff as it involves going to bed at the same time as your DS but it's worth it in the long haul. My DS just needed the reassurance.

Talkinpeace · 08/09/2013 19:29

blackholes
absolutely and utterly
the instinct is to give the little darlings lots of space to sleep in your bed - but then you and DFH get no sleep
the kid in in your bed because they want to feel reassured and loved
so hug and cuddle them
and they will start to get too hot in bed with mummy and daddy and retreat to their own bed where they can stretch out
so give them a kiss and they will head off and settle themselves down - they found their way in, they will find their way out

regardless of OP winding people up, its a strategy that WORKS

marriedinwhiteisback · 08/09/2013 20:55

Um. Have just realised who the OP is. Funny's is generally a very nice and decent poster based on posts I have read. Many have posted an ill judged post over the years.

Funny isn't doing it. It's all fine. Parenting s hard and we all make mstakes.

As you were. Let's all move on with dignity. Xx

ExitPursuedByADragon · 08/09/2013 20:58

I too was surprised when I saw who the op was

bundaberg · 08/09/2013 21:03

yabu, sorry :(

if you really want to stop him then wake up and take him back to bed

ModeratelyObvious · 08/09/2013 22:51

Good luck Funny.

And thanks LondonMother, I didn't know that.

BoozyBear · 08/09/2013 22:55

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

LondonMother · 09/09/2013 17:04

Thanks, Moderately. It's not something I'd thought of before the tragedy that affected the family we knew. Now I'm a bit obsessive about it.

pourmeanotherglass · 11/09/2013 22:52

I don't get how rapid return to bed is supposed to work, with a determined toddler, if there are no barriers to stop them coming straight back. I tried it. It was never going to work. She just came straight back in. Again and again. For months. We were exhausted.
Locking the door worked for us, within a couple of nights the problem was solved.
She's now 9, so this was a few years ago, it didn't traumatise her, and it solved the problem.
I can see the majority of you disagree with this approach, but I'm glad we did it, it was the best solution for us.

lovesherdogstoomuch · 12/09/2013 05:19

it is so hard to drag ourself out of bed when your little one needs you, but you've gotta do it as i'm sure you know. take him back to bed, no eye contact, no chat, just quiet reassurance and repeat as mentioned by Viva. should take a few weeks for him to get the message bless im but just think of that first night of no disturbances! btw i am typing this at 05:17 cos i can't sleep! all my family are snoozing away upstairs. annoying. Envy

themaltesefalcon · 12/09/2013 06:00

Usually if a parent is that "too asleep" there is a drink or drugs involved!

I'm heard it all now. Grin

OP, broken sleep is shit. Working mothers and SAHM alike need a good sleep, but it seems to me (having done both) that the former especially do. When I hit the sheets now, for the first time in my life I don't lie awake thinking or talking but am genuinely asleep within seconds. My kid still wakes fairly frequently and it's usually my husband who deals with her now, as I'm so thoroughly out for the count.

No narcotics involved. Shock

You sound like ace parents to me (and, frankly, if you meant that about reading, your kids, especially the oldest, are old enough to read to themselves. What's all this "Shame on you if you aren't reading your eight-year-old's book with him!" nonsense? By the age of four or five, I was hounding my mother from the room if she tried to interrupt my book with her wittering. But that is another tangent this thread doesn't need Blush).

Hope your boy settles in his own bed soon. If not, the camp bed thing is an excellent idea, unless you have the option of upgrading your bed to a king-size or emperor-size instead. That's my personal fantasy. We could all three of us flail our limbs as much as we liked, then...

buttercrumble · 12/09/2013 06:02

Omg that sounds terrible, what if something happened YABVU Shock

StHelenInPerson · 12/09/2013 08:16

Yabu you either let you ds into your bed or you both take it in turns to keep putting him back to bed.

So one night you do it and the other your partner does it, needs consistency and team work, if your lucky you can crack it in 3-4 days.
A stair gate on the toddlers bedroom door helps for safety reasons mainly.

It's not fair at all to let your toddler sleep/bother with your 8yr old,it is just lazy.

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