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It takes one or two weeks to reset your toddler's body clock

Dr Pamela Douglas17th of Sep 202323rd of May 2024

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When your toddler's night waking is excessive, well beyond what is developmentally normal night waking, it’s time to reset your toddler's body clock. This is most effective if it is done alongside the other steps detailed in The Possums Sleep Program.

When we are so incredibly sleep deprived and exhausted, we naturally crave a quick way to find some relief. But if you try to reset your toddler's body clock too quickly, the days and nights with your baby can seem to fall apart altogether, because her sleep pressure is suddenly very high very often and she becomes much more dialled up than she usually is. This doesn't help, and is even more exhausting!

Parents find the reset goes best when they make incremental changes at one or more of the three pressure points of the body clock, just by ten or 15 minutes a day. You can find out more here. If you keep nudging back sleep times gradually at your chosen pressure points, you'll usually find you have much better consolidation of your toddler's sleep at night and a return to developmentally normal night waking within a couple of weeks.

It can help to think about your own experience of jetlag, if you have ever taken flights across time zones. It typically takes a week or so to reset your own circadian rhythm. This is also true when we are aiming to reset our toddler's body clock. If your child's excessive night waking is severe, it might even take up to three weeks to change.

But slow and steady changes are best.

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Is your toddler having trouble sleeping because of gut pain?

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It's normal for toddlers to have highly variable stool consistency, including green stools and mucous in the stool. Solid food creates a wide range of stool consistencies and texture. But if your toddler has blood in her stool, or you're worried about her health, it's important to have her checked over by her GP.

Does your toddler wake in the night with a loud cry or scream, as if in pain? Or does she wake up excessively during the night, or wake up and take a long time to go back to sleep? Does she refuse to go down for a nap during the day, even though you can see she is tired?

You might be wondering if this behaviour in your toddler is caused by gut pain or discomfort, or a gut

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