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Toddler Sleep (12-36 months) icon

Toddler Sleep (12-36 months)


  • Plan enjoyable days outside the home to help with toddler sleep
  • It's ok to wake a sleeping toddler
  • Outdoor play is good for toddlers and good for sleep
  • Go for lots of walks when you're caring for a baby or toddler
  • Get creative about physical activity (outside the house) when you're caring for a toddler
  • Spend as much time in green or blue spaces as possible when you're caring for a baby or toddler
  • Is the saying "there's no such thing as bad weather, only bad clothing" true for babies and toddlers?

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  • Toddler Sleep (12-36 months)
  • S2: Daytimes
  • CH 2: Making changes
  • PT 2.2: Meeting your toddler's sensory motor needs

Plan enjoyable days outside the home to help with toddler sleep

Dr Pamela Douglas17th of Sep 20237th of Jun 2024

two mothers breastfeed their babies outside

Are you a primary carer, mostly (though not always) a mother, who finds you're waking up exhausted in the morning, before the day has even begun? Unbelievable exhaustion is common at this time of life. Night and day become a weary blur.

This is why I suggest planning each day’s activities ahead of time. You may be so exhausted when you wake that the thought of getting out of the house seems impossible – but if you know you have a friend waiting for coffee catchup, or a parent’s group with others in your situation to chat with, or a plan to get some task done, then it’s easier to put one foot in front of the other (breakfast, dressing the toddler, not to mention the whole project of somehow taking a shower yourself …), and get yourself and your small child out of the house.

Remember: it’s about workability, not perfection. It doesn’t matter if you forget things. It doesn’t matter if your hair isn’t quite right. It doesn’t matter if your clothes are creased. It doesn’t even matter if you're running late – better to show up late than not at all.

It's just getting out that matters – because even though the idea of a week with activities planned can feel quite exhausting at the outset, women or primary carers tell me over and over again that the week was easier when they were out of the house a lot. The toddler was happier. The social contact felt good.

Small steps, aiming to do little achievable things, are best.

However, you'll work out how to best balance things up, because your little one is likely to be much more dialled down when you're outside the house, which makes the day much easier for you. Being out of the house most of the day or at least for a few times a day (even for adventures into the back yard) might actually turn out to be, when you look back over the week, so much more manageable. I’d like to suggest that you experiment with being really quite adventurous for a week, if you can, even though it feels tough as you're making the plans, then review at the end of that week.

Is there someone who cares about you and your toddler who can take your little one so that you have time to plan the week, reaching out to friends that you haven’t had time to see much, researching local parent groups and activities? You can find a weekly planner here.

For many women, the return to paid work after maternity leave happens very quickly. You might have already returned to paid work. These days at home with your small child are a precious opportunity to practice slowing down and letting go of the clock, attending to small things in the here and now, nurturing your friendships, getting out into your local parks and natural environments, caring for your body by walking.

You can let your toddler's sleep look after itself, in the midst of a life that you enjoy - for you - with your precious child simply following along.

Recommended resource

You can download an A4 page for planning out your week here.

toddler looking over balcony into a pond

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Next up in Meeting your toddler's sensory motor needs

It's ok to wake a sleeping toddler

dark skinned baby with rastafari bracelet gently sleeping

It's perfectly ok to wake a sleeping toddler. It's also best not be quiet around your toddler, either, when she is sleeping!

You can trust your small child's sleep regulators, her body clock and sleep pressure, to take the sleep she needs. If your toddler really needs to sleep, she'll stay asleep as you lift her up out of the stroller or car seat or cot, for the next activity you have planned.

If she wakes and cries, and she is breastfed, then you might offer a little

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