The Number One Mistake Parents Make at Bedtime

This week I wanted to talk a bit about the bedtime routine, and the number one mistake parents make when they are creating a bedtime routine.

Now, if you go to any baby site on the web, search “my baby won’t sleep”, or whatever you’re looking for in regards to sleep, almost every single site will tell you about the importance of a bedtime routine. So will I.

I think a bedtime routine is a crucial first step in creating predictability for your baby and teaching your baby that it’s time to make that transition from day into night.

Even adults have routines. We all do things in the same order before bed every night. Without them, we would feel a little anxious or out of sorts, and it would be harder to sleep. So it definitely is important, but there is one mistake that parents make: most of the time people skip right over it.

'Oh bedtime routine, right, next,' because we’ve heard it so much, but the biggest mistake that parents make there is that somewhere in the routine, the baby sleeps!

For example, you’ve heard the baby should have a bath, so you’re going to do a bath, you’re going to get Pyjamas on, you’re going to read a book maybe, and then you’re going to feed your little one. There, right there, that’s the snag.

You feed your baby to sleep, either on the breast or with the bottle.
Most people turn off the lights when it's feed time, get the environment nice and cozy and comfy, and then that is your child’s cue that it’s time to start the journey into sleep. That is where you need to make your changes.

If you breastfeed or bottle feed your baby to sleep and then transfer them to the cot/bassinet, well you’re not going to have a baby that sleeps through the night, that is for sure. You’re probably going to find that half an hour later, 45 minutes later they are awake again, and you’ve got to start the process all over again.


Bath, great; PJs, great; feeding fine. It is totally acceptable to feed a baby before bed. In fact, I encourage it, but keep the lights on high enough that you can watch, and don’t even let sleep start. Not even drowsy…!

If you think of sleep as a journey, I don’t even want you to allow your baby to start the journey. Starting a journey looks like doziness, so heavy blinking, closing the eyes, opening them, anything like that is the beginning of a journey, so don’t let that start! In order for a child to learn to fall asleep unassisted, they need to be put to bed awake. Keep that baby’s eyes open so that they start to realise that food is a lovely step in the bedtime routine, but it is not for the purpose of sleep. That comes next.

If your baby has a really strong association between eating and sleeping, I suggest you break it up with an extra step even after the feed. Feed, sit baby up on your lap, maybe read a story together after the fact, just to break that connection a little bit further and to start to teach your baby that there is no way or there is no reason to fall asleep while feeding.

Then the baby should go into the cot/bassinet awake. This approach is how all my Sleep Support programs start, and I can teach you how to do that. But it’s also the number one way your baby is going to learn the skills they need in order to become a great sleeper and start sleeping through the night.

So, have a look at your bedtime routine. Even though you know you have one, you probably had one since the baby was born, but you probably need to make a fairly significant change to it. That is, to stop feeding your baby to sleep as part of the routine. Even rocking, you might have to say goodbye to any kind of rocking in the routine as well.

You need to be able to place your little one into their cot/bed awake and leave the room for them to fall asleep. If a baby hasn't learnt to fall asleep independently at bedtime, they are unlikely to sleep through the night without relying on you to put them back to sleep.

If you're finding yourself getting up throughout the night to rock or feed your baby back to sleep, then you could definitely benefit from a Sleep Right Tonight Program. Please book in a free phone consultation if you'd like to talk about which sleep support package might be right for you, and how I can help your family sleep through the night. 

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