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06 August 2007

My six year old is waking up afraid of the dark. Again. [More:]
The last time this happened she slept on the floor of our room in a sleeping bag for nine months. She has woken up two nights in a row now and my wife is wigging.

It is the kind of thing that impacts your entire life. I guess we take her to the child psychologist. The last child shrink we saw was a total joke. Sigh.
Let her sleep in her room with a light on?

I was afraid of the dark until I was 9. My mom let me sleep with the light on in my room. It was preferable to me showing up in her bed every night. My mom didn't make a big deal of it. Have you asked your daughter why she doesn't like the dark? It could be that she doesn't like the layout of her room or maybe she doesn't like waking up in the dark + quiet. (I was also allowed to have a radio.) My whole problem was my overactive imagination at that age.
posted by fluffy battle kitten 06 August | 07:11
You have my sympathy, craniac. I totally understand how disruptive that can be. But I'm with the kitten, why can't you just let her sleep with a light? My five year old sleeps in dim light with music playing. It seems to do the trick.
posted by jrossi4r 06 August | 07:35
What they said. Nightlights work wonders for overactive imaginations. Just make sure you don't turn it off after they fall asleep, as it defeats the whole purpose. My parents never seemed to understand that part.
posted by CitrusFreak12 06 August | 08:34
I think fluffy battle kitten is right on the money. I also had an over active imagination at that age and slept with a radio under my pillow. It's really just a distraction but it works.
posted by doctor_negative 06 August | 08:46
She has a three year old sister who also sleeps in the room. I gave her a headlamp last night but it didn't seem to do the trick. We'll figure something out...
posted by craniac 06 August | 09:51
Have you talked to her about what it is she fears? And do you take her seriously? It's easy for adults to say there are no bogeymen, monsters in the closet, or monsters under the bed. It's not the same when you're young.

Is your daughter anxious about other things? Is something in her life, like the passing of a relative, making her feel insecure?
posted by halonine 06 August | 09:55
Magic may help. When one of my kids was plagued by recurring nightmares I nailed a magic potato to the wall. It dried and hung there for more then a year. It worked wonderfully. The key is they must know you believe so that they can believe.
posted by arse_hat 06 August | 10:02
Along the lines of arse_hat's suggestion: I've babysat for kids where the parents gave them a spray bottle full of "monster poison" (plain water).
posted by Fuzzbean 06 August | 10:41
Yeah, give her a monster gun of some kind. In desperation with my son, we used the garlic press: you just hold it and work the handle back and forth vigorously and it gives off magic anti monster vibes. Monsters hate garlic: it is a well known fact. It sounds totally dumb but I swear to you it worked like the charm that it is and there were several times I'd wake up at night to the sound of the garlic press being clanged noisily and then there would be blessed silence. I'd also go with a nightlight; they have so many cool cute ones nowadays that are totally cheap and both girls will probably like it.
posted by mygothlaundry 06 August | 12:19
She's a really smart six year-old, and that is not just parental boasting, so I don't know if a monster gun would work but there may be another placebo device I can use--perhaps an ultrasonic vermin repeller (that will drive out anything besides people, implying monsters without her having to articulate them), a mini led flashlight and instructions on using my ipod. Heck, I'll give her the portable dvd player and headphones!
posted by craniac 06 August | 12:55
I gave her a pep talk, did some relaxation breathing and guided visualization, then gave her some monster spray and my ipod, along with a headlamp.

Probably overkill, but we'll see how it goes tonight.
posted by craniac 06 August | 23:53
Ha! She used the "monster spray" before going to bed last night and listened to my ipod, and not a peep! Awesome!
posted by craniac 07 August | 09:10
That is excellent news!
posted by fluffy battle kitten 07 August | 10:09
Ignoranus || Happy

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