Why You Should Let Your Child Be Bored (And What the Research Says)
The gentle, evidence-based case for letting your child be bored, what the research actually shows, and...

You had a sleeping baby. You had a sleeping toddler. Then at 18 months everything broke. The two-hour bedtime, the 5am start, the midnight visit to your bed. Here is what is actually happening, what to try, and how to survive the weeks it takes to settle.
The 18-month sleep regression is one of the worst of the developmental sleep disruptions. It hits when several things happen at once:
It is genuinely a perfect storm. Even great sleepers regress. It is not your fault, you did not do anything wrong, and it will pass.
The 18-month-old brain is consolidating an enormous amount of new information overnight. REM sleep periods (which is when consolidation happens) increase. This naturally causes more night-wakings as they cycle into lighter sleep more often.
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Layer on top the new ability to call you by name from the cot, the new fear of being apart from you, and the new physical ability to climb out, and the wakings turn into proper protests.
Sleep “training” methods often fail at this age because the underlying issue is developmental, not learned. The toddler is not waking out of habit; they are waking because their brain is on fire. Hard-line approaches usually make it worse.
What does help:
You will be more tired than you were when they were newborn. The newborn nights were broken; the toddler nights are broken AND involve being kicked in the kidneys. Worse, somehow.
Sharing a bed during the regression is not the end of the world, but be intentional about it. If you put them in your bed every night for a fortnight to survive, plan how you will move them out. The longer they sleep in your bed, the harder it is to undo.
If you go in to comfort them in the night, keep it short, boring, and identical each time. Pat, “shhh”, out. Do not pick up, do not turn on lights, do not chat. They are wired for stimulation right now; calm boredom is medicine.
More on toddler sleep and bedtime
If your toddler is still on two naps and bedtime is suddenly a disaster, the nap might be the problem. Signs you are ready to drop to one:
The transition takes 2-4 weeks. Move the morning nap progressively later until it is at lunchtime, settle at one nap of 1.5-2.5 hours after lunch. They will be cranky in the late afternoon for a few weeks. Adjust dinner earlier and bedtime earlier to compensate.
This is the part most articles skip. You cannot solve a developmental phase. You can only survive it.
Most 18-month sleep regressions resolve in 2-6 weeks. Talk to your health visitor or GP if:
For more honest sleep and toddler picks, see my Sleep and Comfort picks. This phase passes. You will sleep again. The wallpaper will come off the wall before that happens, but you will.
Some of the product links in this post are Amazon affiliate links. If you buy through them I may earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. See my full disclosure.
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