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Daylight Savings Time Is Back to Mess Up Your Kid's Schedule

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Post by Amy Reiter.

baby crying crib

If you're like me, you can never really remember when Daylight Savings Time begins or ends, or whether you're supposed to move the clock forward or backward, or exactly what time the official switch happens and we're supposed to start fiddling with our clocks. So let me just help us all out here: Daylight Savings ends this Sunday (at 2 a.m., so you might want to switch your clocks at bedtime on Saturday night). You move your clock back one hour -- fall back; spring forward -- and supposedly get a free hour of sleep on Sunday morning. Unless you're a parent.

While those people without kids are gearing up for an extra hour out on the town or an additional hour of sleep or whatever those people without kids do, we parents are steeling ourselves for a period of time in which our kids' schedules are totally disrupted. Because although we grown-ups can will ourselves into adjusting to the new regime pretty quickly, our kids may be slower to internalize the switch.

How will we survive? And, oh yeah, how can we help them adjust?

In fact, child-sleep experts say it can take between 7 and 10 days for a kid to adjust when Daylight Savings Time kicks in or comes to its annual abrupt halt: It can throw off kids' sleep and appetite and make them cranky, ill-behaved terrors. Which can make their parents cranky, ill-behaved terrors. (You know what I'm talking about.)

More from CafeMom: The End of Daylight Savings Time: A Survival Guide for Parents 

Some experts advocate beginning to shift your child's schedule gradually, a few days before the change. So if she usually goes down for a nap at noon, put her down a few minutes earlier each day for a few days before the scheduled clock shift. Then, when the shift back happens, it will be a bit easier.

I personally have always taken a hard-line approach, much the way I do when I travel to a different time zone. (I change my watch on the airplane and try not to do the local-time/my-time calculation in my head, but rather to live in the local-time moment from the second I get off the plane.)

That means if my kids go to bed at 8 p.m. on Saturday night before the clocks change, they go to bed at 8 p.m. on Sunday night after they change. It may take them a bit longer to fall asleep after they've been tucked in that first night. But eventually, they'll get with the program, just like the rest of us.


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