A couple of weeks ago while I was washing all the children's sheets one of them asked me to leave the safety rails off when I made the beds. I was a little skeptical, but since we have been in big kid beds for 10 months and there is no real barometer for when to take the rails off, I gave in. Nap time went without incident, but I could tell they were nervous as I packed pillows around them. By bedtime the boys had decided they liked the security of the rails and tearfully begged to have them put back on.
K insisted that she was ready "to sleep like a big girl" so I followed her lead and left the rails off. Each night since, I have put pillows on either side of her and one on the floor. I check on her as we turn in for the night and make sure she is adjusted back to the middle of her bed if she is creeping precariously close to the edge.
Last night, when I was awakened by a huge thud following by crying I knew the inevitable had happened--she fell out of her bed and onto the hardwood floor below. As Daddy comforted her, my heart physically ached. I knew it must have hurt and been a frightening experience. I also know she cannot sleep with rails forever and she had seemed ready to remove them. I was struck by how this illustrated the challenge of parenthood.
We use rails/structure to keep our children safe while we train them, but the true test of readiness usually cannot be done without removing the safety device. There is generally no set rule for when to 'remove the rails,' so we pray, we ponder, we discuss, then we hold our breath, remove the rails (or their equivalent) and hope for the best.
There WILL be falls. They may be painful (for us and them). Yet, their growth will be stunted if we don't leave room for them to challenge themselves (within reason, of course).
Thirty minutes later, I awoke to the sound of a stool sliding across the bathroom floor across the hall. Then I heard tinkling. He did it. R listened to my little pep talk before bed and actually went to the bathroom without waking us up to help. As I listened to his movements, I noticed he was still tinkering in the bathroom after he should have been heading back to bed. Then I heard it, "Mommy. I need a little hay-yulp in he-ya. I tee-teed all over my-say-ulf." I climbed out of bed to clean him up, change his pajamas and clean the bathroom. UGH! Rather than making life easier, this exercise in independence had caused more work.
Parenthood is often one step forward, two steps back. I am thankful I get to be the arms they fall into, the shoulder they cry on..and, yes, even the one who gets to clean them up. Thank you, Father, for this gift of being on the front row as they grow.
But is it too much to ask to just get 8pm-7am off for a little R & R? :-)
8 comments:
rails...hard to remove, but prove to produce growth...thanks for sharing your heart, parenthood is a blessing and a growing experience for us Mammas too :)
to be able to "punch off the clock" would be nice...it will be here all too soon...
blessings,
Liz
Great accomplishments for both K adn R - even though they weren't "full-fledged". You'll all get there. It will happen. Hang in there! :-)
I can so relate with my threesome and oldest son. Happy New Year.
Mandy
GA
www.madelinegracehopkins.blogspot.com
They grow up so fast. Our boys turn four tomorrow and I've spent all day remembering (tearfully) how fragile they were on their birth day - and how independent they are becoming despite my instinct to protect. Thank you Father indeed. (side note, we just upgraded from toddler beds to twins and have had 2 nights of uninterupted sleep - for the first time in as long as I can remember...it's been incredible!!!) Hang in there :)
What a beautiful analogy. It's a perfect metaphor for parenting.
And if it's any help, when we removed the rails, we just let our kids fall if they fell. It startled them (and us) but I really think their little bodies learn the bed boundaries that way.
Of course, our floors are carpeted, too. So that makes a difference.
We are doing the same thing around here with learning to crawl and sit upright by ourselves. It's hard to know when to just let them fall.
And yes, apparently 8p-7a is too much too ask. My two have been following P's lead and waking at 5:30 am every morning.
I'm a new reader to your blog, and love your story. Just one problem...WAR EAGLE!!
Michelle
Beautiful insight.
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