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I've studied over 200 kidsâthe happiest ones have parents who do 6 things with them every evening
Published Sun, Feb 8 2026
9:27 AM EST
Updated 37 Min Ago
Reem Raouda, ContributorShare
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For years, bedtime was the most stressful part of my day. No matter how early we started or how carefully I planned, evenings always felt chaotic.
I've heard the same story from many of the parents I've worked with, and it's understandable. Bedtime is a major emotional transition that most of us were never taught how to navigate.
But as a conscious-parenting researcher who has studied over 200 kids, I've noticed a clear pattern: The happiest, most emotionally well-rounded children have parents who follow a predictable routine that lowers anxiety and strengthens connection. Here's what they do differently.
1. They let go of control
Many parents head into bedtime expecting resistance, and children can sense that tension almost immediately.
Parents who experience smoother evenings aren't attached to how long the routine takes or how perfectly it unfolds. When you soften your grip on the outcome, your child's nervous system will follow.
Remember, if bedtime takes 90 minutes instead of 30, but your child falls asleep feeling safe and calm, that's still a win.
2. They connect before they disconnect
Stalling, clinging, tantrums and irritability at bedtime can be signs of separation anxiety. Parents who understand this slow down the final moments of the evening. They offer physical closeness or quiet presence before saying goodnight.
Even 10 to 20 minutes of intentional connection can make a difference. From there, you can set clear but warm boundaries: "I'm here with you now. After two books and a cuddle, it's time to turn the lights out."
3. They remove pressure around sleep
Many bedtime battles are simply about pressure. When children feel they're expected to "fall asleep" on command, their nervous systems shift into alert mode, making rest harder.
Parents with the easiest nights stop making sleep the goal. They focus on creating calm conditions. This makes it more likely for our bodies to settle naturally.
4. They build a bridge from night into morning
To a child, bedtime can feel like an abrupt ending. You can ease this transition by emphasizing what comes next: "We'll finish this in the morning," or, "We'll snuggle again when the sun comes up."
This helps children experience bedtime as a pause, not a loss, reducing anxiety and resistance.
Some parents also create this bridge by ending the night with a simple point of connection. They might ask, for example, "What are you most excited for tomorrow?"
5. They end the night by reinforcing safety
Safety is the signal that tells a child's nervous system it can finally stop bracing and start resting. Without it, even the tiredest body stays alert.
You can reinforce safety by saying things like:Â
- "Today was hard. Tonight was hard. And I'm still here."
- "You didn't have to be perfect today. You just had to be you."
- "I'm here. You can rest."Â
6. They regulate their own emotions
Finally, and this might be the most important one: Emotionally attuned parents regulate themselves. Evenings are when you are most depleted and therefore most likely to react from stress rather than intention.
So pause before engaging. Take a few deep breaths. Ask yourself whether you're carrying stress from the day into the moment. Settle yourself first, then support your child.
Reem Raouda is a leading voice in conscious parenting and the creator of the BOUND and FOUNDATIONS journals, now offered together as her Emotional Safety Bundle. She is widely recognized for her expertise in children's emotional well-being and for redefining what it means to raise emotionally healthy kids. Find her on Instagram.
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