C.S.
Hi T.!
Wow! You're up all night and now you have this challenge. Kudos to you in changing your outside job to give your children quality time!
This is what we did for all sorts of behavior modification. It may not be for you, but I thought I would put it out there for you if you were interested.
As soon as the kids understood, we drilled this into them. The 3 rules in our home are:
1) Treat other people the way you want to be treated.
2) Do what you are told to do, when you are told to do it, and do it without whining or complaining.
3) Every time you are asked to do something by Mom or Dad, you answer, "Yes Mommy/Daddy, I will." (This rule was especially important ages 2-5, and I was anal about it. I can give you the psychology and all the areas in later years that this avoids problems in if you want to ask sometime.)
The exercise I have below actually is what we used when the rules of the house were consistently being broken. I am a firm believer in negative reinforcement for the first 7 years, but sometimes it simply doesn't work, as you are experiencing! So, we started this game, but we used "noticing when they kept a rule of the house" instead of the targeted behavior. It works for anything.
This will require some extra time on your part for a couple days, and some forgetting about dental health for just a short time. Start it in the morning, long before nap time. Get a cup or small jar and put a piece of masking tape on it with "[your boy's] Rewards" written on it. Then, get a jar of something that's his favorite that's small. (I used M&Ms, but you can also use raisins, etc. When they're older, coins and new Lego pieces do the trick--at least for my youngest boy it did.) Sit him down with both jars and tell him that you're going to start a new game. These 2 jars are going to be sitting on the counter. Everytime he obeys, he gets to put an (M&M) in his jar. Then, every day after, he gets to eat her (M&Ms), and then the game starts again right away. "So, if I ask you to put the towel away, and you say, 'Yes, Mommy, I will,' and then you put the towel away, you get to put an M&M in your jar while I'm watching for obeying. [Note: do NOT use the example of the bed]. So, do you want to start to play right now? Ok, let's try it. Ummmm, could you go put that toy away?" When he does, hype it up and say, "You did it! I guess we have to put an M&M in your jar now." Then let him do that. Then right away, "OK, let's try something else. How about we unload the dishwasher? I'll give you something and tell you where to put it, and then if you obey me, you get to put another M&M in the jar." The aim here is to have him get 10-15 in his jar, so give him lots of little jobs that he can easily succeed at. (He'll probably start asking for what she can do next to earn an M&M.)
Then, throughout the day, be vigilant and really notice when he obeys your commands. Target every little thing for the first couple days. If she disobeys, say, "Oh [your boy]! Don't you want an M&M? Why don't you [do the thing you requested] and I'll put one in your jar?" Then, when it's nap time, nonchalantly say, "Okay, so if you stay in bed this afternoon, you get an M&M! And don't forget, if you stay in bed, after nap you get to eat your M&Ms." At this point, I would put a digital clock in his room and write on an index card in the block numbers the time he can get up. Put that card above the clock. "[your boy], when this number (the hour) looks like this, and this number (the middle number) looks like this, and this number (the last number) looks like this, then you can get up. But if the numbers don't look like this and you get out of bed, you cannot get your M&M." This should be presented in exactly the same tone and way as all the other things you've asked him to do. After nappy, give him the jar and say, "Wow! Look at all the M&Ms you earned. I wish I could eat all of those. You get to eat those now because you obeyed so well. When you're finished, we'll start the M&M game right away." For the next several days, there should be at least a little improvement in behavior.
Every behavior is only worth 1 M&M, even if in our minds staying in bed all night and putting a spoon away seems unequal.
I'd love to hear how this goes for you. After you have used this for a couple different behavior modifications, you can introduce getting AND LOSING the M&M. But for the first few times, make it completely positive reinforcement.
Wishing you God's best,
C.