Hi S. -
I know this is frustrating, but I love the way you describe it as partying...and that's exactly what he's doing. The kid does not want to miss a thing!
A couple of things to consider:
- Not every kid needs as much sleep as others. My son (now 15) has never needed the 'recommended' amount. He would do pretty much the same thing as your child. We'd put him down at 8:30, and he'd be up by 2 or 3. Or (worse) 5.
- Sleep patterns, once established, are difficult to break. While you might be able to get your son to stay in his room and play quietly, you probably are NOT going to be able to get him to fall back asleep after he wakes up. Please keep in mind that this is NOT a discipline issue. He is waking up and is WIDE AWAKE and cannot just fall back asleep. I'm sure you've woken up in the middle of the night and have been unable to fall back asleep, no matter how hard you try. Now imagine doing that when you're three, and there's so much fun stuff to do outside of your bed!
- To break this cycle, you're going to have to change his sleep pattern for a little. Pick a time when there aren't a lot of stressors in your family life, and then:
= Make sure he is getting plenty of exercise during the day, but not too close to bedtime (no more than 3 hours). Increase activity if necessary, like take him to the park and let him RUN before dinnertime.
= Make sure he is getting 'quiet time' activities one hour before bed - bath, snuggling, books. No rough-housing!
= Get him an alarm clock and set it to the time you want him to get out of bed. Remind him that unless he needs you for something, he is to stay in his room and in his bed until the alarm goes off. Those are 'sleep times', not play times.
= Here's the kicker. Keep him up until 9:30 or 10:00. Make sure he is truly sleepy before you pop him into bed.
If you need to, keep him up until 10:30 or 11 -- until he can sleep through the night again (or until the alarm goes off). Once you've gotten there, you can back off his bed time by 1/2 hour until you're back at 9 or 8:30.
If the sleep problems persist, ask your pediatrician for a referral to a sleep clinic -- Stanford's is very good, for example.
GOOD LUCK! (been there, done that!)
J.