S.M.
Hi H.,
I read the other responses and have suggestions on both night mares and night terrors.
My son started having night terrors when he was about 10 months old. Really scary because he would go into convulsions (every childs terrors may be different). I was on the phone at 11pm to the pediatrician who said not to worry but still bring him in for a check up. He was and continues at age 9 to occasionally have night terrors but not nearly as frequently as when he was younger. It does seem to happen more often if he goes to bed too late. The Dr. said they don't understand a lot about night terrors other than they are related to sleep walking and they think they are caused by part of the nervous system that is still developing in kids. The Dr. had us make sure we had locks on the doors going outside that were high enough that my son could not reach them as his did become terrors with sleep walking (sleep walkers can end up out in streets without realizing it) As our bedrooms are upstairs we also put a gate that he could not open across the top of the stairs. It looked like he was awake, eyes open and him yelling 'I want my mommy' over and over but if I tried to hold him he would just push me away screaming 'no, no I want my mommy'. Very scary and hard for everyone involved.
There are several ways I deal with all of this. One is if I can get to him as soon as I hear him starting to wake up and go in and sing to him, I sing that mommy loves him and is right there and sing his favorite songs, usually at this point he will let me rub his back and will often go back to sleep. If he gets past this point sometimes I just follow him around while he cries and yells for me, sometimes he answers questions and it seems to be his fears coming out. I also try to wake him. His fits were becoming so scary and had me in tears that I asked the Dr. if it was ok to try and wake him, she said it was fine if he would wake to do so. I actually use a cold wet rag as nothing else will work, he barely comes out of the sleep and just falls into my arms and goes back to a restful sleep. As with the terrors themselves each kid reacts differently to be woken. He has never remembered any of the episodes in the morning however it has affected his desire to have sleep overs as when he has had sleep overs the kids always stay up late. He has had night terrors at friends, the parents knew the circumstances and called me immediately. What my son does now is call me at 11 or 12 at night when everyone is going to sleep for me to come pick him up because he doesn't want this to happen at friends homes. He is 9 now and it doesn't happen very often any more. The Dr. said it can continue up to age 15 but not very often, again just the nervous system finishing development they think.
On the nightmares. I agree with the other parents that they are just working things out at night that bother them during the day. My son and I bought a dream catcher, Indian circle woven in the center usually with feathers on it, to hang by his bed. The story is that the dream catcher catches the bad dreams before they happen and send them to the center of the weaving and gets rid of them, it catches the good dreams and lets them move down the feathers to the dreamer. I think the psychological part of this works for my son. He feels more at ease with his dream catcher when he goes to bed, we even have one at his grandmothers. Realizing this is folklore, for a young imagination it is a nice tool to help him relax. Again singing, and even with my horrible singing voice it helps him when any of the night mares/terrors happen.
Good luck with this. As a parent it is very hard to see this happen but do know they generally outgrow all of these very young and I think the best advice is getting to sleep early enough and on a relatively regular schedule, we have a very irregular schedule but always try and get to bed early enough that he has not gotten to the point of being too tired.
SarahMM