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Baby Sleep (0-12 months) icon

Baby Sleep
(0-12 months)


  • Evening play (often noisy and excited!) and other sensory motor adventures help with baby's sleep
  • Evening water play helps with baby's sleep
  • Does your baby need a bedtime routine for healthy sleep?

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  • Baby Sleep (0-12 months)
  • S3: Evenings
  • CH 2: Making changes
  • PT 2.2: Meeting baby's sensory motor needs

Evening water play helps with baby's sleep

Dr Pamela Douglas31st of Aug 202321st of May 2024

toddler plays in the bath

Water can help you get through the days and evenings with your little ones. Water play can help when you have to be inside the house with an older baby who is dialling up because she needs a change of sensory motor experience.

Lovely long experiences splashing around and about beside a weary parent in the bath in the evening (hopefully with the parent who hasn't already been on duty with your baby that day!) can help meet a little one's sensory motor needs while her sleep pressure is climbing.

A shared bath is a delightful source of enjoyment for your baby's skin and sense of touch! Playing together is a powerful pleasurable impetus for repetitive stimulation of your baby's fine and gross motor movement and co-ordination.

A warm bath is kind on your own senses, too, if you're the parent in the bath. It's not quite the candle, fragrant bath salts, and meditation of pre-baby baths. But you can still turn a shared bath into an opportunity to practice returning your attention to your body (and your precious toddler's wriggly little body), your senses, and enjoyment of the present moment.

In my experience, it's best not to use soaps, bath salts, oils or moisturisers on your little one's delicate skin (other than in the nappy area or where the skin has become dirty, as required), as these applications directly on the skin or in the bath water might dry out his skin or block up the pores, creating rashes. Unless your child has an eczema which is severe enough to require treatment from your doctor, the natural cleansing and pH balancing mechanisms of your baby's healthy young skin works best if we avoid applying products of any kind.

I know you don't need me to remind you that

  • All water play requires careful and constant supervision

  • Water is a precious natural resource, which we need to treat with care.

Recommended resources

What is sensory motor nourishment and why does it hep with baby sleep?

Filling your baby's sensory tank

What your baby needs for best possible motor development

The holistic NDC or Possums' 8 steps for supporting baby's motor development

Evolutionary biology and cross-cultural studies tell us that our little one's sleep can be easy (once you know how)

A dialled up sympathetic nervous system gets in the way of easy baby sleep

Evening play (often noisy and excited!) and other sensory adventures help with baby's sleep

Does your baby need a bedtime routine for healthy sleep?

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Does your baby need a bedtime routine for healthy sleep?

baby sleeping

Baby bedtime routines

For many families, trying to put a bedtime routine in place makes baby's sleep worse, not better.

You might have heard that it's best to have a clearly defined bedtime routine which you stick to, step by step, night after night, so that your baby learns healthy sleep habits. This perspective arises out of the sleep training approaches, which wrongly believe sleep to be under the control of sleep associations. If a bedtime routine is working for your family then you don't need to change anything.

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Possums acknowledges the traditional owners of the lands upon which The Possums Programs have been created, the Yuggera and Turrbal Peoples. We acknowledge that First Nations have breastfed, slept with, and lovingly raised their children on Australian lands for at least 65,000 years, to become the oldest continuous living culture on Earth. Possums stands with the Uluru Statement from the Heart.