Bedtime can feel hard because toddlers are being asked to stop, separate, and settle. A routine game can help because it lets children practice the steps before the real transition happens. Bumpi Bear’s Bedtime Routine gives children a simple sequence: clean up, brush teeth, pull up the blanket.
The power of the game is not that it makes every child instantly sleep. The power is that it makes bedtime more predictable.
Play before the real routine
Use the game before going to the bathroom or bedroom. Say, “Bumpi Bear is getting ready for bed. Then we will get ready too.” This connects the digital routine to the real routine.
Use the same three steps
After the game, repeat the same language: toys, teeth, blanket. You can add bath, pajamas, or story, but keep the core language familiar.
Give your child a job
Toddlers often cooperate better when they have a role. Ask them to put three toys away, hold the toothbrush, choose the bedtime book, or tuck in a stuffed animal.
Keep the tone calm
The game uses soft visuals because bedtime needs a slower pace. Try lowering your voice, dimming lights, and reducing background noise after play.
- Do not use the game as a bribe.
- Use it as a preview of what comes next.
- Repeat the same bedtime words nightly.
- Celebrate one completed step at a time.
When children know what comes next, the transition can feel less sudden. Which bedtime step causes the most resistance in your home?