We've tried every sleep routine going. Here's the one that finally stuck — built around a story, not a schedule.
Why routines kept failing us
We tried sticker charts, the gradual retreat method, white noise machines. My daughter would lie there wide awake, buzzing with the energy of someone who had definitely not wound down. The problem was the transition into bedtime.
The story anchor
What finally worked was treating story time as the cornerstone of the routine rather than the finale. We shifted to: bath → pyjamas → dim lights → story → teeth → sleep.
The story became the signal that the day was winding down, not the last exciting thing before an anticlimactic toothbrush.
The 15-minute rule
I keep story time to 15 minutes maximum. A contained, predictable slot means my kids know when it ends. One story, then sleep has no ambiguity. It is a contract they understand.
What to do when you have nothing left
Some evenings I have zero creativity. That is when I open ReadFluffy, type in a theme my daughter mentioned that day, and within seconds we have a fresh personalised story I can read aloud. My voice, her imagination, no prep required.
Anna is navigating parenthood one bedtime story at a time.


