10 Reasons ADHD Kids Bombees
10 Reasons Why Your Overstimulated Child Can't Fall Asleep (And Why Everything You've Tried Isn't Working)
It's 9 PM. Lights are off. Story is done. But your child is still wired β twisting in bed, calling your name, completely unable to switch off. Your stomach drops. Again.
But what if it's not defiance? What if it's a nervous system that simply hasn't received the signal to slow down?
Note: Read this BEFORE you endure another exhausting bedtime battle with your child!
1. Modern Childhood Is Sensory Overload β And Kids Feel It Most at Bedtime

By bedtime, their brain simply hasn't had a chance to decompress. They're not being defiant. They're overstimulated. And an overstimulated nervous system doesn't switch off because the lights are dimmed.
2. Children Can't Simply Talk Their Nervous Systems Calm

Telling an overstimulated child to "just relax" is like telling someone with a sprained ankle to walk it off. What children do have is a body that responds powerfully to sensory input.
3. Gentle Touch Activates the Body's Natural Calm Response

This isn't just emotional comfort β it's a genuine physiological shift that sets the stage for sleep.
4. Fidgeting Isn't a Bad Habit β It's the Brain's Built-In Regulation Tool

The problem isn't the fidgeting. The problem is having nothing constructive to fidget with. When fidgeting has a calm, gentle outlet, it naturally winds down on its own.
5. ADHD Nervous Systems Need More Sensory Input β Not Less

Providing controlled, gentle sensory engagement gives that brain something to work with β and paradoxically, this helps it calm far more effectively than enforced stillness ever could.

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6. Autistic Children Are Especially Sensitive to the Bedtime Transition

Sensory tools offer something invaluable: a predictable, consistent source of gentle input the child controls themselves.
7. Sensory Self-Soothing Gives Anxious Children a Tool They Control

Tactile self-soothing gives anxious children a coping mechanism they can use independently, without needing a parent in the room.
8. Cortisol Must Drop Before Sleep β Gentle Touch Helps The Body Do It Faster

Gentle touch can help stimulate oxytocin release, which may help counteract cortisol and promote a sense of calm and safety. Even self-directed touch against a soothing texture can support this natural calming response.
9. Repetitive Sensory Input Helps the Brain Switch Into Sleep Mode

Slow, rhythmic tactile engagement gives the active parts of the brain something predictable to attend to, allowing overall neural activity to fall gently on its own.
10. Better Sleep Tonight Builds a More Regulated, Happier Child Tomorrow

Parents consistently report calmer mornings, fewer meltdowns, and children who are simply easier β and more joyful β to be with.

The Bombees Sensory Calming Pillow β gentle self-regulation for children ages 2β10
Soft tactile fidget elements for pre-sleep self-soothing. Breathable, hypoallergenic, machine washable. Five character designs children love. No medications β just calmer bedtimes.
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