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Want to subscribe to every ep and enjoy FREE sleep tools? 👉 www.naptrappedpodcast.com
If you’re aiming for a 7–7 schedule and your baby wakes at 6:15am, what time do you start the day?
From the moment they open their eyes? From when you hear them on the monitor? Or from when you actually go in, turn the lights on, and start the morning?
If you picked option one or two, you might be unknowingly pulling your whole schedule earlier. And that tiny shift, repeated over days, is often why early mornings keep creeping earlier, and naps start feeling harder than they should.
This week Sally and Bec tackle one of the most common (and sanity-saving) distinctions in scheduling: awake time vs UP time. They sound like the same thing. They’re not.
Awake time is simply when your baby wakes. UP time is when you start the day, and on a 7–7 schedule, that’s the anchor that protects your body clock and stops the early rising spiral. Your baby can wake at 6:20am and still be “on” a 7am schedule, because 7am is go time, lights, milk, noise, and the day officially begins.
Then we get practical with naps. You can keep the first nap anchored to the clock to protect the structure of the day, but when a nap ends early, wake windows matter. You count the next wake window from when your baby actually woke, not the time you hoped they’d sleep until. Otherwise you can stack too much awake time, tip into overtired territory, and suddenly bedtime is chaos.
You’ll learn:
* How to use UP time to keep a 7–7 schedule steady, even with early wakes
* Why nap one often stays anchored to the clock
* When to switch to wake windows based on the time your baby actually wakes
* How to handle early nap wake ups without wrecking the rest of the day
* The simple flexibility rule that keeps schedules working in real life
Listen on Spotify or Apple Podcasts HERE
Or, watch below:
Chapters:
00:00 Happy New Year!
05:12 Listener question: counting wake windows correctly
07:45 Awake time vs up time explained
11:20 When long settling throws off your schedule
15:33 Should you count from eyes open or out of crib?
19:08 Happy wake-ups where baby stays in crib
23:41 Why rigid wake windows can create problems
28:15 The flexibility principle for schedules
32:50 Wrap-up and dinner plans
🎙️ ABOUT NAP TRAPPED
Sally Woods and Bec Maher are baby sleep consultants who believe exhausted parents deserve real answers, not judgment. Each episode of Nap Trapped breaks down one sleep challenge with evidence-based advice and a healthy dose of humor.
Links
📩 Get updates + exclusive tools: Subscribe www.naptrappedpodcast.com
📸 Follow Sally & Bec on Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/thesleepconcierge/
https://www.instagram.com/_thesleepcentre/
🎧 Listen on Spotify & Apple Podcasts
By Sally Woods and Bec MaherWant to subscribe to every ep and enjoy FREE sleep tools? 👉 www.naptrappedpodcast.com
If you’re aiming for a 7–7 schedule and your baby wakes at 6:15am, what time do you start the day?
From the moment they open their eyes? From when you hear them on the monitor? Or from when you actually go in, turn the lights on, and start the morning?
If you picked option one or two, you might be unknowingly pulling your whole schedule earlier. And that tiny shift, repeated over days, is often why early mornings keep creeping earlier, and naps start feeling harder than they should.
This week Sally and Bec tackle one of the most common (and sanity-saving) distinctions in scheduling: awake time vs UP time. They sound like the same thing. They’re not.
Awake time is simply when your baby wakes. UP time is when you start the day, and on a 7–7 schedule, that’s the anchor that protects your body clock and stops the early rising spiral. Your baby can wake at 6:20am and still be “on” a 7am schedule, because 7am is go time, lights, milk, noise, and the day officially begins.
Then we get practical with naps. You can keep the first nap anchored to the clock to protect the structure of the day, but when a nap ends early, wake windows matter. You count the next wake window from when your baby actually woke, not the time you hoped they’d sleep until. Otherwise you can stack too much awake time, tip into overtired territory, and suddenly bedtime is chaos.
You’ll learn:
* How to use UP time to keep a 7–7 schedule steady, even with early wakes
* Why nap one often stays anchored to the clock
* When to switch to wake windows based on the time your baby actually wakes
* How to handle early nap wake ups without wrecking the rest of the day
* The simple flexibility rule that keeps schedules working in real life
Listen on Spotify or Apple Podcasts HERE
Or, watch below:
Chapters:
00:00 Happy New Year!
05:12 Listener question: counting wake windows correctly
07:45 Awake time vs up time explained
11:20 When long settling throws off your schedule
15:33 Should you count from eyes open or out of crib?
19:08 Happy wake-ups where baby stays in crib
23:41 Why rigid wake windows can create problems
28:15 The flexibility principle for schedules
32:50 Wrap-up and dinner plans
🎙️ ABOUT NAP TRAPPED
Sally Woods and Bec Maher are baby sleep consultants who believe exhausted parents deserve real answers, not judgment. Each episode of Nap Trapped breaks down one sleep challenge with evidence-based advice and a healthy dose of humor.
Links
📩 Get updates + exclusive tools: Subscribe www.naptrappedpodcast.com
📸 Follow Sally & Bec on Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/thesleepconcierge/
https://www.instagram.com/_thesleepcentre/
🎧 Listen on Spotify & Apple Podcasts