Guide · Bedtime fears

Scared of the dark is normal. Staying scared doesn't have to be.

The fix usually isn't the hall light blazing all night — and it isn't lights-off cold turkey. It's a middle path: a dark ladder of small, brave steps that let bedtime fear settle on its own, with you calm beside them.

Brave Heart Best for ages 4–10 5 min read Research-backed
Why it feels so big The trap The dark ladder Where it fits FAQ
Bedtime is when a child's imagination has the least to do — and the most room to run.
The science

Why the dark feels so big (and why it's not a stall tactic)

The dark removes the information a brain uses to feel safe, and it fills the gap with whatever's most vivid — the shadow that becomes a shape, the creak that becomes footsteps. Being wary of it is normal and developmentally timed: nighttime fears are common in young children and tend to ease with age.

So the stalling at lights-out usually isn't a manipulation to stay up — it's a genuine spike of fear at the moment your child is most alone with it. That reframe changes your job from winning the bedtime standoff to helping them meet the dark in pieces small enough to handle.

The trap

Comfort that quietly keeps the fear

Faced with a frightened child at 8pm, the loving moves are the obvious ones — leave every light on, lie down until they're asleep, come back for the fifth check. They work tonight.

The catch

If those become the permanent arrangement, they can quietly teach the fear to stay — the message lands as "the dark really was too much; the light (or you) is what kept me safe." It's the avoidance trap from the bravery ladder, in pyjamas.

The opposite lunge — lights off, door shut, "there's nothing there, goodnight" — is usually too big a step, and tends to make bedtime scarier. The path between is a graded one: small rungs, climbed with your child, not sprung on them.

The method, for bedtime

The dark ladder

Pick rungs that fit your child, climb one at a time, and stay on each until it feels easy — then step up.

Braver — more dark, less help
6One goodnight, then trust the dark
5Trade the hall light for a small night-light — then dim it
4Read the bedtime story a notch darker
3"Brave seconds" — lights off for a count of five, you there
2Torch & shadow games — point the light into the dark
1Play a favourite game in a dim room
Start here — easiest · a coin for every rung climbed
Why the games work

Turning play into the fear-fighter isn't just cute: controlled trials of playful "dark games" — torch play, dark-tolerance games — find they measurably lower children's fear of the dark, and help them fall asleep faster. Repeat each rung until it's a little boring, then climb.

For the why behind the method — habituation, the avoidance trap, building the ladder — see the bravery ladder.

Where Habit Badger fits

A coin for every brave step

LVL 3

Brave Heart

"I'm brave, even when it's hard."

Habit Badger turns each rung of the dark ladder into a brave moment your child can see.

Those coins grow the Brave Heart badge — "I'm brave, even when it's hard." The coins get the climb going; the identity is what's left when the light's been dimmed for good (who they're becoming).

One honest line

The coin is a companion to your calm, not a replacement for it. A steady "I'm right here, and you've got the next small step" does more than any prize.

Buy-in

Build the ladder together

Do this at a calm daytime moment — not at 8pm in the dark.

No single right pace

Every child climbs differently

Some take a rung every few nights; some need longer; some slip back after a hard day. That's all normal — this is a starting point, not a rulebook, and you know your child best.

When to get help

Check in with your pediatrician or a child psychologist if the fear is intense and persistent, brings panic or nightly hours-long battles, spreads well beyond bedtime, or leaves your child (or the household) exhausted for weeks. The hopeful part: childhood fears and anxiety are among the most treatable things there are — reaching out is a brave step of your own, not a failure.

Questions parents ask

FAQ

Is it okay to use a night-light?
Yes — a night-light is a fine rung, not a crutch, as long as it doesn't become permanent by default. The kinder long game is to make dimming it one of the steps on the ladder once your child is ready.
Should I let them sleep in my bed when they're scared?
The occasional night is no problem. As a nightly fix, though, it can slide into the comfort that keeps the fear going. If it's already a habit, make returning to their own bed a gentle ladder of its own rather than a hard cut-off.
My child says there's a monster. Do I "check"?
One calm, matter-of-fact look can help — but avoid the ritual of checking five times, which can accidentally confirm there's something to check for. Pair it with the ladder, so the goal is meeting the dark, not proving it's empty.
How long does this take?
Often a few weeks, climbing a rung every few nights — but it varies, and slipping back after a hard day is normal, not failure. Small and steady beats fast.
The bigger picture

Where this fits

This guide is one climb; the method and the mechanics live next door:

Turn lights-out into a ladder they can climb.

Habit Badger marks every brave step into the dark with a coin — until the night-light dims, the door's ajar, and your child is simply someone who's brave.

Start with Brave Heart

Sources & disclaimer

  1. Nighttime fears are common in childhood and ease with age. Gordon, J., King, N., Gullone, E., Muris, P., & Ollendick, T. H. (2007). "Nighttime fears of children and adolescents." Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45(10), 2464–2472. doi.org/10.1016/j.brat.2007.03.013
  2. Playful, graded "dark games" reduce children's fear of the dark (parent-delivered bibliotherapy, Uncle Lightfoot). Kopcsó, K., Láng, A., & Coffman, M. F. (2021). Child Psychiatry & Human Development. doi.org/10.1007/s10578-020-01103-4
  3. Bibliotherapy plus games reduces nighttime fears and speeds sleep onset in young children. Orgilés, M., et al. (2026). European Journal of Pediatrics. doi.org/10.1007/s00431-026-06918-2
  4. Gradual exposure — facing a fear "in small, nonthreatening doses"; names fear of the dark. American Academy of Pediatrics, "Fears & Phobias in Children," HealthyChildren.org. healthychildren.org
  5. "Small steps" toward what frightens a child, and gradual withdrawal at bedtime. NHS (UK), "Anxiety in children." nhs.uk
  6. Fears such as the dark are a normal part of young childhood. MindSG, Health Promotion Board, Singapore (HealthHub). healthhub.sg

Habit Badger is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by any named program, researcher, or institution. Studies and named methods are cited for educational purposes only; this page is not a substitute for professional or medical advice.