Family and Economic
Pressures

Family routines are also shaped by broader economic and social conditions. Changes in employment stability, income levels, and cost of living can place pressure on how families organize their time and caregiving.
For many parents, returning to work is influenced not only by preference but by necessity. This can affect the amount of time available for establishing consistent routines and responding to a child’s needs during early development.
At the same time, social expectations around caregiving roles continue to influence how responsibilities are shared within the household. In some cases, this can limit flexibility in how families structure care, even when alternative arrangements may better support the child.
These factors contribute to variability in daily routines and should be considered when understanding how sleep patterns develop.
These patterns are essentially collections of blocks that are pre-arranged and configured, which you can insert into your posts and pages.

What these stats mean
Population and Birth Rate
Mongolia’s population of approximately 3.5 million, alongside 65,000 births annually, reflects a country where new families form at a steady and significant rate relative to its size. This means a large portion of the population is continuously entering early childhood stages, where foundational sleep patterns are established.
Unlike larger populations where demand is diffused, this scale concentrates the need for early guidance. However, structured support for infant sleep particularly preventive, education-based guidance remains limited. As a result, many families navigate critical developmental stages without consistent frameworks for sleep, increasing the likelihood of challenges becoming embedded early.
Population and Age structure
With around 30% of the population under age 15, Mongolia is a distinctly young society. This creates sustained demand on education systems, where schools must accommodate a high volume of children across age groups.
In practice, this can lead to constraints in educational infrastructure, teacher capacity, and individualized attention. Sleep-related issues—such as fatigue, reduced concentration, and behavioral regulation—often emerge within these environments, yet are rarely addressed systematically.
At the same time, healthcare systems are not structured to support sleep as a developmental priority. For infants and young children in particular, there is limited access to guidance on sleep patterns, routines, and early intervention. This creates a gap between the scale of need and the availability of support during formative years.
Population and Urban Living
With approximately 70% of the population living in urban areas (primarily in Ulaanbaatar) daily life has shifted toward dense, structured environments within a relatively short period of time.
This concentration introduces constraints that directly affect sleep:
1. Limited living space and shared sleeping environments
2. Increased exposure to artificial light and noise
3. Fixed school and work schedules
These conditions differ significantly from historically more flexible, environment-driven rhythms. As families adapt to urban living, there is often a mismatch between children’s biological sleep needs and the structure of daily life.
A Combined Perspective
Taken together, these figures describe a population that is both young and urban, with a steady influx of new families and increasing pressure on existing systems.
– A high birth rate sustains continuous demand for early childhood support
– A large youth population intensifies pressure on education and developmental systems
– Urban concentration reshapes daily environments and routines
– Limited integration of sleep into healthcare leaves a gap in early guidance
Within this context, sleep is not simply a private concern within the home. It is shaped by demographic structure, environmental conditions, and the availability of knowledge and support.
Understanding these interactions is essential to addressing sleep in a way that reflects both the realities families face and the scale of need across the population.
Experience and culture
Over the past several years, direct work with families through Sleep Corner has provided insight into how child-rearing practices are shaped within the Mongolian context. In the absence of widely accessible, structured guidance on sleep health, many families rely on intergenerational knowledge passed down through grandparents and elders, and reinforced through everyday practice.
Folklore
Some of these practices are closely tied to traditional folklore. Families hang a felt fox above a child’s crib/bed as a form of protection (READ ARTICLE about felt fox here) and/or families perform ширгэлэх (shirgeleh), a ritual involving melting lead or candle wax at night while chanting religious mantras in front of the baby to find out what has scared them. The melted candle wax poured into the cold water would take the shape of whatever supposedly spooked the baby. Whatever the shape would then be put under the baby’s pillow for 3 nights, or in some cultural contexts they are thrown out to symbolically depict getting rid of it altogether. What is notable is not only the persistence of this practice, but its reach. It is performed across a wide range of households, including those who do not identify as religious. In moments where there is no clear explanation for a child’s distress, families often return to these familiar cultural frameworks as a way to interpret and respond. Here are some interesting figures that came out when families have performed this ritual.



In certain situations, shamans may be invited into the home when a child is believed to be unsettled or affected by unseen forces. These responses reflect a broader cultural framework in which a child’s well-being is understood not only through physical or behavioral signs, but also through environmental and spiritual interpretation.
Cultural narratives also shape how children’s behavior is interpreted. It is commonly said that baby boys may have difficulty settling because they are “watching over their horses” (адуугаа манах). In this context, fathers traditionally make and give their sons a small mock lasso pole (уурга). It is believed that once the baby has this lasso they can sleep better, knowing their horses are safe. This practice reflects deeper associations with responsibility, identity, and Mongolia’s pastoral heritage, where even early childhood is symbolically connected to roles within a larger way of life.
History
As depicted in this mural, Mongolia’s development has been shaped through layers of tradition and externally introduced systems. Traditional life is presented alongside the emergence of education, medicine, and industry. The group of women supporting a baby emerging from a floral form can be understood as a symbolic representation of the introduction of modern medical care, including prenatal and postnatal support, pediatrics, and institutional healthcare. These elements illustrate how new structures were integrated into an already established cultural foundation. Rather than replacing existing beliefs, these systems were added onto them, creating a complex and enduring coexistence.

This layered development continues to define how families navigate daily life. Long-standing cultural practices remain active and influential, while modern expectations like urban living, structured schedules, and institutional systems introduce new demands. These elements do not exist separately; they overlap within the same household, often without a clear framework for reconciliation.
Through practice, it was known but further solidified that sleep health advice and content based solely on scientific reasoning, when introduced without cultural awareness, can feel dismissive or incompatible. At the same time, relying entirely on traditional explanations does not provide solutions for modern challenges. Effective engagement requires navigating this space carefully acknowledging the meaning behind existing beliefs while gradually introducing new ways of understanding.
attachment style
Within many households, caregiving is closely centered around the mother. Breastfeeding is commonly encouraged well into the second year, sometimes longer. In practice, this means that mothers remain highly involved throughout the night for extended periods of time, with little separation between feeding, soothing, and sleep. At the same time, daily life does not adjust to support this level of involvement. Work demands, household responsibilities, and expectations around caregiving continue alongside it. There is often limited space to step back, redistribute roles, or introduce changes to routines, even when maternal fatigue becomes significant.
Care within the household often follows patterns that are already expected. Roles are not usually discussed openly, which makes it harder to change them later.
This becomes clear when trying to adjust night routines. For example, once a baby no longer needs to feed at night, breastfeeding can shift to daytime, while the father takes over night wakings so the mother can rest. In reality, this kind of change is not easy to implement. It interrupts what the family is used to, even if the current situation is exhausting. As a result, changes tend to stay within what already feels familiar. Adjustments are small, and only made if they do not disrupt existing roles. What works in the long run is often set aside for what feels manageable in the moment.
Environment and belief
A consistent pattern has emerged in how sleep environments are set up. Decisions around light, space, and response are often guided by beliefs about protection rather than by how sleep develops biologically. Rooms are rarely kept fully dark. A light is left on, doors remain open, and the child is kept within close proximity, even when this results in a more stimulating environment.
In practice, this creates a clear tension. Conditions that support stable sleep like darkness, reduced sensory input, and predictability are difficult to establish within settings that remain active and responsive. When a child struggles to settle, the instinct is not to reduce input, but to increase presence. This is most evident during moments of distress. Crying is addressed immediately and repeatedly, not only to comfort the child, but engrained beliefs about letting a child be in any discomfort or distress is unnatural. The environment and response are continuously adjusted in real time, rather than structured in a way that supports consistency.
From a practical standpoint, this makes even small changes difficult to sustain. Introducing a conducive sleep environment, which is the foundation of the sleep hygiene framework challenges an existing understanding of what keeps a child safe. Without addressing that underlying belief, adjustments to the environment tend to be temporary, with families returning to what feels familiar and protective.









