For autistic children and the families who love them
Maternal Menace Sleep is an autism-specialized pediatric sleep consulting practice built for families navigating the specific sleep challenges of autism — sensory processing differences, co-occurring anxiety, medication effects, and the thousand other reasons bedtime is hard. No generic sleep training. No "just try consistency." Real support from someone who has been there.
Autistic children don't have sleep problems because they're bad at sleeping. They have sleep problems because their sensory systems, nervous systems, and circadian rhythms work differently. Standard sleep training methods were not designed for these differences — and trying to force them can make things worse, not better.
Samantha Oyler, founder of Maternal Menace Sleep, spent years in the autism therapy trenches — 35+ hours per week of in-home ABA supervision while raising an autistic child and building a publishing career. She has lived the 3 AM bedtime battles, the pediatrician visits that go nowhere, and the well-meaning advice that never fits. Maternal Menace Sleep exists because she needed this and couldn't find it.
Not a one-size-fits-all sleep plan. A sensory-informed, autism-specific process.
We look at sleep through the lens of sensory processing — because for autistic children, a scratchy tag, a flickering light, or a change in routine isn't minor. It's a full nervous system event. Understanding this comes before any plan.
You're the expert on your child. We're not here to override your instincts — we're here to give them structure, language, and a plan that actually fits your family's life. No judgment. No scripts.
Anxiety, GI issues, medication interactions, grief, transitions, sensory sensitivity — we look at the whole picture, not just the bedtime routine. Sleep problems in autism rarely have one cause.
Consultations happen over video. Plans adapt as your child grows, as seasons change, as new challenges emerge. Sleep in autism is not a one-time fix — it needs ongoing support that moves with you.
Sleep deprivation in autistic children is not a secondary concern. Stanford Medicine's Center for Sleep in Autism Spectrum Disorder has identified sleep disruption as a potential convergent pathway — meaning poor sleep may actually aggravate core autism symptoms rather than just co-occur with them.
When a child doesn't sleep, the whole family doesn't sleep. Parents miss work. Siblings are affected. The child dysregulates during the day, which makes the next bedtime harder, which makes the next night worse. It's a cycle — and it needs a dedicated intervention, not a melatonin recommendation.
Sleep problems are a common comorbidity for children with autism spectrum disorder. Despite its central role in brain development and function, these sleep impairments are frequently considered secondary — a concomitant co-occurring condition rather than a primary target for intervention.— Stanford Medicine Center for Sleep in Autism Spectrum Disorder
The same sensory sensitivities that can make a crowded store or a scratchy sweater overwhelming during the day don't simply switch off at night. Understanding the link between your child's sensory system and their sleep patterns is the key to unlocking more peaceful nights.— Dr. Samantha B. Feder, Sensory Interior Design
You've been dismissed by pediatricians, family, and well-meaning friends. Your gut is usually right. We start there.
We address the sensory foundation before we ever talk about bedtime routines. You can't build a sleep plan on a broken sensory foundation.
Every autistic child has a unique sensory profile, a unique nervous system, and a unique set of triggers. The plan should match that.
Gradual, consistent progress beats a dramatic intervention that collapses after two weeks. We build for the long game.
If you're reading this at 2 AM with a child who won't sleep and a body running on fumes — you are not failing. You just need better support.
No toxic positivity. No generic advice. Just honest assessment, evidence-informed strategies, and someone who gets it because they've lived it.
When your autistic child sleeps better, the whole family breathes differently. When parents get real rest, everything is easier — therapy appointments, IEP meetings, work, marriage, the thousand small decisions that fill every day. Sleep is the foundation. We're here to help you build it.
Full consulting services coming soon — currently completing IPSCC/ASC certification through Rest Mama Academy. Sign up above to be first in line.