T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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490.1 | | RICKS::PATTON | | Mon Mar 29 1993 13:45 | 20 |
| Kate,
Charlotte is 20 months old now, and doing the same things as your
daughter. I try to work around the getting-dressed problem by
laying out two or three choices of clothing and hiding everything
else. I let her pick the socks and shoes the same way.
The other thing I've been doing lately is bamboozling her with songs
and fingerplay and games at times when tantrums are likely. During
diaper changes I do "Old MacDonald" with lots of dramatic animal
noises, and quiz her a lot: "What does a cow say?" etc. Then I ask
her, "Where's your tongue? Where's your eyebrow? Where's your elbow?"
and she has yet to tire of this. She likes to do songs with hand
motions, like "Wheels of the Bus" and pattycake and "Where is
Thumbkin." She shouts out requests and I really ham it up. This can
keep her from thinking about what clothes I'm stuffing her into during
all the singing. Some of this has been helpful in the car lately too.
Lucy
|
490.2 | We went through the same thing... | MKOTS3::MACFAWN | Alyssa and Krystin's mommy | Mon Mar 29 1993 14:19 | 17 |
| We do the same things with Krystin (31 months). She used to throw
temper tantrums over the getting dressed/hair thing.
We used to play games like: while putting on her shirt, say "uh, oh,
where'd Krystin go? Krystin, where are you?" and then when you pull it
over her head, say, "There you are! Were you hiding on me?" Also you
can do the same thing for the pants. "Where's Krystin's toes?"
As far as the hair goes, I would let Krystin put hair spray in my hair,
then I would say, "Can mommy do that to you too?" And then when we're
done, I say, "Go show daddy how pretty you are".
Let your daughter "chose" the clothes and the barrettes. It's the
terrible twos and this too shall pass....
Gail
|
490.3 | obsessed in le boudoir | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Mon Mar 29 1993 14:28 | 44 |
| I've got this situation on a daily basis. Ilona has been a clothes
horse since she was 18 months old. A "pretty dress" is her favorite
clothing, preferably a floral summer dress. She is very picky about
her clothing, socks, and shoes.
Some things I've tried, with varying amounts of success:
* Let her dress herself. Part of the struggle has to do with
independence. Of course she might just refuse to get dressed at all,
even insisting on wearing last night's wet diaper.
* Let her participate in selecting clothing. Gets ridiculous when she
wants a lightweight summer dress in January, or wants to wear a dress
that's too big, or refuses to choose anytbing I select and flings both
item A and item B across the room. It helps to hide the out-of-season,
wrong-size items. Somewhat.
* Hold off breakfast until after she is dressed. This is necessary but
not sufficient.
* Don't do it all at once. Delay putting on the shoes and brushing
hair until after breakfast.
* Introduce the element of speed. Say "Hurry, fast, faster!"
Distracts her from the agony of dressing and gets her involved in doing
it as fast as possible, rather than blocking the process.
* As Monica said, distract her with animated song. Not my cup of tea
at 7 a.m., but what the hey, it's better than another bite on the
tushie!
* Let her use the pretty summer dresses as nightgowns. At least she
gets to wear them SOME of the time, and I don't care if she insists on
wearing the dress backwards so she can see the buttons.
* On a weekend, try bribery - like a ride on the horse in front of the
supermarket?
* Pray for stamina. If you can just survive the first hour of the day,
you can make it the rest of the way.
:-)
Laura
|
490.4 | Enjoy the "terrific twos!" | LJOHUB::DYER | | Mon Mar 29 1993 15:49 | 26 |
| I have the same problems in the morning with my almost 4 year old. My
most common and easiest solution is to just dress him before he barely
opens his eyes. (I have to wake him every morning).
Once he is awake he must always chose his clothes or we have a fight
so I have learned to pick out two and we "make a deal". He gets
to chose one of the two once I pick out the two. We also sing and
play games. He can dress himself but that takes too much time.
We don't have that kind of time in the morning.
BTW, after having 3 children, now 22, 17 and almost 4, I don't
and never will again consider it the "terrible twos". It is definitely
the "terrific twos"! Find ways to enjoy it cause it only gets worse!
The so-called "terrible two's" are your little one saying, "I'm
me and I am an individual". "Please let me be me!" If you think
of it as them learning then it is a wonderful thing to watch.
Patience is a virtue! You will never regret using lots of it.
Sorry for getting so speechy but let's just say I have learned
the hard way! When you have a 2 year old AND a 16 year old saying
"NO!" at the same time you learn how to have FUN with the 2 year
old!
Stand back and count to 10 and bite your tongue!
Nancy
|
490.5 | | JARETH::BLACHEK | | Mon Mar 29 1993 15:52 | 23 |
| We went through this same stuff. At the time, it made me wonder how
anyone going through the terrible twos can get pregnant again!
At first, I would shower while my husband gave her breakfast
downstairs. (We did this as a holdover from days when she wore more
than she ate, and it would prevent having to change her again.) Then I
would chase her around the downstairs trying to dress her. It was
*very* frustrating.
Finally, we decided to have set rules. We leave the gate to the stairs
up until she is ready to go downstairs for breakfast. Ready means
dressed, and hair braided. She seems a little more motivated by
breakfast, and now that she is older, wearing food is no longer a
problem at all. Some days, she does wear her jammies, but since we let
her decide, that is rare.
I thought this was one of the more frustrating aspects of parenting.
The stress over leaving on time was awful. You have my sympathy!
Even though it's really hard, try to let your child dress herself. The
more she practices, the better she'll get, and the sooner she'll get
out of the terrible twos.
judy
|
490.6 | 3 things to try | CSTEAM::WRIGHT | | Mon Mar 29 1993 16:35 | 30 |
| Clothes changing and diaper changing are the most stressful part of my
day. It seems that I can handle the other types of tantrums or
"terrible twos" but when my son gives me a hard time about getting him
dressed, it just reduces me to complete dispair. I don't know why. I
guess each parent has areas that really upset them and others which
they can let roll off their backs.
In any case, I've found a slight improvement by doing 3 things.
(By the way, my son doesn't care WHAT he wears, so we don't argue
about choices. He just HATES to get changed.)
1. Dress him in a clean undershirt and shirt the night before.
Have him wear only the bottom of his pajamas, or his blanket
sleeper over the shirt and undershirt. The next morning,
the top half is "done" :^) and I just have to change the
diaper, pants, shoes, and socks.
2. Do it bit by bit. I change his diaper and pants first, then
give him a play break while I go do something else, then
return for shoes and socks.
3. Dress his teddy bear. He is fascinated if I pretend to diaper
and dress his teddy bear. Then he loves it if we pretend that
the bear is not being cooperative, so he can say "no no" to the
bear, and then he "shows" the bear how he does it correctly.
With all this it is better but still frustrating. I find it is worth
it to get up a little earlier so I am not TOO frantic.
Jane
|
490.7 | | RICKS::PATTON | | Mon Mar 29 1993 17:13 | 9 |
| As Nancy in .4 says, it really is the "terrific twos" in that
they are pretty harmless at this age and it gets more complicated
when they get older... I admit I am enjoying my daughter's
assertiveness and only go nuts when she starts screeching; that's
the one thing I hate. Generally I find her two-ishness very
entertaining and her adventures are the subject of family discussion
every day.
Lucy
|
490.8 | IF your daycare is amenable . . . | GAVEL::PCLX31::satow | gavel::satow or @mso | Mon Mar 29 1993 18:03 | 6 |
| . . . you can take her to in her nightwear, with the clothes for the day.
The daycare provider can then do it, without any time pressure, and there
will be peer pressure for her to get dressed. In addition, if she doesn't
cooperate, she will have to wear what you pick.
Clay
|
490.9 | | EMDS::CUNNINGHAM | | Tue Mar 30 1993 08:53 | 20 |
|
re. back a couple...
I do the same thing with the t-shirt bit. Each night we put on a clean
t-shirt or onesie underneath his pj's so that in the morning its one
less thing to wrestle with. I too find it the easiest when I have to
wake "him" up, that way I bring his morning bottle to the crib, wake
him up, and we take it to the changing table to get dressed first
thing. He is just bearly awake and much less of a struggle goes on.
Beleive me, it doesn't go smoothly every day, but it tends to work alot
of the time. Sometimes I feel guilty when I think about if someone did
this to me (threw me into my clothes within 5 mins of my eyes opening)
but he doesn't seem to mind much, and with my husband leaving much
earlier than we do, it works out the easiest for us.
I also put his clothes out the night before all ready to go. He's only
17 mos so we havent' gotten into him wanting to "choose" yet.
Chris
|
490.10 | Thanx for the sympathy | ICS::NELSONK | | Tue Mar 30 1993 10:41 | 13 |
| Thanks for all of the sympathy. I think I needed that almost as much
as all the ideas here!
Hollis is only 21 months, so we haven't gotten into the "let me choose"
bit -- yet. I just find myself thinking, for crying out loud, all I
want you to do is get dressed without a fight. Is that asking too
much? Apparently yes. Anyway, I'm going to have to go back to
dressing her on her changing table in her room. This is a very recent
development, by the way -- her not wanting to get dressed. I think
she's beginning to understand that when she gets dressed, she has to go
out, and it means Mommy and Daddy are gone, too.
|
490.11 | Letting her decide when to get dressed. | CSIDE::DUPLAK | | Tue Mar 30 1993 12:53 | 21 |
| I let my very independent 2.4 year old decide when she wants to
get dressed. I just say, "ok, you just let Mommy know when you
are ready to get dressed" and then I pay her no attention and
busy myself with making beds, picking up, getting ready myself.
She usually comes around within a minute or two (amazing what they
will do for attention - even get dressed!).
She also does not go downstairs for breakfast until all dressed,
teeth brushed and hair combed.
I am also finding that the "twos" can be a lot of fun providing we
take a little extra time, give her some control by allowing her to
make some of her own decisions and letting her do things her own way.
Another key factor is making sure she is feeling ok. Mixing a sick
child with being two can be disastrous. When she is not feeling
well, nothing usually works so we pour on the TLC and muster up all
the patience we can while waiting for healthier days.
Good luck!
Deanna
|
490.12 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is STILL not a family value | Tue Mar 30 1993 12:59 | 8 |
| re .10
There were numerous times when Carrie found herself budled into a coat
with her clothes in a bag and taken to Lorraines's. it took care of
the problem in a few weeks, and this way, my stress level was much
lower.
Meg
|
490.13 | "silly dad" game | EMDS::MAURER | | Tue Mar 30 1993 19:07 | 35 |
| I play the "silly dad" game and start on the bottom and work
my way up. First, diapers are a sheer discipline thing and we
have always laid down the law that he must be still for
diapers. Once that is over he always thought the clothing
thing was free game and starting getting very wild.
"Silly dad" (or mom) is played as follows: Start with socks
and put them on his nose and say "the socks go on your nose?"
He'll pick up on this and say "no". Then work your way
down...ie
o socks go on your ears?
o socks go on your hands?
o socks go on your knees?
He will finally say "no socks go on my feet"
Bang got him, hook line and sinker.....
You may think this process will take forever (and it does the
first or second time) but you can run through it faster as
you go along and leave out parts...
Then its "pants go on your head?"
"shoes go on your nose?"
"shirt on your legs?"
Zach seems to feel a certain amount of control with this
process and likes it. My wife saw me do it once and
pronounced me crazy, but then she is long gone by the time I
have to do this every morning and it is the only way I could
cope with the lack of cooperation. I probably have the only
kid in the world that this works on but.......
Bernie
|
490.14 | Great idea! Bernie | LJOHUB::DYER | | Wed Mar 31 1993 13:34 | 17 |
| re. .13
Boy, I wish I used that one a few years ago. My almost 4 year
old still gives me problems in the morning but he would get
bored with the "silly Mom" game but I am certainly going to
use it as much as I can.
You are very right about the control thing. If they make the
decisions or at least feel like they are or feel they have most
of the control they are happy. Boy, what a great self-esteem
booster for them too. If we just had the patience tho to just
sit back each time and think of these things.....(and were never
tired!, right?!?!)
Thanks Bernie, great idea!
Nancy
|
490.15 | Silly Mama :-) | CSC32::DUBOIS | Discrimination encourages violence | Wed Mar 31 1993 16:16 | 10 |
| < I probably have the only kid in the world that this works on but.......
No you don't, Bernie. Evan (age 5) and I have been using a variation of that
one for years. As a matter of fact, "silly" is a *frequently* used word in our
house. We use it for when I am manipulating him (without him knowing it) like
in the game you described, and we also use it in places where other people
might say "weird". Works great, and is not an insult. We have lots of fun.
:-)
Carol
|
490.16 | Well, sometimes... | DEMON::PANGAKIS | Tara DTN 247-3153 | Thu Apr 01 1993 09:23 | 19 |
| About being silly to get dressed or other tasks you want done but the
kid doesn't, let me add another view. This might work if you
are the only care provider but I have discovered with my child that
while Mom and Dad may have alot of patience , her other care providers
(first my mother-in-law and for the last 1.5 years, day care) don't
have the energy or time to play.
We try to be as consistent as possible and there are just some
things there is no negotitation about: getting dressed, sitting
in her car seat, holding my hand in parking lots, eating [at least
something] etc. No bribery. I'm the Mommy. For us, there's a time
a place for silliness and self-expression, but these aren't examples.
Actually, by being consistent, I've found it's *less* of a hassle
because she knows the things she can control and when she has to
respect the rules. It takes time, and lots of "because" explaining,
but it's worth it, for me.
|
490.17 | Mommy the magician, or is she jerking my chain?? | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Thu Apr 01 1993 11:44 | 16 |
| I tried the "silly" stuff this morning, with no success. She would
have been happy to wear her turtleneck on her leg and her pants on her
head. She does that sort of thing on her own anyway and tries to get
away with it. She found it pleasant that I temporarily went along with
her usual methods.
At 39 degrees and snowing, going naked is not an option. (She got bent
out of shape because I closed the patio door, even though she could
feel it was too cold to go outside.) She thinks that if she just
believes something strong enough (like that its warm enough to go out
naked) it will be so.
Laura,
who had an exceedingly aggravating and lengthy morning with Her Royal
Crankiness. These are times one is grateful for daycare. :-(
|
490.18 | Parenthood -- the world's 2nd oldest profession | ICS::NELSONK | | Thu Apr 01 1993 13:18 | 9 |
| re. .17: THANK YOU FOR SAYING THAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I'm trying to follow a middle ground as best I can. I agree in
principle with trying to make it a game, make it fun, etc., etc. At
the same time, I've got to agree with much of what .16 says about "I'm
the Mommy, that's why."
I guess the bottom line is, some things work with some kids, some
things work with other kids, but NOTHING works with ALL kids!!!
|
490.19 | This too shall pass. | DEMON::PANGAKIS | Tara DTN 247-3153 | Fri Apr 02 1993 09:40 | 3 |
| And below the bottom line,
Nothing works all the time!
|
490.20 | Let them sleep in their clothes! | SAHQ::BAINE | | Fri Apr 02 1993 17:53 | 24 |
| I found that when it was a battle to get dressed in the morning, I let
my child sleep in sweatpants/shirts that could then be worn to day
care! They don't wrinkle when slept in, so your child is all dressed in
the AM. As for wearing their food, give them dry cheerioes and tidbits
of banana or other fruit for breakfast. It's finger food and not as
messy as some other stuff. Ditto for toast bits and scrambled eggs.
Tots also like to dress themselves, and this can take foreever when you
are trying to get out in the AM. We used to let them pick out their
clothes the night before, then get them up at least 15 minutes early so
they can dress themselves at their own speed. I also used to let my
girls bring their clothes into my room, and they got dressed while I
got myself ready.
When I knew they were capable of dressing themselves
(at least by 5 years), but were poking along, I threatened to take them
to day care (or even school, once) in their pjs. It only took once or
twice of their dressing while being driven to school to convince them
that they had to get dressed when I told them to!
As for terrible two's - it's only temporary!
Kathleen
|
490.21 | going with the flow (just guiding it a bit) | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Mon Apr 05 1993 10:36 | 22 |
| Things are going a lot better the last couple of days. On Saturday, I
went through all of Ilona's clothing and removed items that are not
warm enough for the season, those that are too big, and those that she
refuses to ever wear. This narrowed down her choices and reduced her
upset at having clothes she doesn't like.
I put her underwear, socks, and barettes in 1 drawer, her shirts and
pants in another, and her knit dresses, sweaters, and nightgowns in
another. I think getting organized helped.
I gave her warning before insisting that she get dressed, didn't give
her breakfast until after getting dressed, and perhaps most important,
let her pick her own clothes. I did insist that she wear pants of some
sort to keep warm, but let her pick which pants and shirt.
I might wince at her selections, but at least she is dressed
appropriately for the season. Other kids at daycare may be better
dressed, but heck, their children are probably less spirited. They
don't have to live with the turmoil of imposing their wills. At least
my daughter has strong opinions and knows her own mind.
Laura
|
490.22 | Do it ALL the night before! | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed Apr 14 1993 17:01 | 22 |
| I had entered this in the previous file but ....
for years now, we've been getting the boys dressed for the next
morning, the night before. Sounds strange? Think about it for a
minute - these days, most kids wear sweats. Sweats are pretty
comfortable to sleep in. They get bathed/changed into all new stuff
the night before, and then when they wake up in the morning, it's eat,
wash up quick and we're gone. I've been known to get the 3 of us up
and gone within 45 mins, and that includes making lunches and
breakfast, and a shower for me.
If they decide they want to change in the morning, I give them the
clothes they'll wear, and that's it -they realize they don't have TIME
to mess with it.
Another thing that's helpful getting them motivated, is if they want to
do something else in the a.m. (like color, or watch a little TV or a
quick run on NINTENDO), they know they can't till they're READY to go.
My boyfriend thinks I'm NUTS dressing them "the night before", but then
he's never had to deal with dressing them in the morning! (-:
|
490.23 | My 6.5 year old dawdles | SALES::LTRIPP | | Thu Jun 17 1993 17:00 | 25 |
| I know this has been inactive for a while, but here's my twist on this
problem...
What do you do with your 6.5 year old son, who pleads with you "please
mom, can you help me with....(sox, shirt, you fill in the blank).
I usually wake him up, and he sits on the toilet to poop for a few
minutes, while he's sitting, I'm in his room finding his clothes for
the day. He almost always goes along with my choice, never has been a
problem in that category. At first I just found it quicker to assist
him in dressing, now he just plain dawdles, sits on his bed half naked,
playing with toys, until I either get my blood into a boil from yelling
"GET DRESSED!" or just go help him get dressed, because that's just a
lot quicker. Then he gets breakfast. Unfortunately, he doesn't really
care whether or not he eats before leaving, so it's not a big threat to
say get dressed or you'll not have time for breakfast. A couple times
I have packed cereal and and brought it over to the sitter's, he does
like eating with her children, but I really feel he needs to get used
to eating at home, and on a regular schedule. I have also tried waking
him 15 to 30 minutes early, and even then he's still running behind
when it's time to leave.
What method do I try next??
Lyn
|
490.24 | Chart time . . . | STOWOA::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Fri Jun 18 1993 09:30 | 12 |
| <<< Note 490.23 by SALES::LTRIPP >>>
-< My 6.5 year old dawdles >-
> What method do I try next??
> Lyn
Time for positive reenforcement here!! With your son, make up a chart of
the things he needs to do each morning and how long they ought to take. Then
come up with a list of suitable rewards based on how well he does. Then
execute! You might be surprised how well this simple technique works. You
have to put the discipline in it to check the chart each morning before you
leave and give him stars, stickers etc. But it does work.
|
490.25 | Go in PJ's | WHEEL::POMEROY | | Fri Jun 18 1993 09:59 | 12 |
| I had the same problem with my son when he was that age. I
still do occasionally and he's almost 9!
What I did was to threaten to take him to the sitters in his
pj's. At first, he acted like he didn't care, so then I had
to follow through. After once or twice of showing up in his
PJ's, in front of the other kids, he got the hint.
I'm now having the problem with my daughter, almost 7, and
she has always been good about getting herself dressed!
Good luck!
|
490.26 | mornings | EOS::ARMSTRONG | | Fri Jun 18 1993 10:14 | 29 |
| My son Robin sounds a lot like your son....mornings are
definitely a hard time. all transitions are hard, slow.
We do two things...
We have a general goal of having 'pizza party' each Friday,
and to 'earn it', the kids have to be helpful in the morning.
This includes all the various things that have to get done,
dressing, eating breakfast qickly, washing faces, brushing
teeth, etc. etc. With their help (4 kids) we all can start
our day pretty well. If someone is not helpful, and it has
to be pretty terrible, I'll take the other kids out for pizza
and leave one behind with Mom (who hates pizza). If they're
all acting up, we'll all stay home. The kids love going out
for pizza! We've only missed a pizza party a few times.
Robin is our main dawdler....we used to have special
'exercises' for him. When he would take forever getting dressed,
we would then have 'hurry up' exercises when he got home from
school. As soon as he was home, he would go up to his room,
take off all his clothes, put on his PJs, get in bed, and tell
us he was ready. We would say 'GO', and he would then see how
fast he could get up and dressed. then he would do it again.
It wasn't a real punishment...there was no anger. We tried to
make it a game, but a 'game' that he had to do. Since now
he was missing 'playing outside', he realized that dressing and
undressing quickly was a good idea...and it has made a big
difference.
bob
|
490.27 | instant reward=TV time for 5 -10 minutes | SALES::LTRIPP | | Fri Jun 18 1993 11:18 | 7 |
| re the rewards: I have instituted a "instant" sort of reward, as well
as a lesson in cause and effect. He knows that there is NO TV until
all the morning things have been accomplished, including making his
bed. There is most morning where there very simply is NO time for TV.
Does it bother him, well only sometimes.
Lyn
|
490.28 | CHARTS FOR LITTLE ONES? | DV780::DORO | | Fri Jun 18 1993 13:50 | 11 |
|
On the chart idea, how young of an age can yu use that with?
I have a 3.5 yr old and I'd like to start making a more concrete
connection between effort and reward.
I heard about using a" Hand" - drawing a hand, each digit represents
one "job", and filling up the digiat with stars.
Any ideas?
Jam
|
490.29 | Send him in pjs | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Fri Jun 18 1993 15:35 | 18 |
| I think that a 3.5 year old is certainly old enough for a chart - just
remember to keep is simple, and try to use "pictures" to represent the
work that you expect of them. You can cut out a picture of a can of
Pledge to mean dusting, or an animal eating to mean "feed the cat" or
whatever. They'll forget, and can't read to remind themselves ....
Lyn, I would also suggest sending him "wherever he's going" in his pjs.
Are you that adamant about having b.fast AFTER he's dressed? Could
b.fast be first, and then whatever he's wearing after the 73rd time you
told him to get dressed, is what he wears?? If you expect a lot of
squawking, you could BRING his clothes, but at 6.5, I would bet that
once or twice in PJs would be enough to make him realize. And I
wouldn't be afraid to say to your sitter, in front of him, that he was
being uncooperative, and you just didn't have time for his games (or
whatever). Of course you'll have to weigh that against if he WANTS to
get changed at the sitters ....
It's always something! (-:
|
490.30 | no embarassment at 2.5 years | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Sun Jun 20 1993 20:48 | 12 |
| Um, about sending them in pjs?
My daughter didn't want to get dressed one day recently, so I took her
to school in her underpants. No shoes, no clothes. It didn't phase
her one bit! :-)
The teacher dressed her when we arrived.
Oh well, as long as the weather's warm and the teacher doesn't mind...
Laura
|
490.31 | Try it . . . | STOWOA::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Mon Jun 21 1993 10:14 | 18 |
| <<< Note 490.28 by DV780::DORO >>>
-< CHARTS FOR LITTLE ONES? >-
> On the chart idea, how young of an age can yu use that with?
> I have a 3.5 yr old and I'd like to start making a more concrete
> connection between effort and reward.
> I heard about using a" Hand" - drawing a hand, each digit represents
> one "job", and filling up the digiat with stars.
> Any ideas?
> Jam
We used it for toilet training, so I would say 3.5 is right there. Just
make sure that you do this with them so that the rewards are what they want
and the donwside is also what they think it should be (within reason).
|
490.32 | Ideas? | STAR::AWHITNEY | | Tue Aug 10 1993 16:25 | 30 |
| Samantha (almost 21 months) is sooo EMOTIONAL! Okay mom is too
sometimes so she probably gets that from me but I dont' know what to do
with her sometimes. One little thing sets her off and she can be
hysterical for an hour.
Example, this morning her daddy left for work before she got up. He is
usualy the one to get her out of bed in the morning. So when she woke
up I went into her room and of course she asked for 'Daddy'! She
didn't want to have anything to do with me getting her out of bed - and
the morning was down hill from there - I try to talk to her, she just
grabs my face and hair and pulls and pinches as hard as she can. She
wants to hurt too - 'cause once she gets a hold of your face and hair
she stops crying and gets this really mad look on her face!
I ended up having to bring her in the bathroom with me while I got ready and
shut the door (trying to ignore her hitting my legs and screaming)
because she was throwing things over the gate to the stairs and trying
to climb over the gate.
She didn't stop until we were about 1/2 way to the daycare EXCEPT for
the 2-3 minutes she was on the phone with Daddy - I called him as a
bribe for her to calm down.
Bad morning...YES...I just feel bad because it seems like I can't do
anything to calm her down - she gets madder when I ignore her - meaner
when I try to talk to her....ETC!
Is this the terrible TWO's???????????? Any ideas on what I can do to
calm her down? Singing, talking, putting her in the corner, her bed,
holding her etc don't work...
|
490.33 | Just part of getting independent - it's scarey! | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Aug 10 1993 16:48 | 19 |
|
Jason had a few all-out temper tantrums when he was about 2, and there
was NOTHING that anyone could do to calm him. Is she just acting up,
or does it seem that her anger has gotten the better of her?
For Jason, it was just a matter of letting him cry it out. He always
specifically wanted either his father or I (usually me), but then when
we went to him, he wanted NOTHING to do with us. In the end, despite
his protests, I would hold him tightly and rock him, him SCREAMING the
whole time, until he got so tired he'd calm down. We'd have a LONG
talk about it afterwards.
Seems to me that he was out of control of everything, and he was
completely freaked out by it, which led to the tantrum. From what I'd
read, that's when mom/dad need to come in and just execute SOME form of
control, no matter how much they try to resist. It seemed to work for
him, and his tantrums were very few (less than 5).
|
490.34 | What happened to my little angel? | GRANPA::LGRIMES | | Tue Aug 10 1993 17:18 | 9 |
| Welcome to the joys of parenting ;-). I found at that age the change
in routine usually set off major tantrums. My son reacted better when
forwarned about any upset of the routine (ie., tommorrow Daddy has to
go out of town and won't be in when you get up). Of course this can't
be done all the time and I always used "time out" when the behavior got
totally out of control. "I understand you are upset but hitting is not
acceptable" then you just have to ride out the storm. Wonderful way to
start the day, huh? I'm getting ready to go through this with my
little girl and I am not looking forward to it.
|
490.35 | try a few more things | SALES::LTRIPP | | Tue Aug 10 1993 18:06 | 31 |
| My suggestion may backfire, but as I read this I wondered if one of the
methods we were taught in the ADHD parenting classes might work...
Take your daughter, sit down and just hold her, with her hands down at
her side ("pinned down" might be a crude description) and tell her that
youare going to hold her and give her a BIG HUG, until she feels
better. I may work, but then again she may go on to kick you, and that
does hurt! she may try to swing her head around, be careful you don't
end up with a fat lip or black eye.
And maybe as a last resort, is it at all possible that either your
husband could wake her as he is leaving, even if it is a little earlier
than usual, or could call her when he gets to his destination. Perhaps
he could be the one who picks her up at the sitter's (daycare). This
was something that we have been doing, since my husband has classes at
night, he may wake up our son, or make it a point to be theone to pick
him up at daycare/sitters on his non school nights, sometimes "the
boys" will stop on the way home for an ice cream as a treat. You could
try having dad tuck her in the night before, and reminding her that dad
will be gone when she wakes up in the morning.
In our house lately AJ (he's 6.5) will get up and seem anoyed that dad
didn't wake him before he left for work. We have sometimes told him
that dad did infact say good bye, but since he was sleeping he just
didn't remember dad doing it. (this is not a fib, he will usually peek
in before he leaves, sometimes adjusting the blanket and wispering
something to him.)
Yup, it doesn sound like the beginnings of the terrible two's!
Good luck
Lyn
|
490.36 | Tantrums, Tantrums, Tantrums | BUSY::BONINA | | Thu Aug 12 1993 09:42 | 39 |
| Natasha's almost 2 and I've tried "the holding" many times. I usually
end up giving up after she's hurt me so bad (approx. 1/2 hour). From
my experience "the holding" doesn't work for us - it just seems to
elevate my daughters anger which she takes out on me in the form of
kicking, major hitting and screaming so loud that my ears ring for
hours afterwards. {I saw my parent this weekend and they looked at my
bruised legs (from Natasha) and wondered what had happened} What does
work if I'm in a place where it can happen........I remove her from her
current environment..........this works everytime. Most of Natashas T.
come from her frustration of not being able to do something - project
wise, Mommy & Daddy insisting she get a diaper change or we take
something she's got into.
I want my loving child back. I feel like my little person has a bad
case of PMS. :-) ........ she has horns too.....some days they're
nubs and other days they're full blown horns X:-) X:-) X:-)
I don't have the problem with morining tantrums because Natasha like
her Mother is a zombie in the morning. She usually doesn't wake up
until she gets to daycare. I get the tantrums the moment I walk in the
door at night..............it makes me feel sooooooo bad....especially
after a long work day.
I guess there's no good time for a tantrum.
From my experience Natasha needs for my husband and I to take turns
getting her dressed, tubbed & put to bed, etc. My husband was the one
getting her down for bed for awhile and when I tried to put her down
for a few nights she gave me a real hassle. I found that if she can
get used to both of us doing everything, she's less likely to get upset
at a sudden change.
Even though this is a difficult time it's nice to know that we are not
alone.
:-)
|
490.37 | just another tactic to try... | DV780::DORO | | Mon Aug 16 1993 18:15 | 16 |
|
My nanny taught me this for earlyage tantrums.
When Sophie would get so upset she couldn't/wouldn't calm down, The
nanny would put her in her crib for 1-3 minutes, telling her, "you need
to calm down, I want you to calm down a little bit with some quiet
time."
Then, after language came, we would reinforce it with the message "fits
don't work". We ask her, before she gets completely woundup "What do
we know?".. and prompt her for "fits don't work, do they".
Usuallly works....
Jamd
|
490.38 | in so many words, "shadup!", nicely of course | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Tue Aug 17 1993 11:03 | 9 |
| I found a tactic that works (this week at least) for whininess that can
lead up to a tantrum, when Ilona wants something she can't have.
I tell her, "If you continue [whining, crying, yelling] [bathtime is
over, you won't get any treat at all, I will take away the problem
toy]." I say this in a very firm tone of voice and I follow up on my
word.
Laura
|
490.39 | Early Tantrumer | STOWOA::STOCKWELL | MOO MOO Mania | Mon Aug 29 1994 16:42 | 15 |
| Well, my daughter has throwing "tantrums" during diaper time since she
could roll over. We hold her at her ankles and she starts to turn
over, arch her back so that her butt is in the air. Its impossible at
times to change her diapier and get her dressed. I can't understand
why she gets so emotional to the point of sometimes screaming.
Somedays it takes the two of us to change her.
We have tried everything, talking to her, singning, handing her toys,
her bottle, trying to distract her, sometimes nothing works and she is
only 10 months old.
Other than changing time, she is the happiest baby and rarely ever
cries.
|
490.40 | | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Aug 30 1994 16:41 | 15 |
| Do you have a changing table? I've found that if there's no place else
to go, the kids tend to stay still a lot better.
There's still a lot to be said for quick fingers and diaper tape though
(-; Jonathan's just starting to really rather be doing something else.
If I have time I break it into 'two' mini-sessions. He's never peed
without a diaper on, so I have it a little easier. But, the first
'session', I take the diaper off and get him clean. Then I sit with
him, and we play for a minute or two, and I get the diaper all lined up
and ready to go. Then flop him down on it, if necessary my forearm on
his chest so he can't get up, slap the tapes on, and before he has time
to squeel much, we're done. Probably not as careful as it used to be,
sometimes the diaper's pretty crooked, but he's cleaner and the
furniture's safer, nonetheless.
|
490.41 | Picky About Clothes | AKOCOA::SALLET | | Tue May 09 1995 12:07 | 14 |
| We have been having troubles on and off with our almost 4 year old son
in terms of getting dressed in the morning. It's not that he minds'
getting dressed - he's just an absolute BEAR about what he wears. Talk
about being picky. Use to be he only wanted sweats, now it's only
jeans. Now that spring is springing we are migrating to short sleeve
shirts which he just hates - he wants long sleeves. It's really
ridiculous some mornings. We've tried various methods (i.e., letting
him pick out something the nite before, ignoring the tantrums, time
outs, letting him wear whatever he wants, etc) but it's such a hassle.
It's gotten so he only "likes" about 3 certain shirts and whines about
everything else. We've even gone so far as to pack away some of those
he was CONTINUALLY picking to wear. Any suggestions on how to make
life a little easier? BTW, it seems to be more than just a "phase" for
him ... he's REALLY REALLY picky.
|
490.42 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Tue May 09 1995 14:09 | 8 |
|
re .41
One easy way - just get him more of what he likes to wear.
Eva
|
490.43 | He has PLENTY | AKOCOA::SALLET | | Tue May 09 1995 14:20 | 5 |
| .41
I guess that's an option but the thing of it is is that he has a bureau
and closet full of clothes with nothing wrong with them - I hate to buy
more.
|
490.44 | this was a battle I didn't want to fight... | CNTROL::STOLICNY | | Tue May 09 1995 15:35 | 13 |
|
RE: .41
My experience with this was at 2.5 years, not 4, but I do recall a
period where Jason wore one of the 2 "bulldog" shirts he had
every other day. I found it counterproductive to try to get
him to wear something else; it only made him more firm in wanting
to wear the bulldog shirts. I guess I was fortunate in that he
didn't care what pants he wore 8^). I ran the washing machine
alot; he eventually outgrew this phase (or at least outgrew the
bulldog shirts!).
cj/
|
490.45 | | MROA::SANTAMARIA | "Cassidy's Mom" | Tue May 09 1995 15:53 | 23 |
| RE: .41
Julie,
I can sympathize with you. Cassidy has always been very picky about
her clothes. If she doesn't like it she won't wear it. I've pretty
much given up and make sure that I take her shopping with me whenever
I plan on getting her clothes. She is much better about wearing things
if she has picked them out. Of course it makes it hard when she gets
gifts but so far she hasn't said that she dislikes something in front
of anyone. She tells everyone though that only Auntie Kris can buy her
clothes as a gift.
I'm hoping the mornings get better in September when she goes off to
Kindergarten and has to wear a uniform. There's only so many choices
to argue about.
I'm not looking forward to when she's a teen-ager.
The best bet is to just grin and bear it. After a while it just was
not worth the fights and both of us being miserable.
Ginny
|
490.46 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Tue May 09 1995 16:10 | 17 |
|
re. 43
>I guess that's an option but the thing of it is is that he has a
>bureau and closet full of clothes with nothing wrong with them - I hate to
>buy more.
I know what you mean, it drives you crazy. But, this is not, IMO,
a battle worth fighting. To him, he doesn't have plenty because he
doesn't like them. At 4, they don't understand the relatively grown-up
concept of just-wear-what-is-there-because-mom-paid-for-them. Maybe
you can bring him shopping with you and let him pick out his outfits.
In the long run, the cost of a few more outfits is insignificant
compared to the unpleasant struggles he and you have to endure during
the really, really short duration of childhood.
Eva
|
490.47 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Tue May 09 1995 16:34 | 13 |
|
I also want to clarify that, IMO, we should not look upon
this as giving in, but rather an opportunity to let the kid
have a little bit of control over his own world and let
him know that it is ok to stand up for his preferences
and you will support him. Clothing is a harmless subject
to experiment on, IMO. It is rather true that the first
5 years of a kid's life is an important time for
to develop a healthy sense of self and a positive
experience with people ;-). Drive us crazy though ;-(
Eva
|
490.48 | I let them pick out their own clothes | PCBUOA::GIUNTA | | Tue May 09 1995 17:11 | 17 |
| My Jessica is very picky about her clothes, so I just let her wear
whatever she wants. If she wants to wear long sleeves on a warm day, I
ask her to pick out something with short sleeves to take in her
backpack just in case she wants to change later. And in the event that
she refuses to pick out something for later, I always already have
spares in her backpack anyhow so it doesn't matter.
For times when she only wants to wear the same thing over and over,
leaving it in the laundry and telling her that it's dirty and she can
wear it tomorrow usually works.
She's always been like this, but now that she's 4, at least she knows
what matches what. There was a time when I didn't really have to
announce that she had picked out her own clothes -- it was blatantly
obvious by the incredible combinations she could devise.
Cathy
|
490.49 | | USCTR1::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Wed May 10 1995 09:35 | 6 |
| My son did this from 3 onward, and still does. Despite a closet full of
clothes, I gradually bought those items he was comfortable with and
willing to wear. It made life a bit easier in the morning.
I remind myself to pick my battles....:-)
|
490.50 | | TLE::C_STOCKS | Cheryl Stocks | Wed May 10 1995 10:02 | 27 |
| My 4-year-old not only selects his clothes and dresses himself, he also
tells *me* what to wear. (generally does a pretty good job of it, too!)
Both my kids have been selecting clothes and dressing themselves since
they were 2. They can pick anything that's clean (since I do their
laundry 1-2 times a week, this means they wear at least 4 different
shirts a week). I put out-of-season clothes in a separate drawer, so
it's not generally available for selecting, and they ask me "is it a good
day for a short sleeve shirt?" when the weather is changeable (like
this spring!). My 4-year-old also tells me what his preschool teacher
has instructed them to wear, and her rules are generally stricter than
mine (at one point last fall, he said "No more shorts, Mom!", and a
couple of weeks ago he said "No more winter coats - I need to wear my
light jacket or a sweatshirt now.").
What's important to my kids is generally not exactly what clothes they wear,
but what color it is. David had a yellow stage, and has now moved on to
red. Gregor loved purple for a long time, and still does, but his
new favorite is green. (Of course there is no overlap, because that
would make using hand-me-downs too easy! :)
We have very few problems with dressing. Now, if anybody has figured
out how to get clothes put into the laundry basket rather than all over
the floor, I could use some help on that! We have probably 35 socks
scattered all over upstairs right now.
cheryl
|
490.51 | | NOTAPC::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Wed May 10 1995 10:58 | 25 |
| re: .50 Cheryl,
> We have very few problems with dressing. Now, if anybody has figured
> out how to get clothes put into the laundry basket rather than all over
> the floor, I could use some help on that! We have probably 35 socks
> scattered all over upstairs right now.
Clean or dirty? Just wondering, as it might make a difference to the
approach... :-)
We've never had to try this, but here's a couple of ideas I've heard
of...
Switch the routine to evenings instead of mornings. That is, have
them clean up, take baths, etc, then get dressed for the next day.
That way, the decision is already made, and all you have to "discuss"
in the morning is what they want to eat..
Or, go in night clothes if they won't pick something acceptable... not
sure if that would matter, but it might make a difference for some.
fwiw,
- Tom
|
490.52 | Try this! | ALFA1::PEASLEE | | Wed May 10 1995 14:36 | 5 |
| Why not put up a (plastic) basketball hoop in the bedroom and under
it place a small laundry basket. Maybe he'd like to toss his dirty
clothes through the hoop and into the basket.
Nancy
|
490.53 | Have them do it 'all' | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed May 10 1995 15:19 | 27 |
| >We have very few problems with dressing. Now, if anybody has figured
>out how to get clothes put into the laundry basket rather than all over
>the floor, I could use some help on that! We have probably 35 socks
>scattered all over upstairs right now.
Ahhhhh ... I got that one! Since the older two *REFUSED* to put their
dirty clothes where they belong, so I could bring them to the basement
to wash, and I was sick of LOOKING for dirty laundry ... they got the
whole job. Now *THEY* have to bring ALL the dirty clothes down to the
basement. And if it's not down there, I refuse to wash it. That
doesn't mean that they're perfect about picking up their stuff, but now
when I walk into their room, I can just say "These clothes are not
going to get washed, sitting on the floor!", and they know just what's
expected of them.
My feeling in these instances, is I'm asking them something SIMPLE, to
make my "chores" easier. If they're not willing to help me, then they
can do it all themselves. And I really have NOT washed the clothes, to
the point where they DON'T have clothes for school ... to a 7 and 10
year old, this is a BIG problem. Actions and consequences ... they're
getting it!
One other thing that helped a LITTLE, was giving them their own laundry
basket in their room ... which seemed to end up full of stuffed
animals. ??
-patty
|
490.54 | | TLE::C_STOCKS | Cheryl Stocks | Wed May 10 1995 16:11 | 20 |
| Patty,
I've been using that technique, with mixed success. They pick up enough
clothes to have clean stuff to wear, but they "don't see" lots of
the clothes that are driving me nuts by being all over the floor.
The only solutions I've found for those are: nagging, picking them up
myself, (sometimes) stickers as reward.
They do have a laundry basket in each bedroom, but the clothes (especially
socks!) are wherever they happened to take them off and/or where they
were using them in games, etc. Also, it's soooooo much fun to tip the
baskets over when they are nearly full. (sigh) So we frequently have
a bunch of clothes on the floor *near* the laundry baskets (I guess that's
a slight improvement over having them scattered all over the room).
re: the basketball hoop
That would probably work for normal kids, but my 7-year-old hates sports.
Anything that requires a ball is not enticing to him. Now, if there
was a similar approach that resembled a word search puzzle or maze...
cheryl
|
490.55 | | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Thu May 11 1995 13:11 | 15 |
|
..... well, I was saving this as a last resort .... I pay my kids 5
cents a pair, for matching clean sox. I *HATE* matching sox, so when I
sort the clean laundry, all the sox go into 1 pile. They sort through
them, and then get a nickle for each match they make. Sometimes I'll
give them a dime, or if there's A LOT! of sox, I'll say "ok, it's a
nickel for your first 10 matches and a dime for every one after that".
Money's a big motivator in my family ... (-; And I would **GLADLY**
pay someone $20.00 to match all the sox, so the money I give them is
no big deal ... just comes out of my "spare change" jar.
You can't MAKE them do it ... you can make them WANT to do it.
Remember that! (-;
|
490.56 | money | ECADSR::ARMSTRONG | | Thu May 11 1995 13:47 | 25 |
| > ..... well, I was saving this as a last resort .... I pay my kids 5
> cents a pair, for matching clean sox. I *HATE* matching sox, so when I
> Money's a big motivator in my family ... (-;
I've got 4 kids, some motivated by money, some not.
My daughter Anna (5) took all her savings (about $10) and bought a wonderful
stuffed animal that she had seen in a store and REALLY wanted...and on the
way home we were talking about how now her piggy bank would be empty.
She says "That's okay, this unicorn is more important than money"
and Molly (7) pipes up "NOTHING is more important than money!"
We put all of our clothes in a big laudry pile and once a week go though
them. Really, only the kids know who's is who's....and they give away
clothes every week (here Anna, this is too small for me). Sometimes Molly
will get up at 5:30 and sort all the clothes and carry the piles to
everyone's room....for about $.50...of course, someone's stuff might end
up in her pile!
All the kids have to lay out their clothes for the next day before they go
to bed...before story, right along with teeth, etc. Then they just put
them on in the morning..no struggles. At night they seem much more able
to quicly pick something out than the next morning.
|
490.57 | "I whaaaaaaaaant to wear my jeans!" | HELIX::ROCHE | | Wed Jun 14 1995 08:36 | 19 |
|
I'm looking for some advice. The situation is this...Mark, who is a
little over 3 years old has become very and I mean very attached to
one particular pair of jeans. He wants to wear them every day, winter,
spring and summer alike. So much so that if you even suggest that he
wear a different pair of equally nice (at least to me) jeans, he
becomes completely distraught. Needless to say, there are distraught
sessions on a regular basis since the favorite pair do need to get
washed!
On the one hand, it seems the right thing to do to stand firm and
let him scream and get over it eventually. It's of course tempting
just to let him wear them every day and wash them when he's sleeping.
I'm concerned that there is a bigger issue here - some insecurity that
maybe I should be doing something about in some other way.
Thoughts?
-mary
|
490.58 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Revive us, Oh Lord | Wed Jun 14 1995 09:30 | 14 |
|
I haven't been through this (yet), but I'd say if it
doesn't matter if he wears jeans (ie, isn't going somewhere
you'd rather he dress up for, or won't be too hot in his jeans),
then I'd let him wear them and wash them at night, like you
said.
On days that you need him to wear something different, I'd
stand firm.
My nephew went through a similar phase with a particular flannel
shirt at about age 3.5 .
Karen
|
490.59 | been there..... | MAIL2::CUFF | | Wed Jun 14 1995 09:30 | 20 |
| I went through that with my oldest daughter around the same age,
basically my husband and I decided to "pick our arguments", meaning
it just wasn't worth the aggrevation in the morning with 2 working
parents, trying to get out on time, etc. So we went with the flow,
washed the favorite outfit if it was really dirty, sometimes frankly
I got real sick of that routine and just let her wear it dirty, hoping
she would change her mind. This went on for SIX MONTHS!!!!!! :)
Eventually she changed. At age 18 mos she absolutely refused to wear
certain things, now at 4 1/2 she is quite particular about what she
wears each day, I purchase 3 times as many clothes as she'll need for
a new season, hang them around the room and let her pick what is kept,
and return the rest. I won't let her shop with me as her choices are
quite different than anything I would ever pick or let her wear, this
way at least I can control what comes into the house. She likes the
ability to choose, perhaps control, I figure it isn't life-threatening,
so we let her do it.
Good luck, that 6 months with the same outfit (dress) was very long
and drove me crazy.
|
490.60 | | USCTR1::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Wed Jun 14 1995 09:53 | 9 |
| HA! My almost 7 yr. old is still like this, very particular in which
clothese he likes, feels comfortable in, and will wear. So, I just buy
3 of that item and that way if he wants to wear the same thing every
day he can.
I agree that it's "pick your argument" time. I also try to remind
myself that my clothing likes are not necessarily the same as someone
else, especially my sons!
|