T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
754.1 | My folks ignored tantrums | WORDY::STEINHART | Pixillated | Thu Mar 07 1991 10:02 | 7 |
| When I was a kid and had tantrums I'd lay down on the kitchen floor.
My folks just used to carry on as usual, stepping over me as I lay
there screaming. They say it worked for them. . .
And now I'm a MONSTER!!! (Just kidding.)
Laura
|
754.2 | | FDCV06::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Thu Mar 07 1991 10:18 | 11 |
| Your efforts have nothing to do with whether or how many tantrums she
has. It is really just another developmental phase that you and she are
going to live through whatever way you know how.
Removing her from the situation - diversion - is probably the best bet
for now. Reasoning is useless.
We found that the terrible two's really happened for Ryan at 18 months,
for a while, again at 21 months for a bit, and later at 27 months for
a bit. The actual time around turning 2 was a delight :-)
|
754.3 | Ah yes, tantrums at 18mo!! | ROSMRY::MATTIA | | Thu Mar 07 1991 10:35 | 24 |
| Dottie,
Glad you entered this note, I almost entered one like it last month.
My Michael turned 18mo on Feb 23rd and has been having fits since the
last week of January. He even had such a temper tantrum that carried
on for 30+ minutes at the pedi's office. It was awful, the nurse came
out and announced that they were brining us in because he was "scaring
the other children".
I remember my older son doing this, but not to the same extreme and it
was over in 2 WEEKS! We now (sitter included) remove him from the
area. I bring him into his room and sit him on the floor. I DO NOT
close the door. Once he's put there he screams even louder, but I
begin going back in and ask him if he's all done starting at 1/2
minute. Sometime he takes my hand and comes out the first time, other
times (like yesterday) he carries on for 1/2 hr. I really wish my son
would let me console him when he gets like this, as that is what I
would prefer to do. Everytime he has a fit I try to cuddle him but he
pushes me away and throws himself on the floor.
Oh well!! I can sympathize with you. The temper tantrums never
completely go away, the frequency becomes less though.
Donna
|
754.4 | Try not to get angry - it really helps | VISUAL::ROSENBLUH | | Thu Mar 07 1991 11:08 | 27 |
|
Must be something in the air... my 21 month-old son has started doing this
a couple of times a week. (I can't imagine going through 2 a day. Sorry
for you.) Anyway, it infuriated me at first, and I got angry and yelled
back at him to stop screaming, etc. Now I don't get angry, which seems to
work a lot better for me. Basically, he has a tantrum when I come to pick him
up from the sitter's. I carry him outside (restraining his arms so he can't
hit me), put him in the car seat, and sit in the front seat of the car, with the
engine turned off, and wait for him to stop screaming. Last night it took
25 minutes, but I think it's going to get alot better real
soon now. When he stopped, it was as if he had suddenly changed into a
totally different person. I think it really helps to not get angry or
react to the tantrum - have the attitude that you're sorry they're feeling
so out-of-control and you'll wait for them to get it together, and wouldn't
it be nice if he could stop screaming so that you could start the car, drive
home and make dinner together (amounts to a bribe, since this is a favorite
activity for him).
This only works if you have the time to sit in the car and wait it out
(you also have to toughen yourself a bit about what the neighbors or passersby
might say). At home, you can put a screaming baby in the crib (mine doesn't
climb out) or in his room. It's hard to deal with when you're out in public
and there is no safe, boring place you can put him. With my child, holding
him in my arms is not so good because then the tantrum becomes an expression
of his anger at me, instead of upset and frustration with a situation he can't
control. Also, I don't want him to be able to try to hit me when he's in
that state.
|
754.5 | well put, .4 | JAWS::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Thu Mar 07 1991 12:48 | 18 |
| >> put him in the car seat, and sit in the front seat of the car, with the
>> engine turned off, and wait for him to stop screaming....
>> When he stopped, it was as if he had suddenly changed into a
>> totally different person. I think it really helps to not get angry or
>> react to the tantrum - have the attitude that you're sorry they're
>> feeling so out-of-control and you'll wait for them to get it together
Absolutely! It amazed me when Alex and I were sitting in the car,
exact same scenario, and I would ask her every 3 minutes or so if she
was finished yet. She'd stop in mid-scream, her breath still hitching,
and say in a very polite and slightly apologetic voice, "Not yet," then
resume shrieking! I did feel pretty absurd sitting there (in a
department store parking lot) staring out my window acting nonchalant.
But it *worked* and in hindsight this doing-time-out-*with*-Alex was a
kindness to both of us. We just had to ride it out.
Leslie
|
754.6 | I feel it coming on... | ULTRA::DONAHUE | | Thu Mar 07 1991 12:51 | 17 |
| I have a funny feeling that my 4 1/2 month old son is going to have his
dad's temper. I see it from time to time already. Basically, Daniel has
been developing a humorous personality, which my husband and I enjoy
very much as we both have a keen sense of humor.
There are times though, that my husband can "fly off the handle" and
explode for no apparent reason. Unfortunately, I have seen this with
Daniel, too.
If I notice that Daniel is getting frustrated, I usually start playing
with him and he forgets that he was frustrated. Soon he is giggling and
playing with me like nothing happened.
I'm hoping that I can continue to distract him, but there will come a
day.... I can just feel it coming on.....
Norma
|
754.7 | But I *like* the milk on the rug | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Thu Mar 07 1991 14:24 | 17 |
| It's just amazing that you don't realize how early children (babies)
develop so many facets of their personality. At least the two of us
are amazed.
My daugther got very mad at me last night. She was holding her bottle
and shaking it so the formula would spurt out. I told her to stop it
and when she didn't I took the bottle away from her.
Did she ever get *pi**ed*! She screamed and her body went totally erect.
I didn't know 9 month old kids did these kinds of things.
I wanted an independent child. The old adage applies: Be careful what
you wish for.
I'm sure I'll be visiting this note again...
judy
|
754.8 | cold shower | ATLEAD::PSS_MGR | Does Fred Flintstone do his own stunts? | Fri Mar 08 1991 09:10 | 17 |
|
A friend of mine had a remedy for tantrums. Her mother used
it on her and her brothers and sisters....
Take the child, clothes and all, and put them in a COLD shower
until they stop.
She said her son had 1 more tantrum after that and never again.
Now when he gets 'mad' at her she can talk him through it and he will
listen realizing that a tantrum will get him nothing but wet.
She has recommended this method to other moms and they also found
it to be a quick and easy solution.
|
754.9 | holy! | SQM::EZ2USE::BABINEAU | VAXstation intensive care lotion | Fri Mar 08 1991 12:47 | 6 |
| Im sorry but to me a cold shower for a small child's tantrum is just about
as indecent as washing a kids mouth out with soap for saying bad words.
the punishment does not fit the "crime".
-N
|
754.10 | For the CRONIC tantrum child ... | SITBUL::FYFE | | Fri Mar 08 1991 13:36 | 14 |
|
RE: .-9
The child is not being 'punished'. His behavior is being modified.
A cold shower will quickly bring them back to reality and make them
think about their current behavior. At this stage the parent can
intervene and support proper behavior - but first the tantrum
must stop.
I prefer a small cold glass of water to a cold shower myself. Once is
all it takes most of the time.
Doug.
|
754.11 | To each his own, I guess | AIMHI::MAZIALNIK | | Fri Mar 08 1991 14:32 | 9 |
| Even a glass of cold water (in the face? over the head?) seems
too harsh to me. If I was having a temper tantrum (adults have
them, too) and my husband or anyone dared do that to me, I'd be
extraordinarily p*ssed and very unforgiving. I could never throw
my child in the shower like that or even dump a glass of water
over his head.
Donna
|
754.12 | Two tactics | ODIXIE::LAMBKE | Opera is NOT my hobby | Fri Mar 08 1991 15:05 | 8 |
| TEMPER: We always ask my son to put down whatever is making him
frustrated and come back to it later.
TANTRUM: "It's OK to cry, but it hurts my ears. So please go to your
room until you are done. When you are finished crying, come back out
and I'll play with you."
|
754.13 | Not my definition of TANTRUM | SITBUL::FYFE | | Fri Mar 08 1991 15:32 | 6 |
| >TANTRUM: "It's OK to cry, but it hurts my ears. So please go to your
>room until you are done. When you are finished crying, come back out
>and I'll play with you."
If you can talk to the child and he/she responds then it is not a
tantrum they're having.
|
754.14 | Calm Response Is Critical | CECV01::POND | | Mon Mar 11 1991 12:06 | 16 |
| I've found that a good response to a temper tantrum (whatever the
cause) is a time out. Previous responses have indicated similarly.
Whether you choose to use "time-out" in a car, a room, or a quiet place is
really up to you; the idea is to provide a stop in activity and give
the child an opportunity to regain control of him/herself.
Just as an aside...if anyone threw a glass of water at me when I was
angry, they'd be dead meat. Violent force only begets violent force.
Of course, that doesn't mean I find it easy to take my screaming
daughter and place her in a "time-out" spot, but I suppose serenity is
something I may learn...eventually...maybe...
Good luck,
Lois
|
754.15 | Anyone care to provide one? | SITBUL::FYFE | | Mon Mar 11 1991 12:22 | 3 |
|
I think this note would benifit from a clear definition of tantrum.
|
754.16 | not just "snit fit" | CSSE32::RANDALL | waiting for spring | Mon Mar 11 1991 14:53 | 5 |
| Yes, I thought we were initially talking about the child who
becomes hysterical and out of control -- even physically removing
such a child to a quiet place doesn't always work.
--bonnie
|
754.17 | Ignore | CSC32::DUBOIS | The early bird gets worms | Mon Mar 11 1991 15:55 | 6 |
| When Evan is acting along these lines we ignore him. If he hits one of us
then he goes into timeout. Then we ignore him again until timeout is over.
Carol
(FYI, Evan is 3 years old - today)
|
754.18 | no, that makes him frantic | CSSE32::RANDALL | waiting for spring | Tue Mar 12 1991 10:54 | 9 |
| Ignoring Steven seems to make him even more upset.
I never thought of the cold water. I wonder if it would have
helped.
He does seem to be outgrowing it, along with most of his
irrational fears. He's almost 7 now.
--bonnie
|
754.19 | Cold shower--NO WAY! | SENIOR::BROPHY | New Products | Tue Mar 12 1991 12:58 | 7 |
| Personally, I think the cold shower is terrible! I would never
even consider using this tactic. As adults, we're suppose to
"try" and handle these situations rationally. I'm not passing
judgement, as I haven't really experienced what I'd call a real
tantrum yet, but certainly would try all other alternatives.
Linda
|
754.20 | Don't listen to Dr. Spock ... | SITBUL::FYFE | | Tue Mar 12 1991 14:05 | 29 |
|
Having some insight into the education of special needs and physically
challenged children I might have a very different idea of what a tantrum
is. A fit every now or then is not cause for any special attention.
Chronic fits and tantrums are.
I have seen children whos' fits increase in intensity and ferocity
to the point that they become unmanageable and down right dangerous
to their own physical well being. There come a point where a
fit becomes a tantrum. If a child reaches a pattern of chronic
(especially spontaneous) tantrums then it is time to intervene
and modify the behavior.
Water, used as a tool, is harmless. It is used to move their attention
from whatever is making them frantic to focusing on you, the adult. It
*shocks* them! Now the adult is in a position to deal with the episode.
It also gives the child something to think about the next time he
starts getting worked up.
The good news is that you only need to do this once to stop the
behavior in its tracks.
I don't advocate the use of water/showers as a standard disciplinary
tool But there are times when its uses are justified.
Doug.
|
754.21 | My $.02 | ICS::NELSONK | | Tue Mar 12 1991 15:09 | 27 |
| Our pedi said that the easiest remedy for tantrums is what she
called "isolation." In other words, put the child somewhere safe
(in our case, it was James' crib) and shut the door and IGNORE
them till they calm down. I agree with Bonnie, we've had several
instances where James kept going for 30-40 minutes. He'd pause
for a few minutes, then start screaming again. But eventually
(and it seems like forever) he stops.
I don't like the idea of using cold water. On the other hand,
a semi-deliberate tantrum in a 3.5 or 4 year old might warrant it.
This is one case where your mileage will DEFINITELY vary. I wold
say to .0, try a technique, like putting the child in her crib, for
three weeks or so and see how it works. Frankly, once James turned
18 months or so, I didn't have any luck at all with distraction
techniques and thus we went to putting him in his crib till he
calmed down.
How you act AFTER the tantrum is over is also important. I try
to cuddle James and explain that that's not the way we deal with
frustration/anger/etc. Of course, if he's overtired, the only
solution is a nap.
Good luck...I try to take comfort from the fact that the tantrums
mean he's trying to develop his own identity and his own personality.
AFter all, if he could be led around by the nose he would just have
a hard time in later life.
|
754.22 | kids vary so much . . . | CSSE32::RANDALL | waiting for spring | Tue Mar 12 1991 15:19 | 30 |
| Your child's personality has a lot to do with it, too.
The worst thing about leaving Steven to scream it out, besides
listening to him grow so hysterical he eventually collapsed from
exhaustion, was the crushed frightened way he'd behave after he
woke up. It was like, "I was counting on you to help me get
myself back under control, and you abandoned me too, and I'm so
scared of everything and what am I going to do?" And then the
least little thing would set him off again.
We found that trying to maintain contact somehow -- and Neil was a
lot better at this than I was -- until he could calm down was
better in the long run. Holding both his hands in front of his
face seemed to help, too. And I confess that a time or two I lost
my cool, too, and slapped him; surprisingly, that seemed to snap
him back to reality much better than isolation.
I always felt like leaving him to cry it out a few more times
would have worked, all right -- it would have made him so afraid
of his emotions that he'd try to hold it all in and act it out in
other ways. This way has been slow but it seems that he's finally
learning how to keep himself under control, how to express
himself, how to find other ways to deal with the frustration or
panic.
I should add that the isolation and distraction techniques worked
exactly as advertised for Kat, so I don't think this is just
wimpiness on my part.
--bonnie
|
754.23 | | ATLEAD::PSS_MGR | Does Fred Flintstone do his own stunts? | Tue Mar 12 1991 15:46 | 30 |
|
Don't mean to rathole hear but I had a question...
How can a tantrum be *helping* the child develop? (other than
maybe exercise his/her lungs a bit..)Collapsing from exhaustion
cannot be healthy for a child...
As an adult, have you ever seen another adult *have a tantrum*?
(don't mean to be mellowdramatic but aren't crimes committed
because people claim they were *out of control*? and couldn't
help themselves?..just a thought)
Isn't a tantrum also similar to an out of control situation? The
child does not know why or what he may be screaming at but it
must be ok...mom & dad are letting me do it...
What do you all think about this? Obviously, if a child has
a tantrum regularly, ignoring the child or isolation must not be
working...he/she is still doing it...
I wrote the note about my friend who uses a cold shower, I think
a glass of water would work just as well...GET THEIR ATTENTION!
One thing I have to say, if you only need to do it once and it
works, you can spend your time more productively teaching the
child better development techniques instead of dealing with
tantrums all the time...
|
754.24 | is this any clearer? | CSSE32::RANDALL | waiting for spring | Tue Mar 12 1991 16:20 | 21 |
| re: .23
Part of the point is to teach the child how to handle his or her
emotions so s/he doesn't get out of control. Yes, I have seen
adults have tantrums, and not necessarily ones that lead to
murders, either. Some adults are surprisingly childish. I don't
want my kids to be among them. I want them to recognize their
emotions and know appropriate ways of dealing with those
emotions -- how to cry if that's what's needed, how to express
their anger safely without violence, how to show love, how to deal
with frustration.
It's a long slow learning process, and just when you think you've
got it all under control, the child reaches a new stage and new
emotions that you haven't seen before.
So the tantrum itself doesn't help the child develop, but learning
to cope with the situation that triggered it and the emotions that
cause it and that follow it do help the development.
--bonnie
|
754.25 | NOW I know what a tantrum is!! | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Mar 12 1991 20:50 | 55 |
| Quite a few replies back, someone asked for a definition of 'tantrum'.
Mine is based solely on the horrifying behavior of my son, Jason. What
began as a simple (normal) timeout by his father, turned into a battle
of wills (sit on the couch - No! - SIT ON THE COUCH! *NO!*), and ended
with Jason crying/screaming/kicking himself to the point of my husband
could do NOTHING for him, all he wanted was me, and eventually hubby
called me at work, and I had to leave to get the kid to stop. He was
COMPLETELY inconsolable, time alone, time cuddling, or a spanking
mattered not at ALL. I'd be quite sure that a glass of water would've
only intensified his anger. BUT it might have snapped him out of it.
After about 50 minutes of crying "I want Mommy" and not even being
coherent enough to understand I was THERE, he exhausted himself.
THAT's what I call a tantrum.
Jason had 3 of them, and if they EVER return, it'll be TOO SOON!! The
first time, I assumed that more must have happened then my husband let
on, and I thought it was partly because Jason was in a very "I want my
mommy" stage. The second time it happened, I was home, and it started
all the same, and it ended that all he wanted was his Great-Grandma
(who lives halfway across the country!). We had talked the a little
the day after his first tantrum, but not a lot. After the second one,
we had a LONG (but 'simple') talk with Jason, and explained that he
couldn't get that mad, and I couldn't come home from work just because
he was crying, and that it was okay to be MAD. The third and last time
it happened, we realized that WE had some control triggering it (more
later), and again, we had a talk afterwards, during which I explained
that it was okay to be BAD sometimes, and that EVERYBODY does naughty
things sometimes, and that everyone has to DO THINGS they don't WANT to
do (I don't want to work, Daddy doesn't want to mow the grass, Jason
doesn't want to pick up his toys - but we still have to do it). *THIS*
really seemed to hit home with what was going on for him. Apparantly
he felt unfairly persecuted. Once he realized that he wasn't the ONLY
one being 'picked on' (as he saw it), he was able to accept our
expectations of him, and deal with timeouts much easier.
AND, as I said, WE were triggering some of it. He's a *VERY* sensitive
child, and somewhere along the line he learned to understand MUCH
better than we were giving him credit for, so we tended not to explain
as much as he probably needed explained, therefore I'm sure he thought
we were just being 'mean'. And, his stage of punishment would be
something to the effect of (getting progressively harsher) a)sit on the
couch (screaming starts), b) shut off the tv c)go upstairs to your
room. Since he never understood really why he was on the couch in the
first place, the screaming never ceased, and by the time it was time to
go to his room, he was completely hysterical, and sending him to his
room only worsened the tantrum. We found that if we sat him on the
couch and sat WITH him and made SURE he understood what was going on,
he calmed right down. Phew.!!
I hope this can help one person get out of even one tantrum - I know
what a horrible feeling that is watching your child and not being able
to do anything to help them gain control.
GOOD LUCK!!
Patty
|
754.26 | not temper, but not nice behaviour! | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Wed Mar 13 1991 08:07 | 26 |
|
I hope this is in keeping with the basenote enough...it doesn't
seem worthy of it's own topic.
My son, Jason, just turned 18 months. I believe that whoever
coined the phrase "Terrible Twos" was off by about 6 months!
Anyways, we have yet to experience an all out fit as described
here (something to look forward to...). However, he has been
doing a couple of things lately that really get on my nerves:
throwing things and pushing/hitting me. He will be playing
nicely with a toy and then all of a sudden smash it to the
ground then look up at me with an innocent face and ask for
the toy...this happens at the dinner table with spoons, forks,
food, and cups, too. What is the "proper" response to this
behaviour? The pushing/hitting just started 2 days ago...I'm
uncomfortable with pushing/hitting back and have tried "crying"
but he doesn't seem to care. Again, how would you handle this
behaviour? I live in fear that I'm raising a monster!
He also has the mini-fits when he can't have something he wants
("knife, cut, plllleeaaazzze", he says, as if the please guarantees
he'll get it!) but so far, if I just ignore him, he'll stop within
5 minutes.
Thanks,
Carol
|
754.27 | TWO QUESTIONS, PLEASE | DONVAN::MUISE | | Wed Mar 13 1991 11:16 | 14 |
| Two questions:
Bonnie (Randall), don't you have another son who would be about
18 months now? How do you handle his tantrums? Does he behave
the way Steven did (does?) ?
And Re: .20:
What do you mean, "Don't listen to Spock"? Does he talk
about cold showers for tantrums? I still find Spock quite
soothing and effective.
jacki
|
754.28 | Don't ignore them ... | SITBUL::FYFE | | Wed Mar 13 1991 11:35 | 44 |
|
RE: .26
He is testing you, your responses, his limits, and part of it may
even be a game to him. Being a child there is much he does not
understand and needs a guiding hand.
Don't ignore him. If he throws and item down once, return it to him.
Twice, pick up the item, explain the bad behavior to him, and return
it. Three time, pick up the item and put it away.
As parents we are responsible for defining the acceptable behavior of
our children and must communicate this to them. Ignoring them does not
send the right message. (I shudder when I think of putting a child in
isolation during a tantrum). Be consistent.
If he asks for something he can't or shouldn't have - say no. If he
persists, continue to say no.
Each child is different but I would like to share with you what works
very well with my daughter Colleen. The further her actions are
from proper behavior, the firmer my response is (measured response?).
There are times when Colleen gets upset/offended after being disciplined
and begins to cry. If she cries I'll pick her up and require her to
put her head down on my shoulder until the crying stops. This action
enforces the discipline while letting her know that daddy is still there
to take care and console her and still loves her even when she
misbehaves. So far so good. She's the perfect little child :-) (no
bias here eh!)
Also be aware that some behavior is just a phase, like hitting. My
rule of thumb is that if a new behavior appears, don't give it any
undue attention and wait a few days before addressing it with discipline.
Quite frequently these behaviors disappear by themselves.
Good luck,
Doug.
|
754.29 | Beam me up Scotty :-) | SITBUL::FYFE | | Wed Mar 13 1991 11:38 | 12 |
|
>And Re: .20:
> What do you mean, "Don't listen to Spock"? Does he talk
> about cold showers for tantrums? I still find Spock quite
> soothing and effective.
If you've read his work you would know that he does not advocate
cold showers. But his solutions don't fit the real world and I find
him to be quite lame.
No offense intended,
Doug
|
754.30 | normal stuff for that age | CSSE32::RANDALL | waiting for spring | Wed Mar 13 1991 14:13 | 29 |
| re: .27
Yes, my other son is 17 months now, and he's showing some of the
same behavior. The hitting is a bit of a problem, but we find
that just putting him down when he gets too rough and telling him,
"No, you can't be up if you hit people" generally makes him stop,
and he's doing a lot less of it.
The thing he throws most is his food as soon as he's done. That's
led to some royal messes . . . he just wants to emphatically let
us know "no more food." Again, we've found that explaining that he
doesn't need to throw the food, he should just push it aside when
he's done, has gradually soaked through. I think one of the
problems was that we were inadvertently ignoring his signals that
he'd had enough.
He'll stamp his feet and scream when we tell him he can't have
something, or stop him from playing with the computer, or remove
him from close association with plug-ins, but it only lasts a
minute or so, and the time is gradually getting shorter.
But even his worst tantrums are nothing like Steven's. He never
seems to get out of control even when he's very very angry. Kat
never did, either. It seems to be something in Steven's emotional
makeup that makes him more vulnerable to that kind of situation.
--bonnie
|
754.31 | Fussy fives! | KERNEL::CLATWORTHY | | Fri Mar 15 1991 06:59 | 15 |
|
My 5 1/2 year old daughter, Jade, still has tantrums unfotunately!
While they're not as obvious as the ones she had as a toddler, they
can be just as frustrating.
The stamping/shouting behaviour appears to have been replaced with
stroppy/mean comments & wow! those evil stares!!
The good news is, it's a lot easier these days to talk & reason with
her & explain why her behaviour is unreasonable.
We're getting there!!
Liz
|
754.32 | It's all in the name | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Fri Mar 15 1991 08:36 | 25 |
| re .26
Must be something in the name .... (-:
I think that Jason is testing you - thus the "Okay, now I did something
wrong, let's LOOK at Mom and see how she's reacting!"-look that you're
getting from him.
I would try to make it clear that the behavior is unacceptable. We
tried to ignore it and hope it would pass (which worked fine with
Christopher), but with Jason has only led to more problems - now he
slugs the cat and gives us the same look. If I cry, he laughs, if I
say he made the kitty said, he could care less (Me no LIKE Kitty!). If
we time-out, he could care less (Okay, I'll go sit on the couch - it
was worth it to get to hit the cat!). The child is missing any type of
basic remorse, and I have a feeling we had something to do with it -
though I can't figure out WHAT. Especially since we glance sideways at
his brother, and he feels guilty for hours.
If you believe that people's behavior has anything to do with their
names (and I believe it a *LOT*), then I'd suggest you don't let him
get away with anything .... it's only going to get worse!!
Anyone else with any Jason's care to comment??
Patty
|
754.33 | jason = monster? | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Fri Mar 15 1991 08:40 | 8 |
|
Patty,
This Jason was colicky, too. Didn't you write somewhere in here
that yours was as well?? Anyways, he is a devil on one hand...but
can be the most loveable, hugging, kissing little boy on the other.
carol
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754.34 | JASON=FEARLESS MONSTER! | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Fri Mar 15 1991 08:50 | 12 |
| Carol,
To digress from the topic for a quick reply .....
Yes, Jason was colicky as well. He is the devil, and I've always said
if he wasn't so cute we'd have killed him (NOT REALLY!) long ago!!
That killer smile and the big hug gets him out of trouble sometimes.
Maybe we should start a note on Names and common behavior?! I know I'd
never name a kid Jason again! (-: And that's also based on OTHER
Jasons I know too. No fear in this one!
Patty
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754.35 | find something he does mind | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Fri Mar 15 1991 14:22 | 24 |
| Patty,
Look for something he DOES mind giving up. TV, for instance, or
video games, or his allowance, or playing with friends. Or
require him to do some manual labor, like sweeping the kitchen or
whatever chores you have that are within his range (I forget how
old Jason is).
I found that time out generally works best to give the child time
to get himself back under control and to think about what he did
wrong. For "this behavior isn't acceptable and if you engage in
it you'll be punished," something else is necessary. I remember
reading that the characteristics of such punishment have to be
that it's immediate, that it's consistently administered (don't
punish him only every third time he hits the cat), that it be
reasonably connected to the offense, and that it not go on so long
that the child perceives it as unfair (and so the child can start
implementing the new, improved behavior right away).
A good swift flat of the hand to the seat of the pants might not
be an unreasonable tactic, depending on your feelings about
corporal punishment.
--bonnie
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754.36 | Any other ideas? | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Fri Mar 15 1991 17:01 | 26 |
| Bonnie,
I like all your ideas .... and unfortunately have tried them all!!
There is nothing that he likes so much that he wouldn't mind giving it
up. Manual labor doesn't bother him. Where we struggle most is that
it doesn't seem to matter WHAT type of 'punishment' is administered -
it doesn't deter the behavior. He is quite aware that he will be
punished - it's just that it seems like he thinks it's worth it.
For instance, he'll slug the cat - or his brother - and turn around and
say "Are you going to spank me now?" or "Should I go sit on the couch
now?". It just doesn't BOTHER him!! About the ONLY thing that he's
really attached to is his blanket, and I don't have the heart to take
that from him - it'd be easier to remove a limb!
Any other ideas?! He's 3. He could care less about T.V., has no
allowance, only really plays with his brother or the kids at daycare
while at daycare, doesn't like video games, and as I said, manual labor
doesn't bother him (actually, he's thrilled to be able to work like the
'big people'!)
The only other thing that I can think of that he really enjoys is
cuddling with mom or dad, but I'd be afraid of sending a wrong message
(I don't like you anymore) if we were to take that away.
Me
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754.37 | more positive feedback? | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Fri Mar 15 1991 17:20 | 10 |
| Hm. Is hitting the only thing he does this with? I'm beginning to
suspect he's jealous of the baby and the cat. (David is certainly
jealous of our cat!)
Maybe the answer is less punishment and more cuddles. I don't
mean ignore the hitting, but to dish out lots of cuddles and
praise when he's doing things right, or when he interacts
positively with his brother?
--bonnie
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754.38 | Nothing affects him .... | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Sat Mar 16 1991 17:25 | 27 |
| I'd be surprised if he's jealous of the cat because we don't like the
cat (much) - him and his brother do. BTW - his brother is 5 1/2. It's
not just hitting - it's anything that he does 'wrong' - we haven't
found a way to make an impact on him. He's a pretty easy-going happy
kid - but, like all kids, he misbehaves. UNLIKE most kids, the
'punishment' is part of the misbehaving, he takes it, gets up and goes
along his merry way without the slightest trace of remorse. For
example - he'll take a cup of whatever, tip it upside down, get up get
a towel, clean it up and plop himself in the chair. Kind of like his
brain is saying "Well, if I spill this milk, I'll have to clean it up
and go sit in the chair for a while, maybe get a spanking - that's worth
it - SPLASH!"
We'd be hard pressed to cuddle him more - and he probably wouldn't stand for
it. Christopher was never a cuddly kid, so we take our cuddles out on
Jason (-:
I guess we're struggling with 'how to make him feel bad'.... I don't
mean to imply that he's terribly out of control or incredibly
misbehaved (because he's not), it's just that during those times when
we *MUST* make a **MAJOR** impact on him (like if he runs in street),
there doesn't seem to be a way.... so far anyhow!
... I'm amazed at how different 2 kids from the same parents can be!
patty
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754.39 | | POWDML::SATOW | | Mon Mar 18 1991 13:00 | 25 |
| re: .36, .38
Yes, it is terribly frustrating. There's one thing that I'd
caution, and that's to resist the temptation to escalate until he
DOES feel "punished". Doing that is usually a sign that it's
become a power struggle, in which case it means that you've already
lost.
To some extent you've already accomplished something desirable --
he understands that certain acts have consequences. Now that's ok
for the spilling water on the floor, but not for hitting his
brother or the cat. In those cases, perhaps ignoring the behavior
is preferable; it may be that the behavior is designed, consciously
or unconsciously, to get attention. For example if he hits the
cat, tell him matter-of-factly to go to his room, then immediately
turn your attention to comforting the cat. One thing I've read
about discipline in cases like that, is that we too often focus on
the misbehaver rather than the victim. The victim is left to
suffer, and the misbehaver gets what he wants -- attention.
I absolutely agree with you, don't resort to taking away the
blanket or withholding affection. Neither has anything to do with
the misbehavior.
Clay
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754.40 | Oh yes, we've definitely lost the power! | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Mon Mar 18 1991 21:55 | 23 |
| Clay,
Now that you mention it ..... that's exactly what happens!! i've
been trying to UNDERSTAND what is causing this child to act this way,
so rather than 'comfort the victim', we try to talk (or sometimes just
yell) at Jason. And you're right, his brother will be sitting there
whining that he got hurt - which isn't usually true, so usually gets
brushed aside. We've also sat down and talked with them, and decided
upon fair punishments for their common crimes - for the most part this
has worked out MUCH better.
Thanks for your note - I shall try re-directing my attentions, and
hopefully he'll see that he's going to have to be nicer to get what
he's really after.
Part of me can't help wondering one other thing though ... when he
was much younger, the 'bigger' kids (his brother and an older kid at
the babysitter) used to sort of pick on Jason because he couldn't
really fight back. Well, now he can, so how much of this is just
revenge, and how much is TOO much? Anyone else out there experience
this?
Thanks for all the help - maybe it's not too late, huh?!
Patty
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754.41 | Just my thoughts! | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Fri Mar 22 1991 12:43 | 31 |
| I'd like to throw a couple things out, just for fun and opinions...
As I grew up my mother related a story of my sisters first and last
temper tantrum. She laid down on the kitchen floor and started kicking
and screaming, my mother without saying a word, just went and got a
glass of cold water and threw it on her, she stopped and never had
another. You could always tell as she told this story she considered
it one of her parenting triumphs!
I've done some reading on temper tantrums and have heard a couple ways
of dealing with them, and with these I tend to agree.
First, ignore it if at all possible. It enforces the theory that if
you ignore it, it will go away. By paying attention to the TT, you're
reenforcing negative behaviour. This could include shutting the door
to the room, if possible or simple walking away from the situation and
letting it defuse itself.
I've read that you should take the child and give him/her a big
bear-hug, and tell the child (whether or not s/he hears you) that your
going to give him a big hug and hold him real tight until they calm
down. (and don't forget to include some kisses too)
With AJ we have a saying, which runs from Temper Tantrums to just being
whiney, he repeats the rule and knows what it means...."AJ what do you
get when you whine?" He says "nothing!" and he know that means he get
NO reward for being whiney or just plain bratty. Although I'll admit
there have been times when I've been tempted to haul off and belt the
kid, but we all know that's a NO NO big time!
Lyn
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754.42 | | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Fri Mar 22 1991 14:00 | 6 |
| I remember my doctor commenting on tantrums before Ryan started having
them; she remarked that toddlers can easily scare themselves when they
get so out of control, so the hug is really necessary to calm them down
- not to condone the tantrum.
|