T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1350.1 | SPRING FEVER??? | CSOA1::ZACK | | Tue Apr 07 1992 13:33 | 14 |
| Alicia has also been going through a mouthy stage. It is driving me
crazy. (She turned 4 last month). She has been being a monster for
about three weeks. I really think she is getting cabin fever so
yesterday I took her for a long walk/run and I noticed a big difference
in her attitude. I am hoping this is the problem because I don't know
how much more I can take. I really think I also need to get out. I
have been feeling pretty crabby myself.
Angie
|
1350.2 | Could it be the time change? | ICS::NELSONK | | Tue Apr 07 1992 17:04 | 5 |
| Maybe it's the switch to Daylight Saving Time or something...James
has ample opportunities to play outside; it's just that some days,
no matter WHAT you suggest, he doesn't want to do it.
Driving all of us nuts....
|
1350.3 | | CIVIC::MACFAWN | Training to be tall and blonde | Wed Apr 08 1992 13:41 | 12 |
| Alyssa, who turned 4 in November, will say things like, "Mom, I wasn't
talking to you!" or other little snappy comments. All I say to her
is, "Alyssa, don't be fresh! It's not very nice" And she usually
stops being so snippy.
I wouldn't offer your child anything for not being snippy or fresh.
Bad habit you don't want to get into. Once your child knows what being
fresh is, maybe those times will be far and few between.
And this too shall pass...
|
1350.4 | | DTIF::FRIDAY | CDA: The Holodeck of the future | Wed Apr 08 1992 14:22 | 10 |
| We occasionally have the same problems with our son, Tobias.
The only thing that really works when he's being defiant is
to say that if he continues to be defiant then we'll take away
the toy he's playing with, or take some other action that
he's most likely to find unacceptable.
That is, we define the consequences of his actions and force
him to make a choice.
|
1350.5 | | PHAROS::PATTON | | Wed Apr 08 1992 14:27 | 22 |
| My son Daniel turned four in November. I think he says "NO!" more now
than he ever did at two! It gets very tiresome. A friend of mine says
that two-year-olds get all the press but four-year-olds are really much
tougher -- she may be right.
I bought the book "Your Four-Year-Old" by Ilg and Ames, part of the
series (there's one for each year up to maybe six or so). It really was
helpful. One thing they recommend is to let certain things slide if
they aren't too serious, because otherwise you will get sucked into a
no-win battle. I think they are saying that it isn't always so
important to enforce every limit and boundary.
The two areas where I try to ignore Daniel are in using "bad" words and
in verbal defiance. When he refuses a request, I offer choices, or
ignore him for a while then make my request again. If he refuses to do
something, I let him know he will lose a privilege if he refuses a
third time.
The thing that makes up for all this is his enthusiasm and positive
energy and imagination - what a spirit!
Lucy
|
1350.6 | it's begun already..... | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Wed Apr 08 1992 15:05 | 12 |
| Ryan is 3 yrs. 8 months and has already displayed some of the behaviors
described here. The one that gets me is when he says "you don't make
the rules" - I explain that not only do I make the rules but WHY
they're there (for safety etc.).
Rather than constantly arguing or picking up on the negatives, I really
make an effort to give him attention for the positive behaviors, like
picking up toys without being told, and helping his little brother.
My daycare provider comments that even the nicest kids go through this
phase.....
|
1350.7 | words for the bathroom | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Wed Apr 08 1992 15:07 | 12 |
| P.S.
One additional comment - something I remember reading in an earlier
version of PARENTING. This seems to be the age of fascination with
bathroom words,such as pee and poop. I've simply told Ryan that if he
wants to use those words in a silly manner, he can go stand in the
bathroom by himself. He challenged me the first time I said this,
asking if that means they're bad words. I said no, but that if he
chooses to use them in a silly way he can talk to himself alone, in the
bathroom. Since then, the fun has gone out of it for him and he doesn't
say them as much.
|
1350.8 | 1x vs. 3x | CRONIC::ORTH | | Wed Apr 08 1992 16:04 | 27 |
| One comment on the idea of "ignore the first time, warn the second
time, implement consequences the third time" ....
When you do this, you have taught your child that he can get away with
something 2x with impunity, and needn't worry about anything more than
listening to your threats, as long as he stops by 3. *Is* this really
what you want him to think? If so, then go ahead, if it works for you.
But, be aware that if there should come a time when you *need* him to
do it the first time, or *want* him to stop something right away, he
will feel you are being very unfair if he receives consequences when
he's done something "only once". Remember, you taught him that anything
up to time number 3 was "okay".
Definitely choose your battles. But if it's something you can't live
with (and that will be different in each family), then apply the
consequences after the *first* time, *every* time. As long as a child
has been told before that an action/word/attitude is unaccepatable, he
can be held accountable. Don't believe, "I forgot"....they can remember
the most amazingly, fantasticly detailed events and circumstances from
years past, but will "forget" what you told them 3 hours ago! In our
home, forgetting is not an excuse. It *does* cut down on the
"forgetting"!
Try it ... we find that it cuts down the stress level quite a bit!
--dave--
|
1350.9 | Looking forward to it - yikes | VAXUUM::FONTAINE | | Thu Apr 09 1992 15:25 | 29 |
|
Good Grief! I have a 2 1/2 year old who pulls this very same crap.
What will happen when he turns 4!!!!!!!!!
He'll say things (mostly to my husband and my mother, who, by the way
let him get away with alot more than I do). No, I don't want to,
leave me ALONE! Stop talking to me! Don't tell my dog what to do!
(When we tell dog to go lay down). Fortunately, I can say to him,
the next time you say that, you're going in the chair (naughty chair).
If he does it again, in the chair he goes, and he can't come out/off
until he's apoligized. Or if I ask him to come over here, and he says
he doesn't want to or starts to get silly, I'll say "please come over
here or I'll bring you over here myself". Bang, he listens.
He'll still have his days where he's not inclined to listen to anything
I have to say, but I make it hard for him to "enjoy" that behavior.
I realize that he's 2 1/2 and you've got another year and a half worth of
"kid" on your hands!
What works for me is I'm really firm with him, but that doesn't mean we
don't have fun. If we're playing and we get carried away, I don't
reprimand him if he gets too crazy or crosses the boundaries I just try
to settle our play down a bit. But I will usually let him know when the
line has been crossed and warn him nicely to high-tail it back over to
his side of that line. This way he knows the acceptable from the
unacceptable.
I think "they" need to "know" what the boundaries are. If they don't
then we run the risk of raising wild little buggers.
|
1350.10 | JUST WAIT UNTIL 5!!!! | FENNEL::MATTIA | | Tue Apr 14 1992 12:11 | 1 |
|
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1350.11 | ha ha ha... | PROXY::HOPKINS | All one race - Human | Tue Apr 14 1992 12:51 | 6 |
| RE.>> JUST WAIT UNTIL 5!!!!
HA! Just wait till the teens. You'll wish they were terrible 2/3/4
again.
Marie
|
1350.12 | second that | SMURF::HAECK | Debby Haeck | Tue Apr 14 1992 19:07 | 5 |
| >> HA! Just wait till the teens. You'll wish they were terrible 2/3/4
>> again.
I'll second that, with some authority, since we have a 3, 5 and 17 year
old. At least the 3 & 5 year olds listen once in a while!
|