22 answers

19Mo Old Hitting New Baby!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I have a 19mo old daughter and I just had a new baby on Aug 1st. My husband and I thought we really prepared our 19mo old for her new sisters arrivel. She would always hug my tummy and even give my tummy her sippy cup as if she was feeding the baby in my belly. We named our new little one early just so my 19mo old would get use to hearing the name. We told her she was going to be a big sister time and time again!!!

The 3rd day of her new sisters arrival my 19mo old started hitting her little sister in the head. she has even tried kicking and head butting her. I have tired saying " we don't hit sister we love her and have to be gentle", I have also tired saying that in a strin way. I have also tired putting her in a 1 1/2 min time out, but she really seems to enjoy time out. She gets this look on her face and knows shes being evil. It is like nothing I have ever seen from her before.

We have included her in EVERYTHING and my husband even took a week off just to spend extra time with her - taking her to the park and on lots of walks. My Mom is with me this week and she and I have spent a ton of one on one time with her - making sandwiches, cookies, going outside, etc. I sometimes just pick her up and give her tons of kisses and tell her that I lover her so much.

I am nursing the new little one and that does take some time away from me and her, but my new little one is super easy and doesn't take much time away from anyone person. We also no not want to hit our 19mo old in any fashion to solve this problem.

Has anyone gone throuh this? How long does it last and what can I do so she does not hurt her new sister???

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

I completely agree with Deb K, just poor timing and 19 months is about the time the hitting phase starts.

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Sounds like she is testing her limits. She is at the age when it starts anyway, and add in the baby! Stay firm, put her in time out if she hits the baby. She is probably feeling secure that even with the new baby, you are still her mommy and still enforce the rules (it's not a conscious thing, but kids crave boundaries).
Do as much as you can to prevent it. When my second came, we got my little girl a baby doll that she coul take care of when I had to take care of baby - she even started lifting her shirt to 'feed' her baby :). Keep an eye on her so that you can stop her hitting before she starts and redirect her to a more appropriate behavior (if you stop her before she hits I don't know that she'd need a time out. Kids this age need mostly redirection.) Try to learn her triggers and signs that she may be getting ready to hit, so that you can stop her and redirect her.
It will pass.

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Oh my gosh.......so totally normal! You're doing the right thing, always reminding her to be gentle. Never leave the two alone together. But this little girls world has been turned upsidedown, no matter how well you thought you prepared her, she's not even two yet. She really had no idea what you were preparing her for. Now she has to share you, and at 19 months, that's an impossible concept. It may take a few months for her to settle down. When my daughter was old enough to play, my son started to like her more. He was nearly 3 when she was born and did the same things. The minute I would turn my back he would wack the baby, on the head, on the stomach, sometimes even with toys. Don't be paranoid about it, but don't ever leave them alone together. If you see your older daughter going towards the baby, remind her to used gentle touches, and it's probably better if for the next couple months, you don't let her to close to the baby without you right there. Then do things like count the baby's toes or gently touch her head. See if your older daughter wants to read the baby a book or show her a dolly. Get her actively involved in helping you and make it fun. Don't push her into accepting the baby because she won't right away. It will happen, tho. They will probably be very close as they get older. But right now, don't expect her to be happy about this arrangement at all. The next phase she will most likely go thru is ignoring the baby altogether. Good luck, and don't worry it will get better. :)

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It is a normal age all kids start hitting out of frustation, unfortunately you have a newborn. All I can say is make sure she is not ever in a position to do so. Make sure the baby is in a playpen or safely away from her sister unless you are right there monitoring her. If she does it in front of you be VERY firm with her and tell her that isn't nice and set her far away from all of you. Grab her hand, not hit her hand but grab it and set it by her side and tell her "NO HITTING", or "NOT NICE"...never let her get where she can head butt. Do the exact same punishment every single time, it will take a while but she will catch on. Remove her from the room all together and be firm.
Get her a baby doll of her own so maybe she can start practicig compassion and care with her baby doll when you are taking care of the baby? I agree spanking as discipline for hitting sends mixed messages, it is really time to let your daughter know how to be nice to others. I just really would never give her the opportunity to ever be around the baby without you being right there, you trying to catch her in the act before it happens until she is a lot older. She could seriously hurt the baby otherwise.

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(1)This is normal behavior. (2)Sounds like you are doing all the right things. (3)Keep putting your daughter in time out. It doesn't matter whether she enjoys it or not. What matters is that you are protecting your baby. Use a pack-n-play for time out. Give her one minute w/o toys. Then put toys in the pack-n-play. Let her play in there so your baby can be safe. (4)This phase will pass.

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My oldest was 18mo when my son was born and she had a really hard time. She and I spent all of our time together because I am a SAHM and my husband worked 2 jobs, so he was only around on weekends.

She was fine right up until I walked in the house with the baby. She hit our baby once. I swatted her on the butt (very lightly) and told her in a VERY frim voice that we do not hit the baby...

For several months she would never be in the room with the baby. If I was in the living room feeding him she would be in the dining room playing. She would not be near him. It wasn't until I started letting her hold him that she finally started warming up. I never let her hold him alone and was always within arms reach. But it did help allowing her to have some responsibility.

Thinking back on the situation if I could have done it another way I wouldn't have spanked her...I think it just scared her into not wanting to be near the baby, but it did solve the imediate problem of not hitting the baby and I did feel safer with her not around the baby. But I think she was just looking for a way to be a real part of the baby...not just being told things about the baby.

Good Luck!

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I do infant childcare and one of the little girls that I have in my care is now 18 mos old. She is a little jealous of the time I take holding and caring for the younger ones and she has also went through times of being FAR from gentle with the kids. For instance, yesterday while I was changing a diaper she came up and just started to pinch the baby's arm really hard. Like you I am always telling her to be soft and to not hurt the others. The best thing that I have found that REALLY helps is to encourage the 1 1/2 year old to care for her own baby (dolls). She changes their diapers, gives them bottles, holds them, burps them, etc... She is doing so much better but still occasionally has days like yesterday. Hang in there!

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My daughter was also around 18/19 months when her baby brother came into the picture and after a couple of weeks, she started trying to hit him, kick him, push him off my lap...mostly when he was nursing. We had prepared her the same way you did with yours and we had given her a doll and taught her to "feed baby" and "kiss baby" etc. What I found worked with my daughter is to tell her no, we don't hit baby, be sogt and gentle. And I would take her hand and show her what soft and gentle meant...holding her hand while she stroked her brother's head or arm saying "soft and gentle". NEVER leave them in the room alone together! And it might help to let her "hold" baby (you can be holding her, but give your older daughter the feeling that she's doing it herself) Good luck...it took about 2 weeks before my daughter really responded and stopped trying to get rid of her brother.

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Deb K gave the advice I would give... Something else you could try is while you are nursing, as this can be a hard thing for a young child to understand, try putting together a basket of toys that she can only play with while you are nursing. It kind of makes her feel special and since she won't have the toys all the time, they might keep her interested...

Having babies this close together can be really challenging (my first 2 are 22 mos apart) She is really little and has no idea what it means to hurt her sister. Just be diligent and before you know it they will be best friends! Best of luck!

A.

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