S.A. asks from Staten Island, NY on December 27, 2008
Advice Needed - Brooklyn,NY
My in laws spend a great deal of time with my daughter (14 months). They have gotten into the habit of letting her sit on their kitchen table and drop EVERYTHING on it off it to the floor. Now she wants to do this on our table. When I refuse she has started to throw a tantrum (floppin backwards and screaming). Should i tell them to stop this because its leading to bad behavior, or leave this as something she can do with her grandparents only thus enduring the need to repeatedly discipline her at our own table?
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E.R. answers from New York on December 28, 2008
I think it's important children have consistency (as much as possible). It may confuse her to have one set of rules with them and another with you. If you feel, as I do, that sitting on the table is unacceptable you may have to let them know. You may have to ask them to please not let her do this. It's creating bad habits.
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J.E. answers from Rochester on December 28, 2008
Hi S.! Since this is now causing problems at home I would explain it to them and politely ask them to stop allowing it at their house. Better yet, have your husband do the talking. Since it's his family, it shouldn't be your responsibility.
Good luck!
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E.S. answers from New York on December 28, 2008
If I were you I'd have a nice little talk/explanation with the grandparents to please "stop". You are the mother, and the grandparents should respect your very legitimate reasons.
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G.P. answers from Utica on December 27, 2008
You need to tell them you don't allow her to do that at home and you would appreciate if they wouldn't let her do it at theirs since you are the one that it makes it hard for. PLUS it is very confusing for kids to be allowed to do one thing and then be told "no" by someone else. YOU are the parent. They need to be on the same page as you or eventually seh will play them against you and vice versa. Ask them to respect your decisions as the parent.
I understand your plight since my MIL would allow my daughter to do display some pretty bad behavior with no consequesnces and sometimes even get rewards. (crazy, right?) I just had to stand my ground, and it wasn't easy - believe me. SO - good luck!
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A.S. answers from Rochester on December 28, 2008
I had the same thing too - but eventually they'll learn that it's ok to do it at Grandma's house, not ok to do it at home.
I love my parents and my mom-in-law and I don't want to cause any friction/tension - I tell them once in a nice way, I don't like it, don't want to do it, etc. Then if I see the behavior - then I tell her that you can do it at grandma's house, but not here!
Consistency is the key - 14 mos is young, but just be consistent as you can.
I have two girls - 15 mos and 3 1/2 yo and they know...they just do. Pick your battles!! My mom lets the kids watch TV all day, but they can't at my house! My mom-in-law lets them eat butter (but not at my house!). :)
Use your best judgment...
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D.D. answers from New York on December 27, 2008
I'm going to answer from the grandparent point of view. When our grandkids do things like this we think it's cute. The behavior at 14 months old of making something disappear only to have a grown up make it reappear is typical. It's like peek a boo only with items instead of faces.
Before you speak with your inlaws you need to take a big step back a look at the big picture. As yourself the main question: Is this something that will endanger my child? If the answer is no then keep your mouth shut.
My grandchildren are ages 2-6. They do different things at my house than at home. They get to eat lunch on tv trays watching their favorite dvds. They can take out all the toys they want to play with and sprawl them on the floor. They can get an extra cookie or lolly pop. The kids know that it's special at grams and the rules at home are different. Kids are smart and figure it out. I would never think of putting them in the car without a carseat or endangering them in any way but gram's house should be fun.
Pick your fights wisely. The rules at home aren't going to be the same rules at school or the library or the playground.
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H.G. answers from New York on December 27, 2008
I bet they don't realize the difficulty they've created in letting her do this. I'd make a funny comment about how hard it's becoming to deal with her tantrums, especially regarding this particular behavior. Then ask them if they can help you, by also not letting her do it at their house.
(I think the key here is ASKING, if your in-laws are anything like mine!)
She's too young to understand that different places have different rules!
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G.S. answers from New York on December 28, 2008
With a mother-in-law who would allow my girls to do anything at "nanny's house" - children do not understand that one thing flies at one house and not the next. I would just ask them to please try to comply w/the examples you are trying to set at your own home. My MIL would give my children soda which I absolutely did not want them having, overload them on sugar which my youngest still can't have a whole lot of & talk to them in a baby language. You have no idea how good it felt when my oldest was about 4 and told my MIL that they are chicken nuggets not chicky nuggets! Good luck! It's a hard thing to do, but if you don't stop now, imagine what it will be like down the road.
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R.C. answers from New York on December 28, 2008
I'd tend to think you need to tell your in-laws to stop playing this game with her...as it will lead into other things that might turn dangerous.
She's also processing conficking info about what is right and wrong....what she's allowed to do or not to do.
You don't want her learning that it's OK to stand on funiture and to throw what's on top of it off any where.
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