L.H. asks from Lewisville, TX on May 14, 2008
Boys
My grandson is 15mo. old, and is starting to throw temper tantrums when he doesnt get his way. Just wondering how some of you Mother are dealing with this? All the advice I can get would be appreciated.
Thank, L.
2 moms found this helpful
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L.N. answers from Dallas on May 15, 2008
I am a mother of two boys 15 & 10 years old...
Advice I always received on this topic is to ignore them and walk away, once he sees that you are not paying attention to him anymore, he will eventually stop and realize that he is not going to get his way. I hope this helps
L. N
B.M. answers from Dallas on May 15, 2008
I have boys and girls. I have found that the temper tantrums have less to do with gender and more to do with age and tempermant. At this age it has more to do with them not being able to effectively communicate their needs. Add into that that they may not feel like the big people in their lives understand them. My favorite book (and there are MANY) is "The Happiest Toddler on the Block". It has been a lifesaver with my 2-yr-old DD.
K.B. answers from Dallas on May 15, 2008
L.,
I wish there was one pat answer. If you find it out, please let me know! What I found to be the most helpful when either of my boys threw temper tantrums AT THAT AGE was just to let them. They would throw themselves on the floor...and I would just stay calm and walk around them. Somehow it isn't as fun then. It seems to die out quickly. As far as in public....just be discerning about where you go and at what times (is it nap time? eating time? etc...)
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T.T. answers from Dallas on May 14, 2008
my son is 15 months old. He has just started this...almost like "cool, look what I can do" then he kicks and screams.
At home...I ignore him. I ask him if he's done when he stops throwing the fit...and then get back to what we were doing before hand. If it's too out of hand (and no he hasn'd done anything too out of hand yet) I will put him in his room, on the floor...so that he won't hurt himself and then walk away. (I don't put him in his crib because I don't want him thinking his bed is a place of punishment)
Most kids throw fits because it get's a reaction from the parent/grandparent/adult. Also, at 15 months, they can't tell you...hey...my diaper is chaffing or I'm thirsty or can I have a banana. they get frustrated.
Oh...and in public...as long as he's not hurting someone...I stand there un reactive...until he stops. My oldest son used to do this when we went to the grocery. Throw himself RIGHT DOWN on the floor. I'd turn around and wait...never giving him the reaction he wanted. It stopped. (Now at church, I remove would remove him to another room and let him do his thing. Time and place...time and place)
I also repeat the mantra...when things get especially crazy...
This too shall pass. This too shall Pass. This too shall pass.
Smiles to you. Good luck.
Fun stage, huh?
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K.K. answers from Dallas on May 14, 2008
My girls started doing them at around 12 months....I thought that was early, but both girls (14 months apart) did it....we have used two resources that have been great:
Happiest Toddler on the Block by Dr. Harvey Karp---find the DVD to understand better.
Love and Logic---look online for Early Childhood information....great stuff.
T. answers from Dallas on May 15, 2008
First, how lucky that your grandson has someone that cares so much to take care of him. I wish you the best of luck!
My son will be 2 next week and we have gone through this. I just paused with him and got down on my knees to talk to him at eye level and talk to him about what he was feeling? 'Are you mad?' Show mommy what you need? Mommy will help you' ('I help you' is by the way one of the things my little boy says all the time now--too cute). Lots of times kids are frustrated at this age and they are trying to do things that they are coordinated enough for and it is very frustrating for them. Be understanding and patient and think what it would be like for your mind to know what it wants to do but your body can't make that happen (kind of like me with some exercise! ha!)
The other thing is to redirect him or use humor with him. Humor, patience, understanding and redirection are the keys. Our son now rarely throws tantrums and most of the time really wants to help and is very loving. When he does act out and tries to hit, I grab his hands, get on his level, look right in his eyes and tell him 'we don't hit, that hurts mommy. Mommy is your friend and you should act nice'. Last night after I told him this, he says 'sorry mamma, mamma nice' and hugs me. Maybe it's working!! : ) Good luck!
S. answers from Dallas on May 14, 2008
I have twin girls, age 4, and now twin boys, age 21 months, and I know exactly what you mean. I often think, "Where did they learn this?" It's instinctive. I have temper tantrums and head butting (each other) and this week's favorite is pulling their brother's hair (and mine when I put them in time out). My favorite is the temper tantrum while I am trying to change their diaper; they just don't have time for that, so they kick and scream (and they kick hard!). Like the other moms, we do time-outs. Stay calm, put them in time out; one minute for each year, and ignore them. Eventually they get tired of time out and it gets no response from you so it's not fun. Good luck!
B.M. answers from Dallas on May 15, 2008
I have boys and girls. I have found that the temper tantrums have less to do with gender and more to do with age and tempermant. At this age it has more to do with them not being able to effectively communicate their needs. Add into that that they may not feel like the big people in their lives understand them. My favorite book (and there are MANY) is "The Happiest Toddler on the Block". It has been a lifesaver with my 2-yr-old DD.
L.S. answers from Dallas on May 14, 2008
I have 3 boys, aged 13, 11 1/2, and 8. At home, I would pick them up and put them on their bed and tell them they could come off the bed when they were done. They have every right to be mad etc. but I don't want to hear it and neither did anyone else. When they were done then they can come out of their room. I never tolerated tantrums in the store. Basically, because it interrupts other people and is miserable for them and I believe the learning should be done at home until the child can cope with being in public. I hate going to a restaraunt and having my time ruined by screaming kids. It is just rude and inconsiderate to the other people.
When and if the time out didn't work, then I swatted their butts and put them back on their bed. For as many times as it took to get the correct behaviour.
I am basically a drill sergeant even now. My children all learned at an early age that tantrums didn't work and that I meant NO the FIRST time I said it. To this day I have very little problems with discipline. My children are happy and healthy with wonderful spirits and good senses of humor. Respect my decisions and requests. They have good manners and are a joy to be around. They are respectful to adults and helpful. They are very trustworthy. Do they get in trouble, well yeah, but they know I am fair and will help them with anything and that they can tell me honestly what they have done so we can work on it or fix it.
I believe all these things are a direct result because they had good boundaries and a strong sense of sercurity.
I will tell you that I read "To Train Up a Child" by Mike and Debi Pearle and their companion books, "No Greater Joy" Vol I,II,III. I don't advocate everything they do, but do find that they are right about the corporal punishment and several other topics. I used what fit in for us and discarded the rest that we didn't like. Their methods can seem harsh, but I promise they work.
I think their ideas are a success and work well.
I am re-reading them again for me to get in the right frame of mind to deal with a little attitude from my 8yr old. He doesn't know what he is in for.
Good luck,
L.
E.L. answers from Dallas on May 14, 2008
Hi L.,
All I can say is... Hahahaaaa... welcome to my world! I have 3.5 and 2-year-old boys and they are sensitive, rambunctious, irritable and absolutely FUN! I would ignore the tantrums like the other Moms said… I usually tell my boys the following:
You can go and spend some time in your room, when you talk the way toy are talking to me (whining, crying, silly) I just can’t understand you! When you are ready to communicate like the big boy that you are, please come out of you room so that we can chat :-)
Good Luck!
E.
V.H. answers from Dallas on May 15, 2008
For boys, I would suggest reading: Bringing up Boys by James Dobson (used ones on Amazon for about $10)
My oldest daughter went into the "terrible twos" at 16 months and came out at 5 years old! Talk about strong willed child! I found that giving her choices always helps: do you want to wear the pink one or the red one? etc.That way she felt like she was in controll but I had given her bounaries of what is acceptable. Do not be afraid of setting boundaries even though you are the grandma. Setting boundaries shows they are loved and cared for. :)
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