13 answers

Help! My 3 Year Old Is Getting Unruly

Hello everyone, I need some advice on what to do with my 3 year old who has become very mouthy and wont mind his dad and me very well. Where do i start, he has always been so laid back and easy going the perfect baby never fussy. Things were just great! We live across the street from my mom and she has him very spoiled, she doesnt like it when we punish him for something he shouldnt have done. And lets him get away with anything. We also made the mistake of putting him in our bed when he was a baby and yes he is still there. He has his own big boy bed but wont sleep in it at night he will take naps in it and thats it. He has got this new thing of when its time to go to bed he screams, yells, tells us he hates us and just acts like a different child. We put him in time out and explain to him why he is in time out but its not wroking. I am at my wits end, i feel like im a terrible mommy. My husband is even getting frustrated. If anyone has any advice on anything we can try to help with the outburst i would appreciate it. He doesnt always have them he still walks up to you out of the blue kisses you and says i love you!

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

First of all I want to Thank everyone for their advice and support. Guess i did not realize all this is normal. I have taken note on all the great ideas and advice everyone gave and plan to try many of the methods. We have not went to nanny's house for 2 days now. And last night we went to visit some friends who have kids and he played and loved it. So hopefully things will start to turn around for him and me. I will update again when i decide which things worked best for us. God Bless all of you who took the time to respond.

More Answers

I wouldn't worry about your son sleeping with you...many perfectly healthy and normal kids sleep with their parents. As for the screaming, I would isolate him from attention when he does that. He should eventually figure out that he will not be given the attention he craves when he is rude to his parents. Finally, you are his parents, and are responsible for parenting him. If grandparents butt in, sweetly remind them that God gave you the responsiblity for guiding your son-so please do not interfere unless asked. Good luck-you're not a horrible mother at all!!!

I can sympathize with you on the grandma thing. My mother in law was this way. She would let him do things she knew we didn't let him do such as jump on the bed and climb on the back of the sofa. These are things he could get hurt doing! When we would reprimand him she would say "he's allowed to do it at Me-Me's house." This sent him mixed messages and of course he thought he could get away with these things at home. Then when I would reprimand him at home he would say "Me-Me lets me, I'm telling on you!" I tried talking to my mother in law but it seemed to do no good. Finally I told my husband he had to tell her, but he didn't want to hurt her feelings so he wasn't firm enough with her. I ended up having to just keep him away from her for a while. When she would ask if he could come over I would think of some excuse or make other plans for him. I think she finally got the message and it has gotten some better. She no longer lets him do "dangerous" things but I can not get her to stop constantly buying things for him. He is so spoiled and expects me to buy some extravagant thing every time we go to the store just because she does. My husband has been no help on this either. Once again I had to turn to the method of keeping him away from her. Maybe because it is your mom you will have more pull if you talk to her. Grandparents mean well, but you are the parent.

My advice would be to find out what is most important to your child to remove as a consequence. That may be toys, TV time, computer time, time with mommy, anything. I have found with all three of my kids ages 5-12 that they could care less about time outs. They didn't like standing with their nose in the corner though because they can't see what is going on around the house. Good luck.

As someone who has a 4 yr old I know how frustrating it can be to have a child try to push you to the limit and test your patience. I have learned that the more frustrated you seem the more they will act out and nothing will get solved. At this age and up until hopefully 5 lol kids will do whatever it is that you DONT want them doing. If you tell them no to playing then they cry and whine but if your begging them to go play in their room while your on the phone they don't want to.They may not do it intetionally to be cruel and more then likely it's just their way of discovering themselves but the more you fight them the more they fight back. Me and my husband have learned that solving the problem together and both having the patience will show your child you stand your ground. That doesnt mean that all tantrums will stop but it will make them shorter and you can show him how to let out his frustration. Maybe if you and daddy talk to him and have daddy act like he's mad...say he cant find his shoes...not really mad but have him cross his arms and stop his feet or act like your son does to give him a good laugh and say watch how daddy solves his problem and have your husband pretend to stop and think and have him work out his problem and find his shoes. Sounds silly I know but kids mimic us as well as their peers.We also have our son on a steady nighttime schedule.. he does the same thing every night and at the same time.You can also keep a certian schedule all day like I do. They generally eat,nap,play around the same time and order each day...it helps me alot!

Okay, so I don't really have a 3 year old. Actually, my child is only 2 months old. But I use to teach 3 year olds in a preschool. I just wanted to offer you some encouragement. This too shall pass. With some determination and consistancy, you can teach him that his good behavior will be rewarded and his bad behavior will have consequences. And just when you think that he is never going to get it, the light will come on and he will catch on. I have seen even the most difficult children change with consistancy. Just be consistant. Don't give up. You will make it and so will he!

I recently recommended this book to someone else, but it bears repeating. The book 1-2-3 Magic is just that, magic! It explains to us parents that a 3 year old is too young to process a lot of explanation when they do something wrong. They just need to know specifically what they did that was unacceptable and that this is always going to be the punishment for that behavior.

If it makes you feel better, it sounds like he's a normal 3 year old testing his boundaries. You are NOT a terrible mommy. This is just something that appens to our little boys about this age. I've heard that we will eventually get our angels back if we can live through this transition. LOL

I hope this helps.

K. M

My advice would be to be consistant all the time. My 3 year old told me once that she hated me, I clipped her in the mouth. Not to hard but she never told me again. The fits, I would put her on a chair and cover her mouth until she settles. You need to let her know now how is boss or soon she'll control you. You need to let your mom get upset, and tell her that if she loved him she would want her to be disaplined. Just don't give in, I think you'll see results. Disaplining is the hardest thing to do as a parent. But remember now is the time not 5 or 10 years from now.
Good luck

He is at the age where he wants to do things his way and develop his independence but still have a sense of security. This is normal. I have found with my 4 year old that diversion is a great tool. Sometimes when she acts up (and already knows better) I ignore it and distract her by doing something silly or by diverting her to a new activity like reading a book together. I am not excusing or accepting the behavior, just picking my battles and trying to put more positives than negatives in our relationship. During the quiet moments I teach her what is expected. I find that when she is upset is not the best time for a lesson/lecture. I prefer to get to the root of the problem (boredom, needing attention, hungry, tired, wanting to feel in control, needing reassurance...). I rarely use time outs or punishments with my five children (ages 8 months to 10 years). Try to frame the situations so they are win-win so that one of you doesn't have to "lose." (For example, rather than scolding him for not picking up his toys, just move on to "let's see if we can make it a game to do together.")
As for the sleeping issues, you could try some sort of reward system. Perhaps he can get a new stuffed toy that he can only have when he is sleeping in his own bed. (or a sticker chart or other incentive program that highlights how "grown up" he is). If that's too much of a leap, try letting him sleep on the floor in your room for a while or you could stay in his room until he falls asleep. I tell our four year old that she has to start in her own bed but that she can come sleep on the floor in our room if she wakes up in the middle of the night with a bad dream. She feels better knowing she has that as a fall back. Good luck!!!

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