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HELP!! Temper Tantrums - Salt Lake City,UT

holy moly!! my daughter throws temper tantrums when ever she doesnt get her way. im talking about crying, kicking and screaming at the top of her lungs! she also acts like i hit her when i go to pick her up off the ground and this kills me because i dont believe in spanking. I've also tried taking her favorit toys away, talking to her but this just enrages her even more. i would like some advice on how to calm her down and what to do when she does this in public again. PLEASE HELP ME !!!

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My grandpa dealt with temper tantrums in the most unique way....

He had 7 children. If one of them had a temper tantrum, he'd pull up a chair and watch it like a show. He'd holler, 'Hey - come watch! Molly's having a temper tantrum!' Then whoever wanted to come watch would come watch....He'd oooh...and ahhh...and point out techniques....all the while with a big smile on his face. He never let them get under his skin.

The tantrums never lasted long..lol

I've never been brave enough to try it. I tell my daughter (age 8)if she wants to scream and throw a fit she can do it in her room w/ the door closed. She can come out when she's ready.

My son is only 2. When he has a tantrum, I ask 'oh, did that make you mad/upset/sad when mommy ______' and then ask 'do you need a hug?' That's pretty much it for him.

I refuse to deal w/ tantrums in public. I say 'we'll talk about this when we get home/in the car' and that's the end of it.

2 moms found this helpful

Hello L.,

I wanted to let you know that I am a mother of kids, and let me tell you what I did, and it worked for me. IF my kids pitched a fit in public, I didn't take them out any more until they quit doing it. I would drop what ever I was doing and went home. It makes life a little hard because you have to come back to where ever it was but they got the point that it was not going to be that way. When it happened at home or at family or friends house, I would point to the floor and tell them to have their fit right there. I would then walk away. I didn't respond to any of the temper tantrums. That is the major thing they are looking for is attention, take that away and they will start to do it less and less. I hope this helps. Please let me know if you tried it and how it worked. You have to stay firm and not give in to what ever she wants.

2 moms found this helpful

When my oldest was 2 we started sending him to his room when he had a tantrum. We explained it in a way that let him know it wasn't a punishment. He needed some time to calm down on his own. We told him to go to his room and come back when he was happy. It worked very well for us. He learned to control his emotions and identify how he was feeling. He even got to the point where he'd send himself to his room and come back with a smile on his face. Good luck!

1 mom found this helpful

More Answers

My grandpa dealt with temper tantrums in the most unique way....

He had 7 children. If one of them had a temper tantrum, he'd pull up a chair and watch it like a show. He'd holler, 'Hey - come watch! Molly's having a temper tantrum!' Then whoever wanted to come watch would come watch....He'd oooh...and ahhh...and point out techniques....all the while with a big smile on his face. He never let them get under his skin.

The tantrums never lasted long..lol

I've never been brave enough to try it. I tell my daughter (age 8)if she wants to scream and throw a fit she can do it in her room w/ the door closed. She can come out when she's ready.

My son is only 2. When he has a tantrum, I ask 'oh, did that make you mad/upset/sad when mommy ______' and then ask 'do you need a hug?' That's pretty much it for him.

I refuse to deal w/ tantrums in public. I say 'we'll talk about this when we get home/in the car' and that's the end of it.

2 moms found this helpful

I would say look into "love and logic". You respond with empathy (so sad, what a bummer) and then give a choice (do you want to have a fit in your room or be a sweet girl here) then she lives with the consequence (so sad this attitude isn't working for mommy - enjoy some time in your bedroom - you can come out when you are ready to be sweet). Remove her from the area - even if you have to lock the door. Allow her to decide if she wants to behave badly it means she goes to her room so it doesn't bother others. And don't get mad! Even in public, you need to remove her. Don't react to it - do your best to ignore her. When things are bad - use few words. When things are good - that night before bed - you can discuss it. You can even practice - hey hunny (with a smile) new house rule - when you want to throw a fit you can hop skip or jump to your room and do it in there - then when you are sweet you are welcome to join the family. Make it her problem - not yours!

2 moms found this helpful

Hello L.,

I wanted to let you know that I am a mother of kids, and let me tell you what I did, and it worked for me. IF my kids pitched a fit in public, I didn't take them out any more until they quit doing it. I would drop what ever I was doing and went home. It makes life a little hard because you have to come back to where ever it was but they got the point that it was not going to be that way. When it happened at home or at family or friends house, I would point to the floor and tell them to have their fit right there. I would then walk away. I didn't respond to any of the temper tantrums. That is the major thing they are looking for is attention, take that away and they will start to do it less and less. I hope this helps. Please let me know if you tried it and how it worked. You have to stay firm and not give in to what ever she wants.

2 moms found this helpful

I have a boy who is 10 years old now and is better but we went through many years of horrible fits and it started before the age of 1 years old till about 5-6 years old. I know they say all kids throw fits but these were above and beyond and like you nothing seems to faze them, no matter what you do to punish they just don't respond to any kind of punishment. I guess what I have learned through all the years there is no magic thing that I can tell you that will work exactly because every child is different, but what I can tell you is that you make the difference and if you hold fast it will work but it is hard. I don't know about you but I tend to be easy going where I tend to give in just because it seems to be easier and I feel oh he may go with out if I didn't. You need to start now and pick your battles determine if it really is worth it and if so stand your ground, and you have to win. The hardest part is not loosing it and that is where you might need to take a break and come back and resume. I know I have dealt with fits that were 2 hrs long! What I had ended up learning several years later is I had some control in how that went, if only I had not started to loose it and just say no this is how it is, not do any why are you this way or many other things you can say in the moment.If you don't control it now it only get's worse. If you are in public take her home if you can, make sure you tell here why shortly after the tantrum is completely done. From my experience during them they are not able to reason. Also you can try just wrapping your arms around her until she calms down. Mainly you need to win, if you say no that is the way it is. We also learned we were giving to long of punishments and that he always felt punished so why be better (this was as he got a little older). This comes back to how to punish because nothing phases them. The best thing that after all the years that worked was to put him in the corner or just sit on one spot and let them make the decision when they come out once thay are completely done and ready to reason with you, make sure you make it their decision. Always let her know when they have done wrong and make sure you praise the good things, and if your is anything like mine I found it hard and like there was so much more bad then good but really make sure you praise when she is good. There are also books you can get about raising strong willed children. Hope this helps,this really is a subject dear to me because what we went through was extremely hard and exauhsting but you can make the difference. They are looking for your response. C.

2 moms found this helpful

My son went through that a while ago. He would even start hurting his little brother, or trying to break something. I would just go pick him up (noy saying a word) lie him down on his bed, and say "when you are ready to be calm you can come out". He would always scream louder, but I knew he was safe in his room. It took a week or so, but he just stopped. I really had to follow though, if I didn't just one time, it was like I had to start all over.

She wants your attention. Try making a lot more positive comments or interaction when she is doing the right things. I found that if I would give my son attention when he was just playing quietly our day was much more pleasant. I would just walk over give him a soft hug, and say "Thank you for playing so well and using you indoor voice. I Love You!" He always smiled it helped dramatically.

Good Luck! and remember it is just a phase!

1 mom found this helpful

I am a mother of six children. I had small moments of tamtrums but only one that tried to continue it. I see many comments that you should ignore the actions, I too believe that but i took a step further. When my daughter would have a fit I would take her from what brought it on and into another room. I would set him down on the floor and tell her (firmly, but lovingly)"Tha t is not the way we act" I would take into another room, set her in the middle of the floor and go back to what I was doing. She would last for maybe 30 more seconds and it would be over. I would stay calm and uneffected by her actions, just let her know I did not aprove. She only did it for a short while and since she was the second child I did not have to deal with tantrums with any of the others. I found later that I could let my children know that I did not aprove and and follow up with love was all that it took. I prcticed this at home so much that it would flow into the pulic areas. Once your child knows what wil make you respond they tend to contiue to do that. so stay calm and unbothered by it, but let them know you are unahppy with thier actions.
I know the frustrations and I hope you are able to take the best of all this advise and and come to a place that you are happy and can find what you need for you and your child. Good luck.

1 mom found this helpful

I am sure you have heard this before, but walk away. Do not try to calm her down. Remove objects that could hurt her and just do not give attention to negative behavior. I am not saying that I am perfect at this, but I know it is what I should do too. When she is not in the middle of a tantrum, teach her some "words" to express her feelings. "You feel really mad when ...." etc.Eventually she will put the two together and begin to tell you about the injustices that have been done to her... get ready for all that communication. When she is done with her tantrum, give her lots of love and hugs. Good luck.

1 mom found this helpful

hey L., you're in good company there. Do you ever watch Supernanny? She's amazing. Here's my humble opinion:

L. is throwing the tantrums because she can. She knows it gets your attention. When she begins her tantrum, CALMLY (without emotion, it's hard, but it can be done) put her in her room or a safe place. Tell her that when she's calm you'll talk. They need a safe place to get all that emotion out. When she's calm, tell her she can come out, then try to discuss what is happening. Explain to her that the behaviour is unacceptable and give her ideas on how to better express her disapproval. At 3, she's not likely to listen (or appear not to listen) but given time, it should work. [It's worked well for my temper-prone 5 yr old]. The hardest part, for me anyway, is to remain calm and show no emotion. Good luck and God Bless!

1 mom found this helpful

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