S.S. asks from Apple Valley, CA on July 23, 2008
Help with 14 Month Old Gagging Himself
I have a 14 month old son that will stick his fingers down his throat and gag till he vomits when he is upset. It seems to happen when he does not get his way or is bored with the situation. I have asked his Dr. about this and she said to just ignore him when he does it and if he continues let him sit in the vomit so he will see that he cannot get what he wants with bad behavior. I know he is looking for attention so the best thing would be to ignore the bad behavior. However, how do you ignore it when he is in his carseat and has just vomited all over himself and we need to be some place and be CLEAN. My husband said we should try hot sauce or something bitter on the tips of his fingers but I am not sure that would be the best thing for him. Does anyone have any advice?
1 mom found this helpful
Featured Answers
A.H. answers from San Diego on July 24, 2008
I have a friend who's son did the same thing. All they did with him is hold his hands down when he was upset. He eventually got over it and quit doing that.
L.A. answers from San Diego on July 24, 2008
Ignore it! Pack extra clothes and baby wipes when you are going somewhere, but do not give him attention over this. Give him plenty of attention at other times. Don't resort to hot sauce, there is no need for that. He will eventually stop this behavior if it does not get him what he wants - a reaction from you.
S.L. answers from Los Angeles on July 24, 2008
my first born did this, we overly reacted by telling her loudly not to do it and kept taking her fingers away...anyhow, she liked the attention. So we started to ignore it. My husband said if she didn't stop he'd put "chile" --hot spicy Mexican sauce on her fingers, or lemon, or rubbing alcohol. He didn't because I didn't let him and she eventually stopped. We didn't punish her. But i did give her TONS of attention and that's when I noticed that when I wasn't giving her attention-she'd try it again, but I kept on ignoring it. Basically she either learned that this isn't the way to get my attention - or - she grew out of it. Maybe it was just a stage/phase?
-S
More Answers
M.C. answers from Honolulu on July 24, 2008
my little girl would scream herself to puke when angry, too. She did not use her fingers, she would just scream and cry so hard, she would vomit. One day we left the kids with a new babysitter who happened to be a special education teacher. I informed her of Tessa's puking issue just so she wouldn't think she was sick. When Tessa started with this, she turned on the TV and said "I can't hear the TV when you cry, can you??" and she talked her out of puking!! I was aghast, because I then realized that she could control it. I worked really hard to talk her out of future situations by redirecting her...It takes a lot of effort and preplanning (I took several extra toys along with me in the diaper bag, I kept special snacks on hand that she doesn't usually get, etc) and eventually she grew out of it. It really is hard and takes alot of energy. I even resorted to threatening to take away favorite toys and the beloved "Barney time" if she vomited (which, I probably should not have done but it worked at the time.)
So, ignore when you can, redirect when you can't... It is a phase, but you will need to help him work through it until he has the words to accurately communicate his feelings. Make sure that you are acknowledging his feelings ("I know you want to knock over brother's tower, but he is working on making it bigger...let's make another one for you to knock down" and stuff like that. That will at least give him the feeling that you know what he wants and you will do your best to help him. Good luck with this messy problem!
1 mom found this helpful
S.B. answers from Honolulu on July 24, 2008
Oh yes, he is trying to get his way by using manipulation. Always keep extra clothes in the car and when he does it, don't respond verbally. Husbands have a harder time with this sometimes but make him follow the routine. Just change his clothes and move on. If he does it again, do the same thing. My son is a big "I want your attention all the time" kid and I find that when I make a big deal about it, it gets worse and he got his way. I am emotionally upset for the next hour and he is over it in 5 minutes so try to stay calm. One other note: don't try and "talk" to a 14 month old baby. They don't understand that they are hurting themselves or anyone else. They don't have that reasoning yet. Hope this helps!
S.
Y.K. answers from Los Angeles on July 24, 2008
My son did the exact same thing at the exact same age and basically I was told to do nothing; his self-gagging was a way of getting attention when he was bored. I know it's frustrating, embarassing (in public situations) and messy but we ignored it and eventually he did stop doing it. We made sure to have Pampers Clean & Go wipes handy in the car, in his diaper bag, at home and in the office so we could clean him up easily. I wouldn't put anything on your son's fingertips because he will suffer in the short run with the obvious discomfort hot sauce will bring on and in the long run, he actually may get used to having unusual tastes in his mouth and that can definitely be dangerous. Besides, why punish your son for wanting a little extra attention? He's still a baby; he's still learning to cope with his emotions like frustration and boredom. He will grow out of it, I promise, mine did. Good luck to you!
D.H. answers from Los Angeles on July 24, 2008
Are you kidding me? Ignore him? Sit in vomit? Go with your instinct on this one. (I hate when our pediatrician gives parenting or discipline advice - they don't teach that in medical school, so Doctors aren't any more qualified to give this advice than your girlfriends. I ask a medical question, I want a medical answer.) But anyway, your little boy is only 14 months old. Of course he wants "attention." What is wrong with that? He's still a baby! We parents are busy, we can't always give our kids the attention they want/need/deserve, but that doesn't mean we should call the desire for attention "bad behavior." I have no experience with your particular problem, and it does sound awful and hard to live with on a number of levels, but I would go with your instinct and give your son more attention, not less. No necessarily as a reaction to the incident, but just in general. And definitely don't turn your back on him and let him sit in vomit. That will only teach him that he can't trust his parents to take care of his needs. It looks like from what everyone else has said that he'll grow out of this. I wish you much luck in the interim, and I'd say for a kid this young, err on the side of affection, and not withdrawal.
T.D. answers from Los Angeles on July 24, 2008
My sister used to do this when she your son's age. When my mom would put her down in her crib for the night, she'd purposely gag herself and make herself throw up because she didn't want to go to bed. The way my mom handled it was to just stay matter of fact about it, clean her up, kiss her goodnight and put her back in bed. It took several days of being consistent but eventually my sister gave up when she saw that it wasn't getting her what she wanted. Kids are smart that way. :-) I'm not sure I agree with your Dr. about letting him sit in the vomit. That seems pretty cruel to me.
Good luck!!
H.W. answers from Los Angeles on July 24, 2008
My son did the same thing and I remeberhow scary it was. He'd do it in his highchair, in a resturaunt, and in his carseat. Mostly out of anger from being restrained and not from attention. Even at those times when we tried to prevent it by showering him with attention he'd still do it. He out grew it in less than 6 months, but those 6 months were still hard. We always cleaned him up and tried not to yell at him about it since that would make him start doing it again. I would definately say no to the hot sauce for this case though. I think its good for older children with nail biting and such, but it'd be really easy for him to get it in his eyes, and that would be really painful for the little guy.
Good luck!
D.H. answers from Los Angeles on July 24, 2008
I would avoid using hot sauce, if he gets it in his eyes that wouldn't be so good. they do sell a nail polish that is bitter to deter nail biting. I don't know if that would help keep fingers out of the mouth all together. I would ignore the tantrums (making sure he won't hurt himself) and when he does vomit I would clean it up and send to his room or time out (even in the car, just leave the ac blowing and roll windows down, music off, step outside the car where you can see him and let him sit in his chair for a couple minutes.) While cleaning him up don't be emotional, just act matter-of-factly. He may be seeking any sort of reaction from you ('see what a fun game! If I do this then I can make mommy act this way') I would make it routine that if he acts out and vomits then he may not hang out with the family and do fun things until he calms down. But you have to do what fits your family. All in all, ignore the tantrum or send him to his room to finish his tantrum. Clean the vomit off (I would be concerned about rashes.) Good luck!
B.S. answers from Los Angeles on July 24, 2008
Hi S.,
This happened to me. Daughter was doing the same thing for attention at I think the same age. When I would hear her start gagging, I would tell her no...from the driver's seat. Yeah, she did it a few times in the car, with one or two times where she did throw up all over herself. If this happened where I was close to her, I'd pull her hands out of her mouth and tell her "NO". My mother would tell her "oh, those hands are in your mouth again". Amazingly, she would immediately get her hands out of her mouth. All I remember about this is just telling her "NO" with a strong tone in my voice and it hasn't happened anymore. I didn't want to ignore it especially when driving because it was really stressful for me in the car while driving in traffic...plus the smell made me want to gag with her!
Good luck!
Email