19 answers

Husband Thinks Son Is 33 and Not 3 - Houston,TX

I think sometimes my husband is too hard on my son, who is 3 and 1/2. The two constantly butt heads. I use positive reinforcement and time outs, which works great. My Husband just yells at him, and then yells at me because I am spoiling him. Last night, after the kids went to bed I tried to talk to my husband. I told him that Benjamin is only and child, and he is feeding off your anger. Well that didn’t help at all. My husband just got mad at me. He told me the Benjamin is 3 years old and shouldn’t be acting the way he does... ect. I told my Husband I want you think about something, Benjamin is 3 not 33. Can anyone help me on how to get through to him? That yelling gets you NOWHERE, and how to explain to my Husband that our son is just a child.

1 mom found this helpful

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

there's a nice free parenting class with free materials and child care mornings and evenings at the JCC, ###-###-####.

More Answers

I also recommend buying a parenting book, or checking out one from the local library. And bookmarking passages that you would like your husband to read.

Books that I like are No-Cry Discipline Solution, How to Talk So Kids will Listen, and Love and Logic for Early Childhood.

Your husband may be acting out the way he was raised, and it might help for him to hear or read an outside viewpoint.

This part may not be good advice, but in your shoes I'd be tempted to ask my husband why he thinks our three year old is capable of self-control. Especially since his adult role model doesn't seem to be able to control his frustration and stop yelling.

3 moms found this helpful

You have received some great advice already. I don't have advice for the long term parenting situation, but only for the short term. Your husband may not agree to it, but I hope he will.

Ask him to whisper softly to your son when he needs to get hiis attention.... not to merely talk softly, but to actually whisper so the boy has to come close, make eye contact, and he will surely whisper back.

I have found that whispering to a child gets his attention far more than shouting. Either they tune out the shout, it frightens them or they just can't process the combination of volume and words, but with whispering we have to be close and listen. Your husband will, in turn, have to listen when Ben whispers back. Whispering also tends to calm a person down.

I wish you the best, and I hope this offers a short term solution while you work on the parenting concerns long-term.

2 moms found this helpful

I agree, your husband is probably mimicking his upbringing and just does not know his options for dealing with Benjamin.

I would suggest getting a parenting book for dads. I would also encourage you all to find other families with involved dads and their children, so that your husband can see how they parent.

The behavior your son is mimicking? Is probably his fathers behavior. Your husband can break this cycle.

We have to take classes to learn how to drive a car, but they just let you leave the hospital with a human infant because it is yours. Parenting has to be learned just like any other skill. People go to college for many years to learn to care for and help children. Your husband has not had this opportunity.

2 moms found this helpful

Unfortunately, your husband is teaching him to yell, scream and talkback. Your husband is the role-model that your son will mold his behavior to copy. And as he gets older, it will be more difficult for you both to control your son's verbal outbursts if he has learned from a very young age that verbally venting uncontrolled anger and frustration is acceptable and normal.

If you both speak to him in controlled voices, it will make huge strides in avoiding discipline headaches in the future. (Heck, we all get frustrated and angry... We all lose patience. But verbal venting should be the last response instead of the first.)

I agree with a previous poster that this is probably normal for your husband's recollection of his own childhood. However, what exactly is your husband angry about... Is it possible that there are underlying issues that are feeding his anger and your son's behavior at some particular time is just redirecting that frustration?

2 moms found this helpful

This is probably THE hardest thing to deal with. Whoever said that the mother/daughter relationship was difficult obviously never observed a father/son. My husband is a former Marine. Loves sports, hunting, etc all things "male". My son (now 20) loves video games, music (was in varsity choir instead of football!!), movies, books, and girls!! Talk about 2 different men! I have had several headbutting instances. Some things I've learned is that one you need to talk to hubby away from when the behavior is occurring. And I know this sounds horrible but sometimes after everything is going hubby's way (dinner, relaxing, sex) calmly approach him and tell him that your fear about him being so hard on Benjamin is that Benjamin will grow up to resent him. And that your greatest wish is that Dad will be Benjamin's hero and that can't happen if he's always yelling at him and if been is scared of Dad. You said you feel that Dad is expecting too much out of son. Have you tried having other 3 yr old boys around so that Dad can observe what is normal behavior? That always helps around my house. It's amazing how "good" my child is when compared to some others in the world!

You can't object to dad's style in front of Benjamin. It angers dad and undermines his position in the family. Benjamin will very quickly manipulate that to his advantage. Kids are masters at that even at age 3!! It will be very hard on your marriage which must come first.

Also please consider that Dad is trying to teach Benjamin how to be a man. No matter how hard we try, that is something we will never be able to teach, simply because we are women. We don't know how to be a man. One thing that Dr. Laura has said is that children, even at a very young age, know the difference between mom & dad parenting techniques. They don't always take dad's yelling & deep voice as threatening or intimidating the way we, as women and mothers, have a tendancy to do. Sometimes its necessary to listen to day without your mother ears. Children need to learn cope with different types of authority because that is what the world is full of. He won't be able to expect that all people discipline the same way as mom and what better way to learn that than in the safety of his home. As long as dad and you are consistent in WHAT you are teaching the how often works its way through.

Sorry this is so long but it is a very tough situation. Wait until Isabel is older and Dad starts asking why your so hard on her & you start wondering why he is so easy on his "baby" girl. It's because your teaching her to be a woman and you know what it takes to survive as a woman in this world and being a pampered baby girl just won't cut it!!

Good luck!

1 mom found this helpful

This probably has EVERYTHING to do with how your husband was raised and his fears about parenting a boy. I'm reminded of Johnny Cash's song "A Boy Named Sue" in which the guy gave his son the name so he would have to learn to be tough.

Your husband probably will not be able to hear it from you, because you're on the inside. On some level and for some reason, your parenting style is not valid to him. Talk to a therapist who can give you some tips for getting through to him or just give you peace of mind in this. It might take a third party whom he respects to show him the difference.

1 mom found this helpful

Hi L.! Usually, yelling is a typical "I haven't got a clue as to what I'm doing" reaction. Have you made any plans to get together with other families, like having picnics, etc? Sometimes the dad needs some social interaction to see how the other dad's do it. We as mom's always need to be one step ahead of the game. Leave your talking to your husband on the back burner, and just do the mommy/wife thing. Make plans, & create a fun atmosphere for the family to enjoy. Make some plans to be alone with hubby as well. He may be competing with your son for your attention. Let me know if this helps.

1 mom found this helpful

Oh yeah, this area is always a tough one. Men and women have such different parenting styles at times. My husband and I had some rounds on this subject. For instance when my little boy would get tired and start acting up a little, my husband would punish him. This would upset me so much because I would think that our son was tired and needed some understanding and then be put to bed. Well one day my husband goes "Well what happens when he is grown and he holds up a liquor store because he was tired or just having a bad day!" I of course said this was ridiculous and stormed off, but it did get me thinking. What we have discovered is that I had to toughen up a bit and he had to soften up a bit and the line was somewhere between our two styles. But a major thing I found was listening to my husband and validating that his discipline was ok and that he was doing what he felt was right as a parent was huge. Also learning to back my husband up even when I felt he was too hard was super important. Otherwise it comes off like you think you are the superior parent and puts you two at odds and then kids can feel when mom and dad are not in unity, and they will try to conquer!! So I would say try listening and validating and then ask him to do the same and you guys may make some discoveries. From what you wrote it sounds like your husband is a good Dad and trying to do what he thinks is right, so appreciate that and I bet that he will be much more open to seeing your side of things. Best wishes!! :)

1 mom found this helpful

Required Fields

Our records show that we already have a Mamapedia or Mamasource account created for you under the email address you entered.

Please enter your Mamapedia or Mamasource password to continue signing in.

Required Fields

, you’re almost done...

Since this is the first time you are logging in to Mamapedia with Facebook Connect, please provide the following information so you can participate in the Mamapedia community.

As a member, you’ll receive optional email newsletters and community updates sent to you from Mamapedia, and your email address will never be shared with third parties.

By clicking "Continue to Mamapedia", I agree to the Mamapedia Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.