35 answers

I Have Made Soooooo Many Mistakes as a Parent, Now I Have to Fix It

Moms, I have a 3 year old. I try to be a good parent, kind yet firm, loving and fun. We are easygoing but we do punish for bad behavior. My daughter for the most part has always been loving and sweet, and pretty well behaved. She recently turned 3 and a few weeks ago these awful tantrums began. They are fits of rage. She will completely lose it, scream at me, hit me, kick me, bite me, throw things at me etc. These fits last an hour or more. Once she's calm, she is very apologetic and tells me she is mad at me because I go to work and leave her. I understand that its been a hard transition for her since I went back to work a year ago, but I have to work. When she is having these fits, she is so worked up that no method of discipline works. She is like a wild animal. So I took her to the doctor today, he checked her over and there is nothing physically wrong with her. He said she is just mad & manipulating me during these fits. He advised me to lock her in her room until the fit is over. He said once she sees that she is not going to get a reaction out of me, this behavior should end. I am at my wits end, so I am willing to try it. I just want my sweet girl back. I sit here typing with a scratched up face from todays fit of rage. She scratched at my face so many times that my face was bleeding by the time it was over. I am so beat down from this behavior, I am willing to try anything.

I wonder what I did wrong along the line that she now acts like this? This can't be normal 3 year old behavior. Was I too easygoing? I never was able to let her cry it out as a baby so maybe she never learned to self-sooth? Maybe I gave in too many times and she thinks she can walk all over me now? I am really beating myself up for the mistakes I have obviously made so far in my 3 years as a parent. But now I want to fix this. I want my sweet baby back. She does not act like this in school, in fact they tell me she is a model student and is very sweet and gentle with the other klds. Thats how she used to be at home too, so I know my sweet baby is still in there somewhere. I am planning on following the doctors advice, but I am open to other suggestions. Have you ever felt like you royally screwed up as a parent? How do you throw your parenting style out the window and start all over? Please go easy on me, I am beating myself up enough. I guess I am just looking for some support. Thanks in advance.

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Thank you all SO MUCH for all the supportive responses, it really helped me feel better. It helped even more to know that other children have acted this way too. I have recieved some great tips and I will try them all. Thank you again, I can't express how much you have helped me!

Featured Answers

You did not screw up, the terrible two's just got put off til the three's. I wouldn't lock her in her room, but definately ignore her when she acts up. When she starts to behave, smile and prasie her good behavior.
Her behavior is a liitle on the extreme side of normal so keep an eye out for other issues, but most kids push their bounderies about this age.

6 moms found this helpful

My girlfriend's little 3 yr old boy threw a hissy fit at the store. She took him to the bathroom and spanked him. Then when she got home he got another spanking. He has NEVER done that again. Have you ever spanked her?

2 moms found this helpful

You havent done anything wrong, she is testing her independance and you have to be consistant and firm....you are doing fine. Hang in there.

2 moms found this helpful

More Answers

I'm an older mom - much older, actually as my daughter is now 34. But I always answer these rage posts - just in case it helps someone. My daughter was 3 when her father left and I went from SAHM to work 2 jobs mom. And she started having tantrums like this where nothing worked. So I know how beat up you're feeling and how it makes you doubt yourself. I wish I had known then that some children have more trouble processing their emotions than other children so a lot of emotions come out as anger, even though it might be frustration or sadness or boredom. You have to accept what they are feeling and help them process their emotions. Please read about Validation as a communication technique with this type of child. The example I always use is that when a child in anger says "You don't love me!", we are inclined to reply, "Of course I love you!" That is NON validating. A better response is to say "Something must have happened to make you feel that I didn't love you. Can you tell me what happened?" Then really listen to their response, try to find something you can agree with and help process the emotion. So if they say I wanted you to play with me, you can agree with something by saying I can understand how sad that makes you when I've been gone to work and we haven't seen each other all day. Help her name the emotion - Is that frustrating, are you sad because you missed me a lot today, etc. Then transition to what you need to do..like would you like to help me with dinner so we can spend some time together? I know some people will feel that this isn't appropriate "discipline" but seriously if you're sitting there with a scratched up face, you need to consider that she is feeling intense emotions - and maybe not just trying to get her way - but really, really feeling intense emotions that are authentic to her and that she needs help processing these emotions. You may want to google "parenting a child who has intense emotions" to learn more. I wish you all the best.

10 moms found this helpful

You did not screw up, the terrible two's just got put off til the three's. I wouldn't lock her in her room, but definately ignore her when she acts up. When she starts to behave, smile and prasie her good behavior.
Her behavior is a liitle on the extreme side of normal so keep an eye out for other issues, but most kids push their bounderies about this age.

6 moms found this helpful

I wouldn't lock her in her room during these fits. She will just tear up her room. That sounds like a cop-out from the doctor. I've had kids go through stages of having huge freak outs like that. I really don't think it's from anything you've done. Kids have trouble controlling themselves. She must feel so out of control during these rages, she can't help it. Locking her in her room will just make her feel worse. I remember making a 'nest' for one of boys that they would go to when they needed to calm down. We made it out of blankets and pillows. My son put stuff in there he knew he would like to look at. Then we had a 'volcano system' so he could keep in check how he was feeling. When I knew he was starting to go down the path of a freak out, I would ask him questions about the volcano inside him. Like was it getting ready to erupt? Maybe he should go lower his lava level in his nest. Btw, by not letting your daughter cry it out is NOT why she's having these freak outs. Crying it out in a crib doesn't teach self-soothing! Good luck. Stay close to your daughter. These tantrums will pass. They will.

5 moms found this helpful

It doesn't sound like you screwed up at all to me, kids go through phases and you just have to take it as it comes. I think the doctor's suggestion to ignore her behavior and it will stop is good advice. Try the book 1, 2, 3 magic. It worked well with my son, who is 2 1/2. We never had tantrums quite like this, but it has helped with a range of bad behavior. Put her in her room for a time out (3 minutes, since she's 3) and if she tears the room apart just ignore it. After the tantrums subside have her help you clean up the room and then she will be much less likely to tear it apart again.

Just as a side note, if she is behaving wonderfully at school it's probably because you did something right. The director at our school likes to remind us that kids can't be perfect all of the time and those that have been taught how to behave are angels at school and then often melt down a bit at home because they just need to let it out. So apparently you taught her how to be a sweet little girl, she's just going through some stuff right now and needs some time to adjust. She'll learn your new boundaries and things will get better.

5 moms found this helpful

My older son used to have fits like that, without the scratching mind you, when he was around two to three. I would get him in a bear hug, using both arms and legs so he could not hurt me and then I would keep telling him I love you and I am not going to let go until you calm down and talk to me.

I can't remember how long it lasted but the hugging did work. In the end he was just frustrated and couldn't explain himself.

Just so you know Tommy is now 23 and one of the sweetest young men you could ever meet.

You are definitely not a bad mom, a bad mom wouldn't care.

Oh about the room thing. When Tommy had his fits there is just no way I could have safely got him in his room we would have both been injured. In his room I can't see how I could have kept him safe, he was enraged. I don't think the pediatrician has a good suggestion there.

4 moms found this helpful

Yup, this is pretty normal (if a tad extreme) 3 year old behavior. You didn't do anything wrong.

I second the suggestion on the "Love and Logic" books. It's similar to your doctor's advice, but goes into a lot more detail about useful and non-useful ways to do this.

For an immediate self-protection strategy, restrain her when she's in a fit. A restraint is a modified hug. You sit the child in your lap, facing away from you. Cross her hands over her chest, holding onto her wrists. Keep your arms below her arms so she can't bite you. If she's kicking, cross your legs over her legs. Keep your head up so that if she slams her head back, she doesn't hit your chin and make you bite your tongue. Talk calmly to her with a repetitive litany such as "I love you too much to let you hurt anyone. I will keep you safe. You are a good girl. I will not let you hurt me. I am holding your hands until you area ready to control your own hands." For your sake and for hers, don't let her scratch your face or injure you. The overall message of a properly done restraint is "I am the grownup. I am in charge. I will keep you safe. I will not let you do anything that you will regret." If you are doing a restraint properly, you should be (or appear) calm, very patient, and slightly bored. Definitely not angry, sad, or emotionally involved. Restraint can be an excellent option for young children who are too destructive and out of control to be put into a room for time-out.

Whatever disciplinary tactic you choose, give it absolutely consistent implementation for two solid weeks. Be aware that behavior may get briefly worse, then should improve rapidly. If you aren't seeing any improvement in two weeks, try another tactic.

If *nothing* works, consider the possibility of some type of health problem. My son was given a clean bill of health by two doctors, both of whom missed the detail that was severely sleep-deprived due to low-grade asthma! Both of them told me my son was just being manipulative. Both of them were wrong.

But this really does sound like extremely typical 3 year old behavior. Good luck. It gets better.

4 moms found this helpful

Tantrums - she obviously gets a response, so she keeps doing it. If you can put her in a room until she calms down, do it. If you can't, you go into a room until she calms down. I think you'll find that when you disappear, she'll stop, look for you, find you, and start up again. It's classic.

Daily -- You need to be absolutely consistent. If you say no, mean it. Stick with your decision. Do not waffle. She can pitch a fit, but the answer still needs to be no. Do not give in -- ever. If you do, you'll be starting over.

Set some house rules - have her help you with rules and consequences of not following them. No Hitting... No Biting... No Yelling, etc... Consequences might include a time out, no TV, etc.

Good luck!
LBC

3 moms found this helpful

It's not your fault. It's

A) a temporary phase. All three year olds are horrid. I don't know why people get worked up over "the terrible twos" when threes are so much worse. Her terrible behavior will peak at around age 3.5 and then you'll start to see a normal human being emerge again as she nears her 4th birthday. And...

B) her temperament. I've got a bunch of chores to get to so I can't write the novel I usually write but here are three great books for you:
-Raising Your Spirited Child
-Positive Discipline
-The Kadzin Method for Parenting your Defiant Child

Finally...consider a new pediatrician. Locking a 3 year old in a room is ridiculous and counter productive.

Things will get better - hang in there!

3 moms found this helpful

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