26 answers

Parent Seeking Help with 16 Month Old Disipline Issues

My 16 Month old son wants his way. I have to fight with him to change his diaper, get in the car seat and telling him no. He wants what he wants. He seems to get frusrated easily when things dont go his way. I worry because he is the only child and worry about only child syndrome. Any suggestions.

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I have the same problems with my 15 month old and she is also an only child. Diaper Changing is a nightmare!!! She always wants her own way and I have to fight her to get her to do anything or not do anything. Let me know of any tricks you might learn, PLEASE!!!
Thanks and Good Luck
B.

If you're planning on having another that might be the ticket! Also, get him around some other babies his age, cousins etc. so he learns to share and have those experiences.

Time to give him choices. My daughter is an extremely independent 16 month old. She does tons better when I let her pick between 2 things instead of just treating her like a doll.

Also, when I'm changing her diaper, I give her a binky or a toy to play with and then I sing her a song that has her name in it while I'm changing her. She really likes it.

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If you're planning on having another that might be the ticket! Also, get him around some other babies his age, cousins etc. so he learns to share and have those experiences.

It is a lot more that he has a strong will, which is great, however he needs to learn to be cooperative. Most kids his age will respond to things being a game. Like you hold your clean diaper while mommy changes you, or you have to be safe. I know a friend that took her children to the police station so they could explain why carseats were important and they were totally on board after that. Your son is still young for that. You can try a counting game to see how fast he can get in his carseat. Try different words other then "no", like DON'T TOUCH. If you change your tone in your requests sometimes strong willed children will be alot more apt to comply. He is exerting his independence so just give him power (or so he thinks) like choice of snacks or what animal to sleep with, what shirt to wear or what shoes he wants.
Both of my kids have moments, my daughter was an angel until she turned three and is almost seven now and I can say SHE HAS A STRONG WILL, it is about choices, consequences when they make the wrong ones. Since your son is so young I would try getting on his level and making it fun, then if he pitches a fit, it just isn't going to work for him and he has to, if you don't give in, he will figure it out.

Best way to avoid power struggles and avert behavior issues - choices. Give 2 choices, give him 10 sec to decide, if no decision choose for him. Don't give choices when he's already defiant or your at the end of your rope.
So here's how it works, he needs his diaper changed - you give him choice on how he gets it changes. "Do you want your diaper changed on the floor or on the bed? He needs to go in car seat, but give him choices on how he gets in the seat "Do you want to sing barney or old mac donald while you're getting in the seat" You'll be surprised how effective this works when you give him some control over his life in the little ways.
do you want to drink out of red sippy or blue sippy
do you want to read a story before or after your bath
do you want to put on your shirt first or pants first
If you master choices the Love & Logic way, you'll see immediate results. Listen to the Love & LOgic "avoiding power struggles" CD from he library or buy it off their website.
Also consider taking a love & logic class. I have one starting on Friday April 11th. See www.shellymoorman.com.

Have fun!

with my dd I gave her choices, would you like to lay down to get your diaper changed? or would you like mommy to lay you down? If she didn't respond I would say Good choice, mommy will lay you down. I also didn't tell her no very often, instead I would say "let's do something else" which makesit easy to say "you don't tell mommy no" when she says no to something I asked or told her to do. with consistency she came to realize that it wasn't a power struggle for control, she has control over parts of her world--the choices gave her that, they were just always choices I was comfortable with no matter which way she decides. It is so frustrating for these little people to not be able to have power over their own lives they know they can't but they want to control what they can, this has helped us with this issue.

Time to give him choices. My daughter is an extremely independent 16 month old. She does tons better when I let her pick between 2 things instead of just treating her like a doll.

Also, when I'm changing her diaper, I give her a binky or a toy to play with and then I sing her a song that has her name in it while I'm changing her. She really likes it.

At this point, it is not only child syndrome. It's 16 month old phase. But you should be in charge. Establish that early or you wil regret it later. You just have to be smarter than him and use some strategies. For diaper changes --- find other ways to entertain him while you change his diapers. For my 17 month old we sing songs with gestures --- patty cake, itsy bitsy spider, this little piggy, twinkle twinkle little star, etc. It keeps him entertained and busy. Should work for carseat as well. It gets old saying "no" over and over again. Use distraction techniques. Or refocus techniques. Nip it in the bud or it will only get worse. As far as the only child issue --- make sure to have him around other children his age via playgroups, the park, gymnastics, etc. The more he's around his peers, the more he'll learn to interact appropriately.

M.,
My daughter started acting the same way around 16 months old. I had to fight her to get her diaper changed, get her dressed, take a bath, get in her carseat...just about anything turned into an exhausting ordeal. I did some research and found a few tricks that have worked! Some days I have to try a few to find the one to fit her mood, but things are getting much better. I learned that children this age don't understand action then consequence. So saying if you do this then you'll get this, doesn't quite work yet. But distraction does! Also, children at this age respond very well to singing. So we now have a getting up and getting dressed song. She LOVES it! I just made up a silly tune and some actions and the words change almost daily since I can't remember what I sang the day before. But she sings along with me and dances, and gets dressed without a fuss. I've also gotten to where I give her choices. I ask her which 2 outfits she wants to wear. She seems to really like this and doesnt fight putting her clothes on. With the diaper changes I had to get really creative. She LOVES elmo, so I went and bought a package of elmo panties and when I change her diaper I tell her I am putting her "elmos" on, I then put the panties over her diaper and show her when I get done that she is wearing elmo. I have also gotten her involved in the diaper changes. I give her a wipe and ask her to hand it to m when I am ready. And I talk to her about what we are doing. Walk her through it step by step. We did this with bed time, talking about getting ready and going to bed about an hour before hand. Although I know she has no concept of time we tell her, 10 more minutes, 5 more minutes, then when we tell her it is time, she just goes compliantly. (most nights ;) And finally, there are times when I just have to put her in time out or give her a little pat on her thighs. Overall she has come around quite a bit. Although there are still days where she challanges me, we are getting better and understanding each other, and I let her have some options and control while still being firm. I found alot of my infomation from my step mom and a book on raising a strong-willed child. If you are interested let me know and I will find out the author's name (I just moved and can't seem to locate the book right now) good luck!

Mom, never fight with him. You are doing the things that he needs to have done. When a child fusses because I am changing their pants, I tell them "You don't need to act like that I am helping you" I talk to them very calmly. If they need to get into the car seat, "Safety first" NOT a FIGHT. If I say "NO" thats it. Choose your battles and allow him to respond better. Whatever you choose to stress, stay consistent in how you say it, what you are saying, etc. He will learn with consistency. It always takes two to fight. I hope this helps! K

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