K.K. asks from Lehi, UT on April 28, 2008
Seeking Help with My 2 1/2 Year Old Daughter, Acting Out of Control.
HELP! My daughter is very busy, energetic, she's always on the go. But she is so smart and interested in everything. It is kindof hard because she doesn't stop seriously. She wont even sit down to color for more than a min she wont watch movies she is always into everything. Lately I'm having a really hard time with her attitude, she is constantly crying over everything and throwing fits. She yells at me and tells me no. She has been doing stuff like this since she was about 18 months but the last couple of weeks I feel like she has went nuts. She will not listen she is very dramatic and when ever she doesn't get her way she will make a huge scene and start crying and saying I never get to do ______ or I never get this or that. But she just doesn't mind or listen and she is very impatient, she is just always screaming and crying and throwing tantrums. I don't know what to do she has started throwing things at us and her sister, hitting us, kicking us, biteing us, she told me she doesn't love me or she didn't want me for her mommy. I told her well I love you but if you want a new mommy, we can go get one and she said no I not want a new mommy because I'll never see you never. I've tried everything I can think of like more praise and attention when she does good things. Or focus solely on her and do fun things that she wants. I give her a lot of my time and attention. I take her out to play everyday she has interaction with other kids all the time. I give her things to do with her hands to keep her busy. Me and my husband have both tried to console her time out put her in her room, take toys away ignore her tantrums but it's just getting worse. I don't know what to do, I feel like I'm at my wits end. Help please I need advise, everyone says its the age and it will pass. But I just feel like she is worse than normal and I would like advice on what to do to help us get through this phase.
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A.M. answers from Salt Lake City on April 29, 2008
You've received a lot of good advice but I was also thinking about TV. I don't know how much TV she watches or if you like to have the TV on a lot but I think TV makes a huge impact and most people don't realize it. TV changes scenes so frequently it teaches kids (and adults) to not focus, to overreact, and (if the TV is on all day without people necessarily watching) to ignore people and conversations (which is NOT good when they start school). It's overstimulating and kids have a much harder time calming down from over-stimulation than we adults do. Too many toys and activities do the same thing.
I also like "Love and Logic Magic for the Early Years". It is a very good book.
T.S. answers from Salt Lake City on April 29, 2008
My daughter was just like that when she was that age. When she got out of control I would just put her fully dressed into a cold shower to snap her out of it, then while I helped her change her clothes, we would go over what she did and why and what she could have done better. After a while it just took the threat of a cold shower and she would stop. Now my daughter is a wonderful 13 year old who tells all her friends that I'm her best friend. Much different from the little girl who told me she was going to "dislike me forever!!!"
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W.L. answers from Boise on April 28, 2008
It sounds like you do TOOO much for her and give in too much to her and she has too much control. If you don't react to her bad behavior it will quit. I had a neighbor who's child acted like this but when she came to my house she wouln't. They couldn't figure out why. Well, she knew I wouldn't react to her bad or bossy behavior. I make my children learn to entertain themselves. I will buy them all kinds of things, but they don't run my life. I help them, support them, but I don't allow them to be the center of everything all the time. This is a big burden for children to bare and actually they feel pressure to perform after a while. As far as her saying mean things to you, does she hurt your feelings when she does? She shouldn't be allowed to have enough power to hurt your feelings when she is throwing a fit and being spiteful. You need to let her know that when she is being demanding or mean that you lose all interest in what she wants. Don't reward bad behavior with positive or negitive attention. Just place her away in a corner or her room and make her deal with the fits and bad feelings. When she is done I would make her tell you what she did wrong and say sorry. Then get over it and move on. Good luck...it just gets worse until age 4.5 if not gotten under control.
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E.W. answers from Salt Lake City on April 29, 2008
believe it or not, there is a correct way to do time outs and a wrong way.
When she starts acting out, give her a warning (you must never yell...she will learn that yelling is acceptable, and it isn't). If she continues, put her in timeout and set a timer, 1 minute for each year of age. Don't put her in her room, because that is where she sleeps. If you punish her with her room she won't go to bed at night because it's punishment.
If, during the timeout she continues to scream, ignore it, as long as she stays WHERE you put her. Don't respond to anything she says. Your only objective is putting her where she is supposed to be, then go about working. If she continues to move from where you put her, restart the timer until she stays put for the entire time.
When her time is up, get down on her level (kneel, sit, etc) so you can see eye to eye and explain to her why she was put in time out. Ask for an apology. Hugs and Kisses. This is the format that needs to be used.
Good Luck.
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N.W. answers from Salt Lake City on April 29, 2008
Prevention:
1-meals on time/snacks between meals
2-check for teething - 2 yr molars
3-quiet, soothing music (it sounds like she's over stimulated.)
4-take her out to play every OTHER day instead of every day (this will cut back her stress level.)
5-make a point of smiling at her
6-getting enough sleep
Consequences:
1-TIMEOUT (this is your biggest tool - it'll work the fastest and the best.)
a-"do you need a timeout?" "3,2,1,timeout" (she'll try to negotiate her way out of it "no no, i don't want a time out, i'll do it" don't let her. she can do that BEFORE you're done counting but not after. She needs to learn that she has to make that choice before you finish counting.
b-in 10 words or less tell her why she's going to time out. "we do NOT hit sister, we protect sister." "You're having a tantrum; you need a timeout."
c-put her in time out. if she absolutely refuses to stay in time out, you go in timeout with her to make sure she stays there - you'll only need to go with her about 10 times.
d-leave her in timeout until she calms down/starts calming down. (I do this differently than most people, but I think it works better.)
e-"are you done?...ok, you can come out now. Do you need a hug?" /hug (if she starts having a tantrum/crying send her back)
f-refrain from rediscussing why she was in timeout. She doesn't remember what happened and it'll only upset her.
2-if she does something wrong with one of her toys (refuses to share or hits sister with it,) give her TOY a time out. "that toy's not being nice, it needs a timeout"
3-encourage her to name her feelings: "do you feel angry? frustrated?" and share your own feelings "I feel angry, too."
4-point out her sister's feelings "oh, she's smiling - she likes you - you made her happy" "oh, she's crying. she's sad"
5-When she starts having a problem, ask "do you need a hug?" - sometimes this skips the need for the timeout.
She's pushing her boundaries. If you're strict about the counting down/timeout thing, her behavior will improve in just a few days.
Sorry this was so long. I have a son who'll be 3 next month. He's had some really awful days and this is what returned my sweet boy to me.
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T.S. answers from Salt Lake City on April 29, 2008
My daughter was just like that when she was that age. When she got out of control I would just put her fully dressed into a cold shower to snap her out of it, then while I helped her change her clothes, we would go over what she did and why and what she could have done better. After a while it just took the threat of a cold shower and she would stop. Now my daughter is a wonderful 13 year old who tells all her friends that I'm her best friend. Much different from the little girl who told me she was going to "dislike me forever!!!"
C.M. answers from Denver on April 29, 2008
My son has my temperment. Not a good thing always!
The all around advice I have is to stick to your guns and don't back down. Be firm and loving but most importantly be consistent in what you do. If you are not already, you and your husband need to be a united front. They are so smart and extremely aware of any weaknesses.
You don't have to do everything under the sun to try and fix this either. Keep it simple. Pick a punishment or two as well as a reward or two and focus on those. She'll soon be hip to what's expected of her in the family and will begin to assume her role.
Lastly, watch what she is seeing played out on t.v. and with other kids. There may be a source you can eliminate very easily to help.
C.G. answers from Denver on April 29, 2008
Hi,
I recently took a Love and Logic class (the one geared to kids 6 and under) and it had some really useful info on how to handle toddler behavior. I know it's hard to make the time to take a class that takes several weeks, but they also have a book.
The biggest thing I took away from the class is to start thinking in I vs you sense, or using enforceable statements vs unenforceable statements. For example, if your daughter is acting up because she doesn't want to eat what you have dinner, use an enforceable statement like, I will be serving dinner for the next 15 mintues. This is something you can enforce and if she complains (and it will get worse in the short run) then just keep repeating the phrase and not try and reason with her. She'll come to realize you mean what you say.
The other thing that has really helped with my almost 3 year old to stop the whining is to say something like "I will listen when your voice sounds like mine". I used to say please stop whining, which didn't help.
I would highly recommend taking a Love and Logic class or reading the book. There are other great tips on what to do if they are acting up and you can't use enforecable statements.
J.P. answers from Provo on April 29, 2008
You did not mention her sleep habbits. I'm surprised no one has mentioned the idea of looking into her sleep patterns. I can always tell when my kids (3 1/2 & 2) are tired - they always act out more. You have been given a lot of good advice about disapline, so I won't mention that. I would just suggest looking into two things: her diet (it is amazing how much diet effects behavior!) and her sleep habbits.
Do all the time-out stuff (great post on doing proper time-outs!), setting a schedule she can depend on, but look at her diet and sleep. Is she napping? My daughter is 3 1/2 and still has naps - it helps a ton!!
Like the other poster suggested, do research on foods your daughter may be eating. Eliminating certain things that may have a negative reaction in your daughter may help her quite a bit.
Good luck to you! My mom always says, "This too shall pass." and it will!
A.P. answers from Denver on April 29, 2008
That's why they call it the terrible twos. Say goodbye to cute baby, welcome to toddler world. My advice is not to forget who is the boss here. You are. You are giving way too much control to her. Let her throw her fits. But don't let her get her way. Introduce timeouts. Reward her for good behavior. This, too, soon shall pass--- unless you give in to it. Don't create a monster. Nip it in the bud.
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