18 answers

Terrible 3'S.....

I am looking for some advice on behavior at the 2 1/2 - 3 yr age. My daughter will be 3 at the end of this month, but I am not sure if either one of us will make it. I find myself (or feel like) I am yelling all of the time, always having to repeat myself to get her to do anything. She screams or throws a fit at the slightest thing. She does things deliberately after I tell her not to. I have used Time Outs and spanking, sorry have had to resort to it, I keep my cool but eventually I explode, which happened today and I just don't want it to happen again, I feel so guilty for getting upset and she is upset and it just is terrible. We always make amends, but I just want her to listen to me. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!

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So What Happened?™

FYI - i hit my local library (Daniel Boone) and found books on behavior, manners....one is NoBunny's Perfect, and it discusses bad bunny behavior and good bunny behavior. We read it every night and use the 'bad bunny-good bunny' analogy daily and it is really helping!!! I have found using books does the trick a lot of the time. We used 'Hands Are Not For Hitting' and it helped too, as well with her holding my hand to cross the street b/c it tells you what to use your hands for. Thanks everyone - : )

Featured Answers

Try to imagine being that (almost) 3-year-old. Life is a game. Life is fun. Life is a learning process. I have learned that if I do *this* or *that* I can get Mommy to have a fit! It is so much fun! Look at her! I am controling her! Look at what I can do! Look at what I can get her to do!

Solution: set limits and be consistent. Everyone needs boundaries, especially children. They are supposed to test them to see how far they can go. If it is a different place each time, if the boundaries are flexible, it teaches them instability. This causes frustration for you both.

1 mom found this helpful

I so know what you are going thru. I have 4 yr old twin boys and a 3 yr old boy. We are still dealing with tantrums in all 3. I too have become the screaming crazy lady at Walmart. I try not to be but sometimes is just get to be too much. You are not alone. I did read an article online the other day that has helped me. it was about how small children process information. it may seem like they are not listening but they are actuall storing the info for later use. and it may take several times of repeating an action before they comprehend the results of their actions before they actually do them.so an older child will go get their coat if you tell them it cold outside. a small child will run out the door, realize it is cold, then go get their coat. when my kids are not listening i try to think about that before i react. i have seen this in action. after spending weeks trying to get my kids to understand why they can't empty all the clothes out of their dresser and punishing them everyday they finally got it. i actually heard one twin tell the other not to take the clothes out because mommy will get mad and they would get in trouble. from that point, no more dragging out all the clothes. so there is hope.

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wow, that's a lot of activities for a 3 year old! As for the behavior, the louder she gets- the quieter you should become. That's the wisest parenting info I've ever been given.

I say very quietly, "when you can speak to me in a nice manner, then we will discuss your behavior". I sit down & quietly do something of my own choice. Yelling, trying to correct the behavior in the heat of the moment....just allows your child to feed off your negative energy. If she's truly overboard, then just clearly state "when you are in control of yourself, we will discuss this matter. Until then you have to sit in time-out". Remaining calm is hard, but in the end, you are actually modeling the behavior you wish to receive from her!

This principle works the same way the old grocery store tricks works: if your child acts out in public, then you leave the store & go home. On the next trip, either your child doesn't go or is allowed to go with firmly-set behavior expectations in place. After a few go-rounds, you should see a definite improvement!

All this testing is a normal part of parenting. It truly does drive us over the edge, & will continue (in varying degrees) until adulthood. Yuck!! From the time my older son was 18 months until almost age 3, I had a muscle twitch in one cheek...it was the only outward "tell" of his toll on my peace of mind. My Mom & Sis still tease me about it!

3 moms found this helpful

Oh girl, been there, and can give you some hope. My daughter turned 4 in Jan and it is getting better. You do not have to apologize for spanking your child. I personally think its healthier than letting a child walk all over you or letting them get their way all of the time. Be consistant in your disipline, but realize her age. Sometimes when you tell her to do something, like cleaning or whatever, she may forget. Or you have her doing too much, she will also forget. Sometimes I just catch my daughter doing things on purpose that she knows is very wrong, and sometimes its just for attention. Some things that have helped me is, NAPTIME!! If your child still requires a nap, its not just an option. If for some reason she doesnt get a nap, you can expect for behavior to be unpleasant. If we are going somewhere I have a talk with her before we go. Birthday parties- I explain to her the behavior I expect from her and tell her the consequences of what will happen of she acts up. Sometimes after the talk all I have to do is give her a look or say remember what we talked about? And she straightens up. In my opinion its a lot better than screaming like a hag in front of everyone (Im guilty of it) but vowed to stop it! Shopping- same thing, talk to her before you go, bring whatever you think she will need. And some people will disagree, but if your child will be shopping with you all day, they do deserve a reward if they are good. I mean how boring is shopping for a 2 year old? You could bribe her, if shes good for this, you will give her that. Hey whatever works right? And it does!!! Some say bribing is bad, but those are the people with the screaming kids when you go out to eat. As far as the picky eating, Im over it! It used to drive me absolutely nuts! But then I realized that some of this stuff I JUST started liking myself, how do you expect a 3 year old like it. Feed her something healthy she will eat and be done with it. I also know there are just somethings I just cant do while I have my daughter with me, and save it for when daddy gets home. That way we get a break from each other. Anyways enough of that. But I will tell you, my daughter is MUCH better than she was at your daughters age. Hope that cheers you up. Its hard at first when your precious little baby turns into an opinionated 14 year old over night, but you will get used to it, and it will get better! Until of course, she is actually 14! ;)

3 moms found this helpful

My husband and I have used time-outs, but we do them in a different way than what I have heard. Instead of doing the "1 minute for every year" method, we put the kids in a corner, sitting down, and when they are ready to listen and behave, that is when they are allowed to come out. Then we get down to their eye level and repeat why we put them in time out, and finish with a big hug and lots of love. Sometimes my daughter is in time out for 30 seconds, sometimes she is in there for 10 minutes, it is up to her and her attitude. If it gets really bad and out of control and it doesn't seem like she is calming down with a temper-tantrum, we will put her in her room and shut the door behind us. Then, once she cools down, she can come out. We are trying to instill in her that she has the ability and the choice to control her actions and emotions. It has really seemed to work and my daughter just turned 3. We have already started on my son, who is 20 months, but he is a bit more bull-headed and stubborn so he usually ends up in his room with the door shut for a few minutes, although I am starting to see an improvement already.

2 moms found this helpful

Try to imagine being that (almost) 3-year-old. Life is a game. Life is fun. Life is a learning process. I have learned that if I do *this* or *that* I can get Mommy to have a fit! It is so much fun! Look at her! I am controling her! Look at what I can do! Look at what I can get her to do!

Solution: set limits and be consistent. Everyone needs boundaries, especially children. They are supposed to test them to see how far they can go. If it is a different place each time, if the boundaries are flexible, it teaches them instability. This causes frustration for you both.

1 mom found this helpful

Hi...
I don't really have any solutions to your problems, but wanted to let you know you are not alone. Whoever said it was the terrible twos was wrong, it's definately the terrible threes. My four year old went through them and now my almost three year old (b-day in one week) is going through them. For me, it just paseed eventually....I use time outs and some spanking too-you aren't alone on that either! It's better now, but we have some boughts of terible fours now! Anyway, I hope you find some good advice and good luck!
D.

Oh my goodness I think you could have taken those words directly out of my mouth. I have a 3 1/2 year old and were going through the same exact thing. I will tell him 3 or 4 times to do something and he won't until I yell or threaten with a spanking. And I feel like I'm constantly yelling all day long just to get him to do the smallest things. It drives me crazy. I'm sorry I don't have any advice for you on how do deal with it because I'm stuck in the same situation. So maybe I can read some of your reply's for myself. I just wanted to let you know your not alone and let's hope it's "just a phase" as everyone likes to always tell me. Good luck.

I so know what you are going thru. I have 4 yr old twin boys and a 3 yr old boy. We are still dealing with tantrums in all 3. I too have become the screaming crazy lady at Walmart. I try not to be but sometimes is just get to be too much. You are not alone. I did read an article online the other day that has helped me. it was about how small children process information. it may seem like they are not listening but they are actuall storing the info for later use. and it may take several times of repeating an action before they comprehend the results of their actions before they actually do them.so an older child will go get their coat if you tell them it cold outside. a small child will run out the door, realize it is cold, then go get their coat. when my kids are not listening i try to think about that before i react. i have seen this in action. after spending weeks trying to get my kids to understand why they can't empty all the clothes out of their dresser and punishing them everyday they finally got it. i actually heard one twin tell the other not to take the clothes out because mommy will get mad and they would get in trouble. from that point, no more dragging out all the clothes. so there is hope.

Scream-free Parenting, I think the author was Edward Runkel. It doesn't give a simplistic method, but lots of material to think about and learn from. It definitely changed my parenting, and we are all better off for it.

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