D.B. asks from Buffalo, NY on February 09, 2009
Time Out - Buffalo,NY
i am having a problem disiplining my 4 year old son. he doesnt listen to myself or his father when we say no. we tell him no and he just does it anyway. i have tried talking rationaly to him and that did not work. i then tried the time outs and he cries we feel bad and take him out of the corner. i dont know what else to do. the doctor and my family tell me he is just spoiled. any advice?
So What Happened?™
thank you everyone for all your responses. i started a sticker reward program with my son and so far so good. for every day he listens and is good (which is alot of the time) he gets a sticker. after 4 days of getting a sticker consistantly he will get a little prize. i did have to put him in the corner once yesterday, but he stayed there and understood why he was in the corner and said sorry when he came out. at school he is great. he loves school and listens perfectly for all his teachers. again thank you for all your responses.
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A.D. answers from New York on February 10, 2009
Hi D.,
I'm glad to see you've decided on a method you think will work. I would just add that when you do need to give him a time out, remember the old 1 minute a year rule, 4 yrs old = 4 minutes in time out. Also, crying is one thing, tantrum-ing is another. For my daughter, the time out doesn't start until she stops throwing a fit. She can cry because she is sad she is being punished, but she can't scream, she has to sit nicely. Good luck!
A.
K.C. answers from Syracuse on February 10, 2009
For a minute I thought I wrote this and didn't know it!! :) I too am the mother of a very energetic 4 year old. He is very sweet and fun but also very mischievous and stubborn. You can't feel bad about him crying in time out. He cries because he knows you are going to let him up when he does. He is going to have to learn who is in charge because from the sound if things, he probably knows it is him. You can also try taking away a favorite toy for a couple of days and give it back when he starts acting better. Stay strong and firm in punishments. Good luck!
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C.R. answers from Syracuse on February 10, 2009
It's hard when your child cries...we all know this, but look at it this way...he needs to follow the rules to be SAFE...not because you want him to. Children at a young age can't tell the difference between the really important rules(like don't play in the street) and the manners rules(don't jump on the sofa)...don't bend...decide what you are going to do for a punishment and stick with it...it will be really hard at first as you've already established a pattern of caving, but stick with it...this is your child we're talking about, not a dog you can take to the pound because it's more than you bargined for...I tell my kids...my job is to keep you safe, fed and hopefully turn you into people who make good decisions later in life....that being said...when he was little it was considered cute when he was fresh, now it's not so cute anymore and the pattern has to change...don't go hard core discpline...but make a chart with things he can see and understand...and include chores!!! Chores help everyone..lil kids want to feel important and helpful, the less you do the more time you get to enjoy your kids...chores need to be age appropriate...set and clear table(even my 2 yearold helps with this)make own bed, put away clothes...I fold them and lace them on each childs bed...they do the rest...sort socks, feed the pet,clean the bathroom(using kid safe cleaners)and so forth...all 5 of my kids do these things...and it'll help with his self esteem and rule following issues as well...also my fav game to play when they are young and don't want to help is the mommy no game...everytime they ask a question I say no I don't want to make your lunch, tie your shoes, wipe your butt, turn on the t.v....whatever and then we talk about my job again and what their job as a child is...to play, have fun, and follow the rules...etc...good luck!!!!
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L.B. answers from New York on February 10, 2009
D.,
Time for tough love sweetie. You have basically asnswered your own question. You say you give him time outs and he cries and you let him out? How is that teaching him anything. All you are teaching him is how to manipulate you two. When you discipline a child it is for his own good and developement. You want him to grow up to be a good person, so these are the things you have to do as a parent. Trust me, no parent likes to see their child cry, but they learn very quickly how to get their way. Next time he acts out, stick to your guns and keep him in time out for 4 minutes. If he gets up, the timer starts again. It will just take a few times for him to get it!
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K.H. answers from Utica on February 10, 2009
Hi D.
Congrats on your lovely family.
I know that today's discipline is time out. I know that it works with some children. I did not have much success with it either, my problem however sounds different than yours. My would get more and more wild til he was kicking out the walls etc, yours sounds like he cries and you can't stand it. I thought the purpose of time out was to let them cool off, calm down, and get control of themselves. Until they stop crying they can't do that, however, if they are never going to stop crying they aren't going to do that. Time out is punishment after all and they don't have to like it.
So is your question how to discipline if you don't use time out. I don't know whether you read an earlier answer to someone's discipline problem that I wrote but my mom helped me tremendously with my situation. This is what it takes:
I had to really get to know my son so I knew what would upset him before it did.
Then I averted the problem.
Which means you have to not be caught up in what you are doing so much that you don't see, hear, or know what is happening else where. You must be on top of things.
This is how it works on my easy example, trust me all were not this easy to figure out because it was my younger son who was difficult to discipline, so I had the influence of the older son.
An hour after our older son got home from school. There was battle royal, every day. It was crazy!!! I never knew who to correct, but mom came. She was there 2 days and said why don't you just feed younger boy and the problem will solve itself. I didn't know how she knew that but I gave the boys a snack, and no more fighting. They did eat their dinner.
When I asked mom how she knew she said it was worth a try --- it worked with you girls.
Warm whether caused one of my boys to get wild, MD said the heat rash. Now I can't change the whether but I can change what we do in the whether, or keep them out of it and in the air conditioning.
You have to figure out the real cause and change that. It is never the cause you think it is. It is not he did, or he said=== however it is often I don't know how, or environmental. Check those first.
Frustration I found to be the biggest problem. Because this child was hyper smart, when he couldn't _____ he would get mad and throw things. Right now I am doing therapy with a K, who does the same thing. His mother is wild with frustration because he breaks stuff: mirrors, doors etc --- I said to him as we worked it is ok not to be able to do things but you have to tell us so we can help you learn. Learning is fun. He doesn't have the vocab to verbalize all so you have to work out the situation but we have a beginning. His mom is amazed that I think he is a good little fellow.
Talking helps tremendously, when you talk ahead of time not in the heat of the problem.
Does that mean you never have to punish -- no of course not but if you avert punishment so it is not an every hour situation you can cope when it happens.
Thanks to Mom I could/can still figure out the situation.
God bless you and give you wisdom as you watch and pay attention to figure out your situation.
Do let me know if it works --- do let me know if you don't understand, and let me help you if you don't.
K. SAHM married 38 years --- adult children - 37, coach; 32, lawyer, married with 6 mo; 18, college student, fine arts 3.7 GPA, on campus; 18, college student, journalism 3.8 GPA living at home. Yup they are twins.
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L.L. answers from New York on February 10, 2009
Ha.........you loose, you took him out of the corner. he's now the boss. I have three children and I will tell you that it is the biggest commitment of life to pick a punishment and stick to it. You are not giving clear messages by letting him out. Your message is you can play us like a flute baby! Not good for you. The kiddie jackpot for him!
I gave my kids time outs in the corner. A minute for each year old they are is the guideline. Do they stay in the corner? NO WAY. This is where the commitment comes in. Each time I gave a time out I had to physically hold them in the corner by standing in back of them for the entire time out. I set the timer and they did not move until it went off. This meant wrestling the first few months. They it was mere blockading the second three. After about 6 months they stood in the corner by themselves. This means that each time you give them a time out you get one too. If all yours does is cry but stays in the corner you are a lucky dog. Cash in on that. If you want a brat in training who will raise the bar and do more because there are no consequences just keep feeling sorry for him. He's not going to feel sorry for you guys. He's gonna say "hot dog.......I'm the one with the power and let the games begin".
Your child could stay in the corner quicker than mine or take longer. So don't freak when I say 6 months because that is my children not yours necessarily.
Oh, you can alter this a bit too. If your child is 5 and you don't want to spend 5 minutes in the corner with them cut it down to two to start out with. Once you are consistant with it and he knows you are not budging any longer you can also threaten to give him a raise in his minutes if he pisses you off or you need more leverage.
Ha...........isn't that neat? I'm alomst feeling like Marie Barrone right now!
Don't like the corner? Just send them to YOUR ROOM for a few minutes. Make sure there is nothing for them to do in there. Even their own room is fine. It's just about the power and who caves in first. Set limits you can handle so you can be consistant without wanting to shoot yourself in the head or give up.
If you love him find something you can commit to and do it consistantly. But think about it long and hard before you even start it. don't rush into anything you can't commit to or.......mixed signals again, and your creditability is even more damaged.
OK, public places. Here is a good one where you won't look like a MEAN ABUSIVE PARENT. When my son acted up I threatened to kiss him to death with lots of lipstick on if he did not behave. (carry a tube in your purse so you can show him the ammo) It worked as a diversion in a funny way. Anyone who overheard it cracked up which releaved the tension and he ended up loving the attention he received by squaking about getting kissed. Hey, let me tell you that my 6th grader (the baby) has a meltdown if I threaten to kiss him in public. When he gets to be too much I tell him that if he does not straighten up I am going to ambush him with kisses in front of the kids at school when he least expects it and he straightens right up. Punishment does not have to be whips and chains........kisses are awesome weapons to a kid too. The older they get the more they freak if you even mention kiss and them in the same sentence.
Ain't life grand?
L.
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J.S. answers from New York on February 10, 2009
Hi D.~
By not keeping him in the corner, you are telling him, basically, that you will not discipline him in any way, shape, or form. The reality is this: you are constantly teaching your children with every single word you speak, every move you make, every act you do and every reaction you have. Not many people understand this, but every single move made by Mom or Dad teaches the child and ultimately helps form their future behavior. My ex called me names therefore, my children did, too. My ex never did anything remotely related to housework and so my son, when he was 8, told me he had no reason to learn to cook or clean because that would be his wife's job and if he didn't marry, he'd live with me so I'd do it for him. As I said, he was 8 years old at the time, his father and I were divorced and his father moved back into his mother's house and has told the courts he has no plans to move. My ex husband will be 41 this year.
Do yourself and your son a huge favor and put him in the corner, put cotton in your ears so you don't hear him crying and let him know, after the punishment is over, you still love him but bad behavior will not be tolerated any longer. Also, 1 minute for every year he is old and keep a timer available so he knows when punishment is over.
Good luck to you and your son.
J.~
J.M. answers from New York on February 10, 2009
I don't mean to sound silly, but have you watched Super Nanny? It's on Friday nights. She is wonderful. I have learned so much by watching her, it's all objective you don't have to do any of what she does, or you can do it all. I try very much to handle my children the way she handles them and my children are pretty well behaved most days.
It's hard when they are this little and learning boundaries and learning about life. I know you feel bad when he is in time out and he cries, but thats part of the learning process for him. It's what is in his best interest (some discipline), he needs to learn now that there are consequences for his actions, and after a while he will be tired of time outs and will start behaving better. If you can't put your foot down now, by the time you can it might be too late and he will already have learned to walk all over you.
No one ever said being a Mom would be easy right?
K.C. answers from Syracuse on February 10, 2009
For a minute I thought I wrote this and didn't know it!! :) I too am the mother of a very energetic 4 year old. He is very sweet and fun but also very mischievous and stubborn. You can't feel bad about him crying in time out. He cries because he knows you are going to let him up when he does. He is going to have to learn who is in charge because from the sound if things, he probably knows it is him. You can also try taking away a favorite toy for a couple of days and give it back when he starts acting better. Stay strong and firm in punishments. Good luck!
N.D. answers from New York on February 10, 2009
Your son needs to learn discipline. He will never be a happy well adjusted member of society if he hasnt learned. It is your duty as a parent to teach him limits and when he misbehaves he needs a consequence. Of course he will cry when in the corner, he isnt getting his own way. But if you are consistent you should notice his behavior improving and a simple waring or three count will be enough to make him listen most of the time. If you dont train him to listen now he will be in for a huge shock when he goes to school and probably hate the experience. If you cant stand his crying turn on your music real loud.
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