11 answers

What's Normal for 26Mo. Old Boy?

My oldest is out of control. Up until recently, he's always been real good with his younger brother. About a week ago he started hitting him, pushing him down, kicking him, and he's even started hitting him or throwing whatever toy he has in his hands at the moment at him. I have tried time-outs, I've tried sitting him in my lap and making him look at me and telling him that's not acceptable(which got me poked in the eye last night), and have even swatted him a couple of times for the worst offensives and NOTHING IS WORKING! My mom suggested the swats because he has to know there are limits. I've tried talking to him and telling him certain behaviors are not acceptable and he laughs at me. A couple days ago, he's started yelling (No that) at me any time I've tried to discipline him. The last couple of days, I feel like he's been in time out half of the day for his bad behavior towards his brother. I also feel like all I ever do is get on to him and yell at him and I know that's not good. Is it only going to get worse since my youngest is about to walk and follows him around all the time? Is this normal behavior? HELP!!!

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

S.,

I think most moms have said this sentence at some point "all I ever do is get on to him and yell at him". It is tough. Each child is different & yes that behavior is normal. Some kids (1 of mine was this way) respond better with positive responses from their mom. When he is being nice to his brother, praise him. Even though he should be all the time, little one are not. Reward him with something or a sticker chart for "helping" his brother with things or "helping" you with brother related things. It may be worth a shot. Good luck!

More Answers

when my son behaves like this (disrespectful to us), we just state "We don't have to be treated like this. I am going in the other room and when you feel you can be respectful to me and my feelings then you can join me". Then I usually go into a bedroom that has a lock on the door. I "lock" myself in so he can't follow me around. It usually takes him about 2 minutes of being by himself to come to the door, knock, and apologize for being disrespectful. Once he apologizes, I open the door, give him a big hug and say "okay, I will come back and play with you as long as you respect me and my boundaries". It works EVERYTIME with my son. We have been doing this for about a year now. He very rarely is disrespectful now. We notice he usually starts behaving disrespectful to us when he is getting sick. But we try to tell him that even if he doesn't feel good he still has to be respectful to others feelings. If you don't feel comfortable going to your room and locking door, you can put him in his room with a baby gate up so he can't get out. that way you can still keep an eye on him and make sure he is not getting into mischief.

1 mom found this helpful

I have 3 boys...I think that just comes with the age, but it's still not OK.  I used to (and still do) make sure that I spend some good 1 on 1 time with each of my boys doing what THEY want to do (not what I think they want to do).  When they were younger, I would just follow their lead.  Sometimes I could do this while the younger was napping, get a sitter for the others, or wait until Dad got home.  It really made a difference for both of us to just be silly and have fun together.  Another piece of advice that works great is to tell him what you want him to do, instead of what you don't want him to do.  If he's hitting his brother, tell him "if you're mad, hit the pillow" Don't say "don't hit your brother".  It really helps a lot-kids only hear part of what you're saying.  Definately try to lay up on the time-outs, it's hard to make something effective when you're using it all day. Hang in there-it will get a little easier (my kids are 8, 6, 4 and they still hit and fight-I think it's the nature of the beast:)) but at least now, they now their limits.

1 mom found this helpful

Yes it's normal...but you are doing the right thing to try to stop it now. You just have to find your way and be consistent. He will probably keep trying you until he can break you...BE CONSISTENT..Don't back down. "This is not okay, go to time out now!" "When you throw toys, you lose them. Bring me the toy." Make sure you aren't giving him more attention for being mean to his brother...
I do the eye contact thing...always have..."Look at my eyes..It is not okay to hit your brother!...Do you understand?" If they look away, I make them regain eye contact and I start again from the beginning...
I have two girls and two boys...Boys are just harder at that age...I'm seeing that change as they get older...I think girls are harder in the teen years...sheesh... Good luck and pray for patients...

1 mom found this helpful

I agree with your mom. Spanking, spanking, spanking. You cannot reason with a child. Foolishness is bound up in their heart.

S.,

I think most moms have said this sentence at some point "all I ever do is get on to him and yell at him". It is tough. Each child is different & yes that behavior is normal. Some kids (1 of mine was this way) respond better with positive responses from their mom. When he is being nice to his brother, praise him. Even though he should be all the time, little one are not. Reward him with something or a sticker chart for "helping" his brother with things or "helping" you with brother related things. It may be worth a shot. Good luck!

I am going to play the devil's advocate here. Have you tried spending more "fun" time with him. It sounds to me like he is jealous of the little brother. I would say that he is acting out for two reasons, #1 he is 2 years old, that is what 2 year olds do and #2 he wants attention and even bad attention is attention. I know how easy it is to put them both down for a nap at the same time. I have been there and done that. But maybe try getting down and playing with him when little brother is sleeping. Take him for a walk when daddy is home and can watch the little one. Have grandma or daddy or a friend watch the baby and take him to the park. I bet you will see a difference.

You should have clear cut rules and consequences. We have a 27 month old and certain things are not tolerated at all. Fits and outbursts get her put to bed, hitting, throwing, saying no, not listening, etc. get two minutes time out on the steps. She knows that once she is in time out she has to sit until the timer goes off and she has to stop crying to be able to get up. We always have a happier child when she comes out of time out. She apologizes and hugs and goes back to good play. You cannot use time out all day long. It has to be a clear cut break in the bad activity. Also if she gets nasty at the dinner table, we push her chair away until she stops what she is doing and then we let her rejoin dinner. All these things seem to work in our house.

Remember all children are different and this too will pass.

You will almost never stop undesirable behavior the first time around--example, one time out, a spanking or whatever. Most discipline takes repeated attempts. Pick a method you feel comfortable with and seems to connect with your child and use it consistently. Also, try to have some just Mom and 2 year old boy time, even if it's 20-30 minutes each day while the other naps. He is probably looking for undivided attention from you.

I would definitly disapline him in a manner that is not a spanking or yelling. Tell him its not something nice to do and put him in his bed and tell him to sit there, even though he won't probably, shut his door so he's alone. than when time out is over, see if he improves. Time outs not working? IT's all about where you put him and how long you keep him there, a minute for each age, my daughter is 2 so two minutes there, my son is five so five minutes, you could just put him in his room and tell him to come out when he's ready to be nice. This could work, but don't scold him when you do, just be blunt, he hits you , pick him up put him in his room and say come out when you want to be nice and leave him there. he will get the idea, don't use warnings, they don't work at this age.

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