Daily Express Prize Crossword Thursday...
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First, the parent must always strive to remain calm. At first, the child will drive you to tears, shouting, perhaps awful words. Well, you're normal, so forgive yourself and work on this. It takes time. The parent must gain control of herself first so that she can teach it to the child. So this does not happen overnight. The parent will have to start catching herself and trying harder to maintain a calmer voice at tantrum time.
Next, the parent should come face level with the little darling she'd like to strangle and in that new calm voice explain the situation. "Elisabeth, we do not throw toys like that. You must stop that immediately. You are in time-out." Face leve is important. It gets their attention much better.
You then put the naughty gnome into time-out or a no-no place. Use a high chair in the boring dining room, or perhaps place her in a corner in the hallway. The point is to separate the child from what she was doing. Don't put her in a high traffic area where she can enjoy watching you and the dog, etc. She needs to be able to hear you (security) but not really enjoy the view. Don't visit with her during her sentence. Don't let others visit with her. She stays in the chair for one minute per year. (Two year olds stay two minutes, 3 yr olds, 3 minutes.) The tots normally get quiet in that length of time. Return to her then and, face level, "Elisabeth, you are in time-out because you were throwing toys. We don't throw toys indoors. You must say you are sorry." She stays in time-out until she does so.
The terrible twos will be around until the child knows there is punishment for doing bad things, and the punishment is not worth doing the bad thing. The terrible part does fade away. The key is for the parents to be absolutely consistent and together on this.
On the hitting issue, this will get you nowhere and stores up bad parent memories for years so cut off the habit as if you are trying to give up smoking, just stop. Always stay calm - this shows you are in control - it may take a LONG time but this will get through to her in the end. Rewards are great so it is good this is used - make sure that if she does what you say after telling her off that you say thank you - mummy is happy she did this.
Biting and hitting is something that has to be dealt with through being calm and making it a complete no-no.
If she pinches you, warn her you will pinch her back if she does it again, then if she does it again, pinch her back. If she bites you, warn her taht if she does it again you will bite her back, then if she does it again bite her back, obviously not stupidly hard but hard enough to let her no that it hurts. This accompanied with firm but reasoned words explaining that she had a warning and that she shouldn't do things to people that she would not like done to her should do the trick.
Hi there,
My friends little boy is exactly the same. He was a little devil, he used to shout and throw things at her. And she came to me and asked for help as I have a 2 year old little girl. And I know this is probably unbelieveable. But she is the most behaved child. She is 2 and says please, thankyou and pardons. She used to throw really bad tantrums and try to hit me and bite me. But know she is an angel. Anyway back to the point in question.
What I did with my little one is as soon as she was naughty. For instance if she was sat next to me then tried to bite me I would simply move away from her and simply ignore her. Don't even look at her. They will be naughty for a bit longer, then they will wonder why mummy is ignoring them. Then they will try to interact with you, with a toy or a book asking you to look at it. Once they are being nice then give them attention again. I told my friend this as well, and now her little boy as an occasional moment. But she does this it lasts 2 mins. Then he stops.
You need to tell your friend to try this, it will be hard for her at first. But a child should never get attention for bad behaviour only for good. And the child will learn this. Children are more intelligent then we think. The listen and learn all the time. Please let me know how you get on. If your friend or yourself need anymore help. Then just ask.
my sister and i both have the same problem but it might sound strange but ours where declared with a medical problem. It was a big relief for us as we both thought we where bad parents.
Try cutting glucose out of her diet. Its expensive to buy the foods but it may be worth it in the end.
It is worth seeing a doctor explaining the situation. pay attention to your childs stumps and sleeping patterns to so you can tell him.
my child has been diagonosed with coeliac disease.
Everything i have read dosen't explain the childs mood etc but the dietician i saw explained it to me.
Is the little girl always hungry etc... Your doctor should be told of this.