It really think you should do full time daycare. Some of the issue is a cycle. Baby is high needs so mom is always there, can’t do anything else. Baby likes that so gets more high needs. Mom quits job and stays home.
If you had other kids you wouldn’t be able to care for the toddler this way, so theyd learn more self regulation. You also said you had a nanny before. Kids aren’t meant to just be with adults all day. The two year old would enjoy being in a good daycare with other well behaved kids. They learn about others feelings and it’s not all about them. Back in the day this baby would have been in a large family or around cousins. It’s a modern thing that a sahm would have only one child. This was my solution and really my high needs baby changed for the better. I pick her up right after nap and I feel better and she has calmed way way down. |
Exactly. The child is acting like this because she can. It’s getting her what she wants. Fwiw in school she’ll likely act somewhat normal because she’s around peers. If other kids aren’t crying she probably won’t cry and have a tantrum. Even 2 year olds don’t want to embarrass themselves in front of their peers. |
The point is OP does not solve this “dynamic” by leaving the house and ignoring the problem. Yes it will be good for her to get time away. But the issue is much more than the “dynamic” of the overprotective mother that you want to depict. |
This right here! Another solution is to have another baby. |
I disagree. |
Another sad example of someone who believes in “spoiling” a 2 yo |
Np. I left my high needs 2 year old with grandparents that she sees weekly and loves. We only went away for 3 days. For the next year, the toddler screamed anytime the grandparents came over because she thought she was being left with them. They weren’t allowed to hold her. |
Must be nice to see the world through the lens of NT parenting only … you do realize that many challenging kids don’t behave the way you expect. Because that’s the whole thing - they are not typical kids. And no, getting a baby to stop crying through outright neglect is not a good thing. |
She sounds spoiled. Crying over her lunch request and donut demands? Angry because you’re on the phone? Send this kid to daycare asap. |
Wow good for you! You should go into business because you’ll make millions with your solutions. |
Nah. I’ll go to work and be thrilled. |
But OP said: “She will literally cry for hours until and unless you do exactly what she wants.” |
No, ignore this poster. Have an eval instead of trying to walk in the dark. |
Ok OP here. I think this thread got too many comments and too much visibility (my fault, mostly mine responding to helpful suggestions) and so now all the people who don’t have kids like this and are just here to be angry have arrived, so I’m going to stop responding.
Thank you very much to all those who responded helpfully, critically, supportively, etc. |
I actually would. When I was a teen I babysat for kids who wouldn’t eat their dinner. I gave them a few chances and then threw it away. They inevitably asked for more food later and I said no. The parents were shocked. The next time I fed them dinner they ate because they knew I’d throw it away and no more food if they left the table. The parents couldn’t believe they’d sit through dinner for me. |