Clearly, maturity does not come with age or parenthood. You all need to get some perspective. Rough handling & constant verbal abuse of a 3 year old child by a parent is inexcusable. Period. No exceptions. |
Yes, singing definitely helps! I have a 15 year old complex special needs child - still in a diaper overnight. He has some behavioral challenges - one being getting ready in the morning. I make up silly words to nursery rhymes he likes or make up a silly song about his teacher. I do this EVERY DAY but it works. It redirects him and makes getting ready fun and makes me enjoy the process more myself knowing he doesn't respond to "ok, time to get ready" or "we have to get ready right now" like I can usually do with my other children |
NP.
Wow, people who think this is abhorrent child abuse must come from the most wonderful privileged of upbringings. Bless you. This behavior is not okay and definitely can cause some harm to your child and particularly if it continues and/or increases, as I am sure you are well aware. I grew up in a very loving family of uneducated, traditional folks who I learned over time had mixed upbringings of abuse and/or no emotions. My parents were determined to not be that way, but they still spaniels us, had short fuses, got Angry over things like spilled milk, etc. it took me years, about 37 of them, to realize this is not normal adult behavior, but also that they loved and did their very best with us. As a parent now for three years, I see similar tendencies for me to be short fused and angry and have even roughly grabbed my child once. Granted he was sitting on my newborn. Either way, yes I have my own issues to work through but I’m much better than my parents who are much better than theirs. As long as your spouse acknowledges and is trying to work on this and doesn’t get worse you can get through this. I appreciate all the helpful tips for me as well! |
As someone who had an abusive father, I agree with this. |
oh irony alert. ^PP called it abuse. I said this is not abuse, but no where did I say it was excusable. CPS wouldn't consider "rough handling a few times" as abuse. Give me a break. |
This is not even slightly OK. You need to take your child out of the situation immediately. |
If he’ll commit to parenting classes that would be a good start. Otherwise he probably can’t have them alone. |
OP here, yeah my spouse is like this sometimes, fighting over things that don't matter. He is also really good at playing with DD sometimes. I like the whispering approach, I have tried it and sometimes it works. |
Singing also helps with the regulation of the vagus nerve, which will help calm everyone down. |
My DH struggled (and still somewhat does) with this too. It's really hard and I hated that we had to deal with it, but I love him and knew this was a consequence of him struggling with the overwhelm and overstimulation of parenting. Reading about the effects of yelling did help a lot, he genuinely did not realize how damaging it could be. He grew up with a father who is great and not abusive but has a temper so he honestly just thought that was how you discipline a child. The Big Little Feelings course helped a lot too. I also did at one point have a very serious conversation with him about how it couldn't continue without a serious effect on our marriage and our future. I did this in a calm moment once everyone had calmed down and we were alone. |
Mad mom PP here. When I yell, it is absolutely due to overstimulation; discordant noise really sets me on edge and there's a heck of a lot of that in the toddler stage. That doesn't make my reaction ok but it's crucial to acknowledge one's triggers. I specifically will put airpods in with low music sometimes just to dull the kid noise in the house because it's bothering me. Or suggest something DC *can* do, that's still fun but not as noisy. |
That is not normal - he is clearly struggling to handle typical toddler frustrations in a healthy way. You need to jointly figure out a more healthy way to parent your child - his emotions and actions NEED to be more measured and compassionate than a toddler. It's our job as parents to do so. He is harming his relationship with your child. |
Np, but Calling the guy “abusive” and keeping her away from her FATHER is far more abusive than anything OP mentioned. Ridiculous. |
Parenting classes |