OP if you are in the DC area, look into this parenting class, Parent-Child Journey: An Individualized Approach to Raising Your Challenging Child. It was very helpful for us.
http://www.parentchildjourney.com/journey/ |
I think some kids are really, really hard and in that case, you need all the help (parenting education, hands-on help, as much patience as you can find, taking care of yourself) as you can get. My oldest (DS) was and is a super easy kid. Like really, really easy. Then we had DD. She is a completely normal kid, but compared to DS, who was at the other extreme, seems a lot harder.
And remember too, that it's not forever, someday she will be an adult! |
Wait until she turns thirteen. You will want to kill her. |
Prioritize your marriage. Marriage comes first.
Hire a baby sitter for each Saturday night. Tip the baby sitter extra if 4 year old tantrums/cries all night. You and your husband deserve a night out once a week. |
This!! My now 8yo is generally well behaved, but the TV always, ALWAYS lead to tantrums when it was turned off. Even now at 8, it causes problems so we’ve cut out all screen time during the week. |
Huh? When my 4 year old isn’t with me she’s in preschool and her teachers only have good things to say about her behavior. When she has babysitters or play dates at a friends house, I always ask the adult how it went. All of them only have positive things to say about her behavior. I really doubt there’s a conspiracy amongst her teachers, babysitters and other parents to hide bad behavior. What a strange comment. |
I haven't read through this whole thread, Op. But one thing that keeps preschoolers on an even keel is a predictable schedule. Get up at the same time every day, eat breakfast, have active time, eat lunch, have some quiet time to read/play/watch/color/watch t.v., then more active time. Dinner, bath, stories, bedtime.
That's only an example. Little kids this age do best when they get plenty of sleep and predictable, regular active time (bike riding, going to the park, preschool, etc). |
Kids don't come with a parenting manual. Sometimes. They are just easy and any kind of parenting works, sometimes through trial and error or an approach you read about you find a way, other times you need expert input to help figure out how best to parent this child. And you have to accept that what your child needs may run completely counter to what your natural parenting style is or what your philosophy on parenting is. You have to figure out what works for this kid.
Something at school works. She is regulated there. Is it structure, boundaries, clear expectations, following other kids? Talk to her teachers and see what they do. It may not be fully transferable to home but will give you ideas. I would definitely work with someone. This dynamic is having a significant impact on your life and some expert input can improve this for everyone. It is no fun for the child either to feel so angry or out of control. Getting help doesn't in any way mean you aren't a good parent, it is just an important resource to figure out what a healthy parenting approach is for this child. |
You sound like parent of the year. |
Well I have three children, and one of them is acting like this. Not spoiling any of them. Perhaps you just lucked out in the lottery. But please, go ahead and call yourself a superior parent. I'll roll my eyes at you. |
Read the book 1,2,3 magic and do it relentlessly. Make sure DH does it too. |