Anonymous wrote:Giving her other ways to be involved with baby might help. My son liked getting things for baby like a clean diaper, paci, blanket, etc. That might be a way to redirect when she's getting too aggressive.
Little one will be giving it back soon enough. My 15mo full-on tackles his big bro (4) now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you just have to keep consistently re-directing, and encouraging the toddler to be gentle, and to notice how the baby is communicating distress.
Remind yourself that toddlers are going to “toddler”, and that as both of them get older, the baby will be less vulnerable and the toddler will have an older child’s understanding re: how babies should —and should not —be treated.
Reading your post, I had the feeling that you’re hoping there’s a different magic strategy or that the toddler will somehow “get it”. There is not. Most toddlers need lots of repetition and adult supervision and interventions for pretty much everything, and this is no different. It’s great that your older daughter loves her sister. It’s going to take a lot of interaction and instruction and redirecting— until both kids are a bit older.
Thank you! I think I'm just exhausted and this reassurance that this is normal is really helpful. It's hard to feel like we're doing the right thing when nothing changes, but I will focus on the short term of keeping everyone safe and separated when necessary, and praising positive interactions when I see them, and not worry for now about the fact that my toddler doesn't seem to be changing in the short term and trust this will get easier with time.
Anonymous wrote:I think you just have to keep consistently re-directing, and encouraging the toddler to be gentle, and to notice how the baby is communicating distress.
Remind yourself that toddlers are going to “toddler”, and that as both of them get older, the baby will be less vulnerable and the toddler will have an older child’s understanding re: how babies should —and should not —be treated.
Reading your post, I had the feeling that you’re hoping there’s a different magic strategy or that the toddler will somehow “get it”. There is not. Most toddlers need lots of repetition and adult supervision and interventions for pretty much everything, and this is no different. It’s great that your older daughter loves her sister. It’s going to take a lot of interaction and instruction and redirecting— until both kids are a bit older.
Anonymous wrote:"DD1 I can not allow you to hug DD2 like that. I need to stop you to keep her safe". Then STOP HER. Remove the baby, remove the 3 year old, whatever it takes.
Do this every time.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you are aggressively policing "boundaries" for your infant. An infant does not require boundaries. If your toddler does something that affects your infant's safety, step in. Your infant is not asking for space. Stop projecting. You don't need to put them in separate rooms and there's no reason she can't touch her sister. There's something really off about your post. You don't need to "hold boundaries" between a 7 month old and a 2 year old unless the 2 year old is injuring the infant.