Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to teach your child to be generous and to set boundaries.
Talk with her about the need to be kind to her cousin and share. Help her identify the toys she isn’t willing to share and put them away before the visit. Maybe make her bedroom off limits.
Teach her a script for both the cousin and for you if the cousin takes something she doesn’t want to share. For example “cousin, that toy is special to me and I don’t want to share it right now.” And if that doesn’t work, she should have a script for coming to you “I don’t want yo share the Barbie, can you help me put it away?”
Fwiw I expect my kid to share her toys with visitors especially if she’s had a chance to remove anything too precious. But I would try to have an escape hatch as well, assuming it doesn’t get abused (every toy definitely can’t be unshared).
This has nothing to do with your in laws.
Fwiw we travel to our in laws for holidays so it’s never at our house. My MIL created an easter egg hunt last spring and everything my daughter found my cousin said she wanted and my MIL told my daughter to guve her cousin. So yeah… it kind of does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take whatever it is back and hand it to your kid. If cousin has a tantrum, not your problem.
This is what I'd do too. "Oh Lydia, Hannah was playing with this. Here you go Hannah."
+1. Stand up for your kid. Don;t let the entitled cousin be indulged further-it'll just make their behavior worse. Even if they have ASD they need to learn to function appropriately in social settings and society in general.
Wth to all the suggestions to put defending herself on the 4yo? It's obvious the gparents and cousin's mother are enabling the cousin and supportive of cousin's behavior, which means they are siding with the cousin which the daughter is aware of. You don't ask a 4yo to defend themself against another 4yo and at least three adults. Don't create a doormat and bully dynamic. Those roles tend to stick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take whatever it is back and hand it to your kid. If cousin has a tantrum, not your problem.
This is what I'd do too. "Oh Lydia, Hannah was playing with this. Here you go Hannah."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Put away or dont bring anything you don't want to share.
+1
Don't take a toy back and give it to your kid. At 4 she needs to start learning how to speak up and self advocate. Give her a script like I'm still playing with that you, and you can play with it when I'm done
This. You can both intervene AND give your child a script. For a 4yr old, practice “I’m not done” and “still my turn”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Put away or dont bring anything you don't want to share.
+1
Don't take a toy back and give it to your kid. At 4 she needs to start learning how to speak up and self advocate. Give her a script like I'm still playing with that you, and you can play with it when I'm done
Anonymous wrote:Put away or dont bring anything you don't want to share.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to teach your child to be generous and to set boundaries.
Talk with her about the need to be kind to her cousin and share. Help her identify the toys she isn’t willing to share and put them away before the visit. Maybe make her bedroom off limits.
Teach her a script for both the cousin and for you if the cousin takes something she doesn’t want to share. For example “cousin, that toy is special to me and I don’t want to share it right now.” And if that doesn’t work, she should have a script for coming to you “I don’t want yo share the Barbie, can you help me put it away?”
Fwiw I expect my kid to share her toys with visitors especially if she’s had a chance to remove anything too precious. But I would try to have an escape hatch as well, assuming it doesn’t get abused (every toy definitely can’t be unshared).
This has nothing to do with your in laws.
Fwiw we travel to our in laws for holidays so it’s never at our house. My MIL created an easter egg hunt last spring and everything my daughter found my cousin said she wanted and my MIL told my daughter to guve her cousin. So yeah… it kind of does.
Anonymous wrote:You need to teach your child to be generous and to set boundaries.
Talk with her about the need to be kind to her cousin and share. Help her identify the toys she isn’t willing to share and put them away before the visit. Maybe make her bedroom off limits.
Teach her a script for both the cousin and for you if the cousin takes something she doesn’t want to share. For example “cousin, that toy is special to me and I don’t want to share it right now.” And if that doesn’t work, she should have a script for coming to you “I don’t want yo share the Barbie, can you help me put it away?”
Fwiw I expect my kid to share her toys with visitors especially if she’s had a chance to remove anything too precious. But I would try to have an escape hatch as well, assuming it doesn’t get abused (every toy definitely can’t be unshared).
This has nothing to do with your in laws.
Anonymous wrote:Take whatever it is back and hand it to your kid. If cousin has a tantrum, not your problem.