Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your immediate reaction to her hitting or screaming?
I try for all the stuff that the books say -- emotional validation and setting clear boundaries.
Stay calm myself, hold her, talk through it, help her calm down.
The problem is that sometimes my own thoughts about me (or her) being messed up, broken, or a failure make this impossible and then I'll scream myself or say something mean like "You are such a terrible kid". Which is why I posted asking what good parents with difficult kids tell themselves in their heads to avoid losing their cool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dr. Becky talks a lot about the deeply feeling kids. You need to catch her BEFORE she hits and remove her. It's not fair to her sibling to get hit all the time.
Also, remember to keep her from getting too tired, too hungry/thirsty - those will help with regulation of moods.
OP here. Yes, we read Dr Becky. Of course the #1 goal is prevention, but sometimes I fail. And this is exactly the rabbit hole I go down -- "I'm trying so hard to do it right, to prevent it, to keep a schedule, avoid her being hungry/thirsty/tired, while also working FT and getting dinner on the table and trying to parent my other kid and taking care of my health. And I am still failing."
So when I fail, I tend to start falling apart myself and screaming or a couple times being too physical with her (when I'm holding her or separating her physically) because in my head, I'm catastrophizing. So I just was hoping someone could help tell me what good parents think when in the midst of these situations so I do not feel like an absolute failure (and don't feel like there's something wrong with my kid). I literally have not seen any healthy examples of parenting a difficult kid and want to learn from others.
Anonymous wrote:What’s your immediate reaction to her hitting or screaming?
Anonymous wrote:Dr. Becky talks a lot about the deeply feeling kids. You need to catch her BEFORE she hits and remove her. It's not fair to her sibling to get hit all the time.
Also, remember to keep her from getting too tired, too hungry/thirsty - those will help with regulation of moods.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a highly emotional, deeply-feeling mom with a highly emotional, deeply-feeling 5-year-old.
She has intense tantrums more often than most kids. She still hits me and older sibling when upset (not all the time, but several times a week). Parenting her can be hard because I have to be "on" so much - watching for when she starts getting escalated, quickly de-escalating the emotional climate to avoid a tantrum, teaching and reinforcing emotional regulation skills (while also working really hard to keep myself calm). And also coaching older sibling and playing interference when she sets the little one off with teasing or whatever.
DD doesn't have any diagnoses and does well at school, on playdates, and with grandparents, so I don't think there's anything to fix - this is just the kid I got, which is not shocking given that my mom and I are both the same way.
I have read a ton, I've been to therapy, but I still struggle when my husband or I are not able to prevent the tantrum and she does hit or scream. My inner voice immediately says "You (or your husband or your kid or your whole family) is bad, messed up, a failure. No matter how hard you try, your kid is hitting and screaming regularly. Normal kids her age do not do this. This is hopeless."
I am wondering what a healthy alternative script would be given that I can't change the reality: the major tantrum is happening, most kids have grown out of this by age 5 but mine hasn't, and my dream of having a happy, calm, positive family is not possible. So what do I tell myself in these situations?
It sounds like she's able to hold it together temporarily in other settings but that doesn't mean she wouldn't get a diagnosis.
Suggest you read the book The Explosive Child.
But I do use some of the techniques there. I have consulted a therapist and her pediatrician too. Anonymous wrote:I am a highly emotional, deeply-feeling mom with a highly emotional, deeply-feeling 5-year-old.
She has intense tantrums more often than most kids. She still hits me and older sibling when upset (not all the time, but several times a week). Parenting her can be hard because I have to be "on" so much - watching for when she starts getting escalated, quickly de-escalating the emotional climate to avoid a tantrum, teaching and reinforcing emotional regulation skills (while also working really hard to keep myself calm). And also coaching older sibling and playing interference when she sets the little one off with teasing or whatever.
DD doesn't have any diagnoses and does well at school, on playdates, and with grandparents, so I don't think there's anything to fix - this is just the kid I got, which is not shocking given that my mom and I are both the same way.
I have read a ton, I've been to therapy, but I still struggle when my husband or I are not able to prevent the tantrum and she does hit or scream. My inner voice immediately says "You (or your husband or your kid or your whole family) is bad, messed up, a failure. No matter how hard you try, your kid is hitting and screaming regularly. Normal kids her age do not do this. This is hopeless."
I am wondering what a healthy alternative script would be given that I can't change the reality: the major tantrum is happening, most kids have grown out of this by age 5 but mine hasn't, and my dream of having a happy, calm, positive family is not possible. So what do I tell myself in these situations?