Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, I did that as a kid - same exact age and scenario as your DD! I was shocked when my foot went through the wall and I can remember vividly how terrified I was that I had done that. In a weird way it de-escalated my tantrum and my parents could see how scared I got and we all calmed down cThey never punished me for kicking the hole (I was punished for whatever I had been screaming about in the first place) and I still remember it as a moment that reinforced for me that whatever I did, my parents still loved me.
Well, that's a very important message, of course, but since all the PPs have mentioned consequences would be repairing the wall I'm not sure how having to fix what she broke would contradict that. Fixing our mistakes when we make them is just part of life, so I think it's a pretty reasonable (and still loving) reaction.
Loss of computer use would be punishing her for what she was screaming about in the first place, failure to get off the computer when instructed.
I'm the pp who kicked the hole in the wall, and I wasn't trying to say that my parents handled it perfectly or that there should not be consequences - but I did want to share the memory of my parents' reaction 40 years later - I don't remember the specific punishment for my action leading up to kicking the hole, but I do remember how much I felt that I could count on my parents.
Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, I did that as a kid - same exact age and scenario as your DD! I was shocked when my foot went through the wall and I can remember vividly how terrified I was that I had done that. In a weird way it de-escalated my tantrum and my parents could see how scared I got and we all calmed down cThey never punished me for kicking the hole (I was punished for whatever I had been screaming about in the first place) and I still remember it as a moment that reinforced for me that whatever I did, my parents still loved me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, I did that as a kid - same exact age and scenario as your DD! I was shocked when my foot went through the wall and I can remember vividly how terrified I was that I had done that. In a weird way it de-escalated my tantrum and my parents could see how scared I got and we all calmed down cThey never punished me for kicking the hole (I was punished for whatever I had been screaming about in the first place) and I still remember it as a moment that reinforced for me that whatever I did, my parents still loved me.
Well, that's a very important message, of course, but since all the PPs have mentioned consequences would be repairing the wall I'm not sure how having to fix what she broke would contradict that. Fixing our mistakes when we make them is just part of life, so I think it's a pretty reasonable (and still loving) reaction.
Loss of computer use would be punishing her for what she was screaming about in the first place, failure to get off the computer when instructed.
Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, I did that as a kid - same exact age and scenario as your DD! I was shocked when my foot went through the wall and I can remember vividly how terrified I was that I had done that. In a weird way it de-escalated my tantrum and my parents could see how scared I got and we all calmed down cThey never punished me for kicking the hole (I was punished for whatever I had been screaming about in the first place) and I still remember it as a moment that reinforced for me that whatever I did, my parents still loved me.
Anonymous wrote:
No screen time until she works/pays off the wall repair.
Anonymous wrote:She has to pay for (or work to pay off) the supplies to repair the wall, then work under the supervision of an adult to help repair the wall.
Because the tantrum was triggered by conflict over computer use, she would also lose that privilege for a while. Then when she got it back there would be a system of graduated restrictions until she could show she was being responsible about computer use and reacting appropriately to whatever the family rules are for computer time.
+1Anonymous wrote:She has to pay for (or work to pay off) the supplies to repair the wall, then work under the supervision of an adult to help repair the wall.
Because the tantrum was triggered by conflict over computer use, she would also lose that privilege for a while. Then when she got it back there would be a system of graduated restrictions until she could show she was being responsible about computer use and reacting appropriately to whatever the family rules are for computer time.
Anonymous wrote:She gets to repair the hole, can I get an amen?