Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is almost 5 and will not give up on anything. When I try to help, she gets upset and says I’m distracting her.
Example...yesterday we were at a park with a climbing wall. Dd can’t do it by herself. She doesn’t have the physical strength to make it all the way up. We spent 90 minutes with her trying and falling off every time. I tried offering help, telling her to step back and try something else, telling her which foot holds she could use, encouraging her. She wanted to hear none of it. She finally figured out a path that would allow her to get up all the way with one final nudge from me. Her mood immediately changed and she had a great time. The 90 minutes leading up to that were pure hell and she was upset for most of it.
How do you parent when your kid is really stubborn? Step back and let them do their thing?
Yes. Honestly, she didn't need you there for almost any of those 90 minutes. One or two offers of help would have been sufficient.
I would have been sitting on a bench reading a book and encouraging her from time to time.
Even if the kid is yelling and crying in frustration?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In that case, it's resilience and worthy of praise.
When it's an insistence on the blue cup over the red cup, it's stubborness.
This. 100%
I have a DS that's the exact opposite. He would try for a little bit and then say something like, "I didn't really want to make to the top anyway," and move on to something else. His lack of persistence is so frustrating.
Anonymous wrote:In that case, it's resilience and worthy of praise.
When it's an insistence on the blue cup over the red cup, it's stubborness.
Anonymous wrote:90 minutes at a climbing wall? You were involved waaaaaay too long. You are trying to reason with a 5 year old. In the future, give it 5-10 minutes and go read your book. This is how your DD figures out if/when she needs help from you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is almost 5 and will not give up on anything. When I try to help, she gets upset and says I’m distracting her.
Example...yesterday we were at a park with a climbing wall. Dd can’t do it by herself. She doesn’t have the physical strength to make it all the way up. We spent 90 minutes with her trying and falling off every time. I tried offering help, telling her to step back and try something else, telling her which foot holds she could use, encouraging her. She wanted to hear none of it. She finally figured out a path that would allow her to get up all the way with one final nudge from me. Her mood immediately changed and she had a great time. The 90 minutes leading up to that were pure hell and she was upset for most of it.
How do you parent when your kid is really stubborn? Step back and let them do their thing?
Yes. Honestly, she didn't need you there for almost any of those 90 minutes. One or two offers of help would have been sufficient.
I would have been sitting on a bench reading a book and encouraging her from time to time.
Even if the kid is yelling and crying in frustration?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is almost 5 and will not give up on anything. When I try to help, she gets upset and says I’m distracting her.
Example...yesterday we were at a park with a climbing wall. Dd can’t do it by herself. She doesn’t have the physical strength to make it all the way up. We spent 90 minutes with her trying and falling off every time. I tried offering help, telling her to step back and try something else, telling her which foot holds she could use, encouraging her. She wanted to hear none of it. She finally figured out a path that would allow her to get up all the way with one final nudge from me. Her mood immediately changed and she had a great time. The 90 minutes leading up to that were pure hell and she was upset for most of it.
How do you parent when your kid is really stubborn? Step back and let them do their thing?
Yes. Honestly, she didn't need you there for almost any of those 90 minutes. One or two offers of help would have been sufficient.
I would have been sitting on a bench reading a book and encouraging her from time to time.
+1. Same. And yes, even if they're frustrated. You offer to help, they say "NO I CAN DO IT", then you say "okay let me know if you need me." Then let them do it. She's almost 5, she knows how to ask for help if she wants it. Maybe she would have given up, maybe she would have asked for help, maybe she would have figured it out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is almost 5 and will not give up on anything. When I try to help, she gets upset and says I’m distracting her.
Example...yesterday we were at a park with a climbing wall. Dd can’t do it by herself. She doesn’t have the physical strength to make it all the way up. We spent 90 minutes with her trying and falling off every time. I tried offering help, telling her to step back and try something else, telling her which foot holds she could use, encouraging her. She wanted to hear none of it. She finally figured out a path that would allow her to get up all the way with one final nudge from me. Her mood immediately changed and she had a great time. The 90 minutes leading up to that were pure hell and she was upset for most of it.
How do you parent when your kid is really stubborn? Step back and let them do their thing?
Yes. Honestly, she didn't need you there for almost any of those 90 minutes. One or two offers of help would have been sufficient.
I would have been sitting on a bench reading a book and encouraging her from time to time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is almost 5 and will not give up on anything. When I try to help, she gets upset and says I’m distracting her.
Example...yesterday we were at a park with a climbing wall. Dd can’t do it by herself. She doesn’t have the physical strength to make it all the way up. We spent 90 minutes with her trying and falling off every time. I tried offering help, telling her to step back and try something else, telling her which foot holds she could use, encouraging her. She wanted to hear none of it. She finally figured out a path that would allow her to get up all the way with one final nudge from me. Her mood immediately changed and she had a great time. The 90 minutes leading up to that were pure hell and she was upset for most of it.
How do you parent when your kid is really stubborn? Step back and let them do their thing?
Yes. Honestly, she didn't need you there for almost any of those 90 minutes. One or two offers of help would have been sufficient.
I would have been sitting on a bench reading a book and encouraging her from time to time.
Anonymous wrote:DD is almost 5 and will not give up on anything. When I try to help, she gets upset and says I’m distracting her.
Example...yesterday we were at a park with a climbing wall. Dd can’t do it by herself. She doesn’t have the physical strength to make it all the way up. We spent 90 minutes with her trying and falling off every time. I tried offering help, telling her to step back and try something else, telling her which foot holds she could use, encouraging her. She wanted to hear none of it. She finally figured out a path that would allow her to get up all the way with one final nudge from me. Her mood immediately changed and she had a great time. The 90 minutes leading up to that were pure hell and she was upset for most of it.
How do you parent when your kid is really stubborn? Step back and let them do their thing?
Anonymous wrote:In that case, it's resilience and worthy of praise.
When it's an insistence on the blue cup over the red cup, it's stubborness.