Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We started timeout at 18 mos so yes.
I would say NO in a serious voice and make her sit on the floor or the bottom stair for one minute. Then I would tell her she could get up again when the minute was up.
I know all kids and families are different and I legit don’t judge but no study has shown time outs to be effective discipline and they can be kind of bad for emotional health. Maybe important for the parent to be able to cool down though.
I am the PP and it worked for us. I acknowledge its only one kid but it worked. When she was 2 and3 I could take her anywhere, restaurant etc and she would be well behaved.
Redirect their attention. That's the best you can hope for at that age. Don't smack his hands -- that will damage your relationship and not help with behavior at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We started timeout at 18 mos so yes.
I would say NO in a serious voice and make her sit on the floor or the bottom stair for one minute. Then I would tell her she could get up again when the minute was up.
I know all kids and families are different and I legit don’t judge but no study has shown time outs to be effective discipline and they can be kind of bad for emotional health. Maybe important for the parent to be able to cool down though.
Anonymous wrote:If so, how?
Every time we try to get serious, make eye contact and tell him “no”, or grab him sternly away from a situation, or try timeout, he literally laughs and thinks it’s a game a keeps doing what he was doing.
I’ve even lightly slapped his hands and he laughs.
Thoughts/tips?
Anonymous wrote:We started timeout at 18 mos so yes.
I would say NO in a serious voice and make her sit on the floor or the bottom stair for one minute. Then I would tell her she could get up again when the minute was up.
Anonymous wrote:Don't hit him unless it's a safety issue (he's about to stick a fork in a light socket). He's too young for timeout. If he does something he's not supposed to, you say no, and you redirect. Every time. You will be doing it over and over and over and over again. For years. Consistency is key.