Anonymous wrote:OP again. I hesitate to call them tantrums because to my ear that has an implication of willfulness / manipulation, and I don’t think she’s doing it for attention — she just has zero chill, so when she can’t find her shoe or she bonks her head on a chair or something, she immediately becomes EXTREMELY LOUD. And if she just used her words — “Mom, can you peel my banana?” — is happily do it, but when she’s screaming incoherently I don’t know what she wants and couldn’t help if I wanted to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My third kid is almost three and screams. So much screaming. Older siblings got down the stairs faster? Screaming freak out that she’s going to be left behind. No milk in her Cheerios yet (because I’m literally opening the fridge to get it)? Screaming. Sometimes we can’t understand what she’s saying because she’s screaming so incoherently, sometimes we can tell and try to explain that she can have what she wants when she can ask in a nice voice... And when she’s not screaming chances are she’s whining. Despite us being mostly consistent about pretending not to understand a whiny voice.
She’s always been like this. She’s actually way way better than she was at 18 months, when she would spend probably an hour a day in shrieking tantrums on the floor — being able to understand us and to make herself understood definitely help. It doesn’t seem to be sleep deprivation. She’s a cheerful, sweet, funny little person when she’s not absolutely losing her sh*t. Her pediatrician says there’s no medical cause, it’s behavioral/temperamental (she was a fussy baby too), but it’s driving me insane.
Please help.
I would see someone. This doesn't seem quite right.
Anonymous wrote:Put her in her bedroom the minute she starts and tell her she needs to stay there until she stops. Tell her this is the new plan when she is calm. Follow thru every single time.
Anonymous wrote:My third kid is almost three and screams. So much screaming. Older siblings got down the stairs faster? Screaming freak out that she’s going to be left behind. No milk in her Cheerios yet (because I’m literally opening the fridge to get it)? Screaming. Sometimes we can’t understand what she’s saying because she’s screaming so incoherently, sometimes we can tell and try to explain that she can have what she wants when she can ask in a nice voice... And when she’s not screaming chances are she’s whining. Despite us being mostly consistent about pretending not to understand a whiny voice.
She’s always been like this. She’s actually way way better than she was at 18 months, when she would spend probably an hour a day in shrieking tantrums on the floor — being able to understand us and to make herself understood definitely help. It doesn’t seem to be sleep deprivation. She’s a cheerful, sweet, funny little person when she’s not absolutely losing her sh*t. Her pediatrician says there’s no medical cause, it’s behavioral/temperamental (she was a fussy baby too), but it’s driving me insane.
Please help.
Anonymous wrote:What happens if you just let her scream?
Like just go to town, and when she stops deal with her?