Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are they interacting when he's not hitting? How old is the baby? Are you getting him involved with the baby? (Bringing you a blanket or binky, picking out a book, etc.)
OP here. The baby is ten months and crawling. He says he doesn’t like her and has never wanted to be involved with her. He’s only shown a protective or caring moment when we first started feeding her and he’d say, “she doesn’t like that! Stop giving it to her!”
She wants everything he’s playing with and we stop her and tell her that he’s playing with x right now. He also has cars and beloved stuffed animals in his room that she can never play with. They will roll the ball to each other but that’s about it. We are very fair about taking turns. We tried reading to them together but she annoys him and won’t sit still. If I am playing with her, he wants whatever we’re playing with.
Rolling the ball together is a great start! Maybe you already do, but everytime she smiles or laughs, I would reinforce to him how much she likes him. She's smiling because she loves being with him, she's not just a sister but his friend, etc.
Also, maybe if he was interested in telling you what she didn't like then, he might be interested in telling you about other things she doesn't like? I might start by just asking about everything. If baby wiggles away during reading time, before you move her, perhaps ask your son about it, "I don't sister likes this book, what do you think?'
Hitting may be common, but I think if you can get him a little more involved, it may lessen a bit.
Anonymous wrote:You're describing a routine where he gets jealous of the baby, which will happen no matter how much attention he gets, and then does something that shifts all the attention to him. I'm guessing you're stopping playing with the baby to walk him to his room, make sure he's sitting, and then you're talking about it afterwards? That's a powerful reinforcer.
When it happens pick up the baby, go somewhere else and do something fun. Don't explain. Don't talk to him at all. Just say "Let's go somewhere safe" to the baby and leave. In a minute, when he rejoins, let him as long as he stays safe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are they interacting when he's not hitting? How old is the baby? Are you getting him involved with the baby? (Bringing you a blanket or binky, picking out a book, etc.)
OP here. The baby is ten months and crawling. He says he doesn’t like her and has never wanted to be involved with her. He’s only shown a protective or caring moment when we first started feeding her and he’d say, “she doesn’t like that! Stop giving it to her!”
She wants everything he’s playing with and we stop her and tell her that he’s playing with x right now. He also has cars and beloved stuffed animals in his room that she can never play with. They will roll the ball to each other but that’s about it. We are very fair about taking turns. We tried reading to them together but she annoys him and won’t sit still. If I am playing with her, he wants whatever we’re playing with.
Anonymous wrote:OP this is normal, and the solution is to prevent him from hurting her because impulse control is still something a 2 year old struggles with.
We put a gate up at this age and the baby got his own space so he wasn't always getting into his older brother's stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Have you thought about a childcare arrangement that allows him to be away from the baby? Perhaps he needs to engage socially with people other than your immediate family? He is obviously having a difficult time adjusting to a new sibling and outside simulation might help.
Also, time outs don't work. I say this as an early childhood teacher. The kid just sits there and thinks about how much you suck. Plus, it tells them that when they have big feelings they get sent away, which in turn creates more big feelings and shame.
Anonymous wrote:Is he getting enough attention from YOU? You can't just pawn him off onto other people while you coo over the newborn and assume he's not going to be jealous of all the attention you're lavishing on that new baby.
Anonymous wrote:How are they interacting when he's not hitting? How old is the baby? Are you getting him involved with the baby? (Bringing you a blanket or binky, picking out a book, etc.)