Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the heck? Why are you making them decide? Just decide without asking and tell them that’s what you’re doing or where you’re going.
This reminds me of how my sister used to ask her three or four year old, “what do you want to eat for dinner?” I remember my niece pointing to a bottle of syrup in the refrigerator. My sister looked at me with an exasperated expression like can you believe she wants her for dinner? I wanted to be like, don’t ask your three-year-old what she wants for dinner. Just give it to her.
OP here. That's not what I ask them. It's not that broad. Instead of “what do you want to eat for dinner?” I ask- Would you like broccoli or green beans?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to make them be a team. Ours fight too (of course!) but they are pretty cute together. usually we just remove ourselves and make them figure it out. In your park example I suppose you could do what a PP suggested or you could say super casually “oh kids, we are going to a park in an hour, you two figure out where we should go.” Then walk away. When they squabble, casually say “you guys are good at solving problems. I know you will figure it out.” Then leave again.
This works for all sorts of compromise situations. Sometimes you will have to broker “hmm sounds like you really can’t agree… hmm… what could we do…” if they still can’t offer a solution you could either say you will pick for them or you can help them figure out taking turns.
One thing we also learned in siblings without rivalry or peaceful siblings is to never have them race each other - we make it kids vs parents but never kid vs kid. They are a team.
Too young for this. They don't have the cognitive tools to reason through a situation.
Anonymous wrote:You need to make them be a team. Ours fight too (of course!) but they are pretty cute together. usually we just remove ourselves and make them figure it out. In your park example I suppose you could do what a PP suggested or you could say super casually “oh kids, we are going to a park in an hour, you two figure out where we should go.” Then walk away. When they squabble, casually say “you guys are good at solving problems. I know you will figure it out.” Then leave again.
This works for all sorts of compromise situations. Sometimes you will have to broker “hmm sounds like you really can’t agree… hmm… what could we do…” if they still can’t offer a solution you could either say you will pick for them or you can help them figure out taking turns.
One thing we also learned in siblings without rivalry or peaceful siblings is to never have them race each other - we make it kids vs parents but never kid vs kid. They are a team.
Anonymous wrote:You need to make them be a team. Ours fight too (of course!) but they are pretty cute together. usually we just remove ourselves and make them figure it out. In your park example I suppose you could do what a PP suggested or you could say super casually “oh kids, we are going to a park in an hour, you two figure out where we should go.” Then walk away. When they squabble, casually say “you guys are good at solving problems. I know you will figure it out.” Then leave again.
This works for all sorts of compromise situations. Sometimes you will have to broker “hmm sounds like you really can’t agree… hmm… what could we do…” if they still can’t offer a solution you could either say you will pick for them or you can help them figure out taking turns.
One thing we also learned in siblings without rivalry or peaceful siblings is to never have them race each other - we make it kids vs parents but never kid vs kid. They are a team.