Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ugh, oldest siblings suck
Are you my narcissistic younger brother?
Anonymous wrote:I see this a lot on here— a parent suddenly thinks that their 2/3/4 year old is a totally mature and grown up kid once an infant comes home. They’re not. They’re still very little, and they’re now seeing a sibling get a ton more attention. It’s normal for them to feel stressed/jealous about this. They deserve your attention and patience, too.
This particular incident seems like a non-issue to me. Your kid doesn’t understand germ theory. They’re 3. They were told not to do something and they did it to get your attention. That’s it. The bigger deal you make, the more they’re going to act out.
Anonymous wrote:ugh, oldest siblings suck
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The consequence should’ve been immediate— no more playing whatever she was playing at that time, no favorite book/toy for the rest of the day.
I’d let it go now. She’s 3 and wants attention— it’s not malice.
Maybe, but we really do not know. Hopefully, the 3 year old child will not repeat this type of behavior. If repeated, then a cild therapist should be consulted if you--the parent--feel unable to stop this type of behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 yo has a cough and cold and we have been telling her not to go near to their new sibling so avoid spreading the virus.
Today, 3 yo wanted attention while I was feeding the baby, and went up to baby and “sprayed” him with some spit. Not actually spitting but spraying him with her saliva on purpose.
What is an appropriate consequence for this? 3 yo seemed to know exactly what she was doing.
She knew she was disobeying you, yes. She does not understand viral transmission or germ theory.
Preschoolers want your attention, and bringing home a new baby is always challenging. Add in that your daughter is under the weather and likely needier for that: you need to take a step back from thinking of her as the "big sister who should know better" and remember she's also your baby who doesn't feel good. An appropriate consequence is a three minute time out for disobeying you, and then some dedicated cuddling so she feels loved.
Anonymous wrote:3 yo has a cough and cold and we have been telling her not to go near to their new sibling so avoid spreading the virus.
Today, 3 yo wanted attention while I was feeding the baby, and went up to baby and “sprayed” him with some spit. Not actually spitting but spraying him with her saliva on purpose.
What is an appropriate consequence for this? 3 yo seemed to know exactly what she was doing.
Anonymous wrote:3 yo has a cough and cold and we have been telling her not to go near to their new sibling so avoid spreading the virus.
Today, 3 yo wanted attention while I was feeding the baby, and went up to baby and “sprayed” him with some spit. Not actually spitting but spraying him with her saliva on purpose.
What is an appropriate consequence for this? 3 yo seemed to know exactly what she was doing.