Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I absolutely would not go right to three for couch jumping.
Our kids are 2.5 and 4. Our right-to-threes are:
1) Hitting or kicking a person
2) Not stopping when we say “stop” when we’re walking out on the sidewalk (they’re city kids, we walk everywhere, and we let 2.5 get about 1/4 block in front of us and the 4 year old get about a 1/2 block in front of us, so this is a SERIOUS infraction for us. Has only happened once each that I can remember).
3) One time, the older one looked me right in the eye and said “I hate you.” Chilled me to the bone. I went right to three and put him in a timeout. I don’t know if that was the right move, prob not according to the book. It was just my first instinct. He clearly had no idea what it even meant, we talked about it a lot after and he’s never said it since.
We’ve been doing 1-2-3 Magic since each kid was about 18 months old. I’d say we’ve gone right to 3 a single digit number of times, across both kids.
Thanks for your perspective. I’m having trouble understanding how jumping on the couch isn’t in everyone’s dangerous category. It literally doesn’t fit in my head. I’m worried he’ll get a concussion or break a leg. If I use the counting procedure, they can get a full 9 seconds of jumping in. Every time. Maybe I just grew up in an unusually well-behaved circle of children, but I’d literally never seen another child jump on furniture before mine did it. I’ve tried time-out, but I’ve always included the no-fun conversation in the past, which I’m thinking may be part of the problem.
So, while I understand that this isn’t quite running in the street, why isn’t this in your dangerous category?
I’m the PP. I mean, maybe I’m the wrong person to ask because my kids jump on the couch and we just let them (it’s an old crappy couch anyway). Honesty, the risk of couch jumping doesn’t seem that much higher than climbing on a playground. In fact, we have a piker triangle and I think that’s riskier than couch jumping. At least the couch is soft!
I think it makes sense in most cases not to allow couch jumping, for both behavior and potentially risk reasons, but 9 seconds of couch jumping is very unlikely to result in disaster.
How are your kids in terms of internal awareness of their bodies and physical safety? Are they just throwing themselves around? One thing we worked on from a young age was building this awareness and I think it’s really paid off. So if a 1.5 year old was climbing too high on the playground or jumping on the couch too close to the edge, instead of just immediately shutting it down, we would tell them to pause and just point and say things like “ooh, look down there. You’re pretty high off the ground” or “look at where your body is, you’re very close to the edge of the couch.” Most of the time, the kid would look, and then ask for help or start climbing down or back away. At 2.5 and 4 they self regulate really well on stuff like this. Maybe that kind of approach (in addition to counting for just straight up not following established rules) might help?