Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get your kid and immediately end the outing every time. When they learn running away = game over they will stop.
I'm the strap the kid in the stroller mom.
My kid didn't do this on outings he was enjoying. He did it because we were bored. The first time I remember was standing in line at the pharmacy to get emergency asthma meds for his brother. Or the grocery store, or the waiting room at the dentist.
Maybe if you have a life in which your kid only goes fun places the "end the outing" strategy makes sense, but most people don't have that.
If you have to bring your three year old on an outing like that, I think it’s good for there to be a reward at the end (like going to a favorite playground on the way home). In your examples, I think you just have to grab them and hold on tight.
Personally I wouldn’t talk about safety in this scenario. The one on one convo they barely understand anyway is all but a reward. Just contain them however you’re going to and grit your teeth and get through it.
Kids shouldn't be rewarded for expected behaviors. This is the equivalent to everyone gets a trophy. Life is just not like that. Sometimes we have to do things we don't want and that is normal. I am sitting in a terribly boring meeting right now and I don't need a reward at the end of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get your kid and immediately end the outing every time. When they learn running away = game over they will stop.
I'm the strap the kid in the stroller mom.
My kid didn't do this on outings he was enjoying. He did it because we were bored. The first time I remember was standing in line at the pharmacy to get emergency asthma meds for his brother. Or the grocery store, or the waiting room at the dentist.
Maybe if you have a life in which your kid only goes fun places the "end the outing" strategy makes sense, but most people don't have that.
If you have to bring your three year old on an outing like that, I think it’s good for there to be a reward at the end (like going to a favorite playground on the way home). In your examples, I think you just have to grab them and hold on tight.
Personally I wouldn’t talk about safety in this scenario. The one on one convo they barely understand anyway is all but a reward. Just contain them however you’re going to and grit your teeth and get through it.
Anonymous wrote:When one of my kids went through this phase, we started bringing the stroller places. Every time he ran, I caught him, picked him up, strapped him in without talking, and we either went home, or I ignored him for a while. For example, if we were at the park and he ran, then he could sit in the stroller and watch his sibling play. When I let him out to try again, I'd say "Don't run away". It fixed it pretty fast.
I think the chase, and the verbal interaction, can become very reinforcing, so I wanted a consequence strong enough to reinforce that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get your kid and immediately end the outing every time. When they learn running away = game over they will stop.
I'm the strap the kid in the stroller mom.
My kid didn't do this on outings he was enjoying. He did it because we were bored. The first time I remember was standing in line at the pharmacy to get emergency asthma meds for his brother. Or the grocery store, or the waiting room at the dentist.
Maybe if you have a life in which your kid only goes fun places the "end the outing" strategy makes sense, but most people don't have that.
Anonymous wrote:When one of my kids went through this phase, we started bringing the stroller places. Every time he ran, I caught him, picked him up, strapped him in without talking, and we either went home, or I ignored him for a while. For example, if we were at the park and he ran, then he could sit in the stroller and watch his sibling play. When I let him out to try again, I'd say "Don't run away". It fixed it pretty fast.
I think the chase, and the verbal interaction, can become very reinforcing, so I wanted a consequence strong enough to reinforce that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I actually came to this post to say with the PP said, this is a flag for autism. Just keep this in mind because HFAUD may not look the same as what you think. Your child can be verbal, social and still on the spectrum.
Not everything is a diagnosis.
Anonymous wrote:
I actually came to this post to say with the PP said, this is a flag for autism. Just keep this in mind because HFAUD may not look the same as what you think. Your child can be verbal, social and still on the spectrum.
Anonymous wrote:I got a leash. One of those cute ones with a teddy bear backpack.