Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you might benefit from the Kazdin method. I read a "lite" version of it when my DS2 was born and it helped.
BTW, I follow Janet Lansbury and she's not against consequences. You just have to be calm about it and it's best of they're logical.
Also one more thing: things go so much more smoothly in the house when DS1 is out of the house for at least half day at presschool or camp or whatever.
Thanks. Yes, he did FINE the weeks he was in VBS. And during school he’s better. But now, day after day until school starts...
What consequences do you do?
Anonymous wrote:OP I agree you need time outs. My almost 3 year old DD has had bouts of violence towards 1 yr old DS. Immediate time out, length depending on the severity of the incident.
She loves her brother but has a very hard time regulating her emotions and jealousy. But by now she KNOWS she doesn't like time out and she KNOWS she doesn't like it when mommy and daddy are very upset at her for being mean.
To echo some other posters, do you do NOTHING when these incidents happen? I have had a couple occasions where I have kind of freaked out DD because she did something inadvertantly fairly dangerous (like push towards stairs) and I just instinctively slapped her wrist away and grabbed the baby up protectively. Not even intending to punish just like, in fear. And she remembers those and she has kind of internalized the more dangerous things herself and now warns me if DS is edging towards it. Afterwards I'll sit down with her and explain that that was mean, "Don't do that, baby larlo could have been very hurt. Remember last week when you fell and got a big ouchy? Larlo would have gotten an ouchy like that and maybe would have gone to the doctor and we would all be very sad." That kind of thing. You have to explain it to them, they don't understand it on their own.
As we have enforced consequences and had these conversations (over and over and over and over for the last 6 months) she has also gotten more verbal about her own needs and we have respected them. IE sometimes she will say to me, 'Mommy carry baby larlo I am playing right now' to be like, get him out of my hair and I'll do it because she learned to ask nicely.
Good luck OP, but start being upset, kids learn what is acceptable by how people react. So react!
Anonymous wrote:OP you might benefit from the Kazdin method. I read a "lite" version of it when my DS2 was born and it helped.
BTW, I follow Janet Lansbury and she's not against consequences. You just have to be calm about it and it's best of they're logical.
Also one more thing: things go so much more smoothly in the house when DS1 is out of the house for at least half day at presschool or camp or whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so frustrated. I know that the aggression is rooted in jealousy. We are doing SO much to combat that. Ample 1:1 attention, emotional connections. We practice Positive Parenting. We do not react when he hurts the brother, because negative attention is attention!
I am exhausted. I cannot leave them alone for a single second. Not only that, but when we are together I have to actively watching. I cannot cook or do laundry or pee or shower unless I have one child with me.
3 year old will push over the 19 month old ANY time he walks by. He just pushed him into the wall. Yesterday he almost pushed him down the stairs. He’ll tackle, squeeze his neck, etc.
We are terrified of him really hurting the baby.
We are doing all we can. Please help.
You are not doing all you can. You are doing nothing. Discipline your kid. There is a lot of ground between what you are doing and beating his ass. Find something acceptable for you and your DH and DO IT. Don't wait until you end up in the ER because he shoved your baby down the stairs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so frustrated. I know that the aggression is rooted in jealousy. We are doing SO much to combat that. Ample 1:1 attention, emotional connections. We practice Positive Parenting. We do not react when he hurts the brother, because negative attention is attention!
I am exhausted. I cannot leave them alone for a single second. Not only that, but when we are together I have to actively watching. I cannot cook or do laundry or pee or shower unless I have one child with me.
3 year old will push over the 19 month old ANY time he walks by. He just pushed him into the wall. Yesterday he almost pushed him down the stairs. He’ll tackle, squeeze his neck, etc.
We are terrified of him really hurting the baby.
We are doing all we can. Please help.
You are not doing all you can. You are doing nothing. Discipline your kid. There is a lot of ground between what you are doing and beating his ass. Find something acceptable for you and your DH and DO IT. Don't wait until you end up in the ER because he shoved your baby down the stairs.
Anonymous wrote:Can you encourage good interactions between them? Willl the older guy sing songs or tell stories to the little one? Anything that will help the older one realize he gets good attention from being kind.
You can also talk to him - how does he feel about little brother? Maybe you can stop the little on efr Kim doing his least favorite thing (new walkers might push/fall into nearby brothers, or get into their favorite toys, etc.). You want the older one to think you are on his team too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I follow Janet Lansbury and I have a 3 yo and a baby. My 3 yo had a brief phase of trying to hurt the baby in various ways (biting was a favorite). I took away her favorite thing for increasing amounts of time. First offense, one day. Second offense, two days, etc. By four days without it and asking a million times every day and getting the same "unruffled" response she finally got it. She no longer hurts the baby.
If you're doing everything else (modeling, 1:1 attention, etc.) than I think you absolutely need to enforce some negative consequence. You need to protect the baby, that's the priority. I'd lose my mind if older DC nearly pushed younger DC down the stairs. That is not a time to worry about your reaction being a source of attention.
Can you please share some more info? This is helpful. My son just turned 3, so he’s young.
And I have lost my mind. I get so upset. It’s really scary and upsetting to see the baby getting so hurt for no reason.
But then, according to the books, but reactions are JUST want DS1 wants.
Anonymous wrote:I follow Janet Lansbury and I have a 3 yo and a baby. My 3 yo had a brief phase of trying to hurt the baby in various ways (biting was a favorite). I took away her favorite thing for increasing amounts of time. First offense, one day. Second offense, two days, etc. By four days without it and asking a million times every day and getting the same "unruffled" response she finally got it. She no longer hurts the baby.
If you're doing everything else (modeling, 1:1 attention, etc.) than I think you absolutely need to enforce some negative consequence. You need to protect the baby, that's the priority. I'd lose my mind if older DC nearly pushed younger DC down the stairs. That is not a time to worry about your reaction being a source of attention.