Anonymous wrote:I’m guessing your consequences are weak. Take away the iPad for a day? Who cares. It’s back tomorrow. He’s old enough to understand that this is NOT okay. I would lay it out for him before it happens again. Charlie—biting is not okay. It hurts your sister. If it happens again, you will lose ALL (non school related) screens for 2 weeks. And then stick to it!!!
Anonymous wrote:DS, who will be 6 in Nov, is generally speaking a super sweet kid. Well behaved at school, lots of friends, full of hugs and love. EXCEPT. For the past 2-3 months, every time he and DD (8) get into it - which is at least once a day, because let's be honest, they have spent an absurd amount of time together - he bites her. Never bitten another soul. And he bites her HARD.
We have tried what feels like everything to get him to stop - strategies for what to do instead when he's mad at her (bite a pillow! breathing ball! come find me!), positive reinforcement for days without biting, and even taking away beloved toys and enforcing extra chores when he bites.
And it just doesn't stop. I have cut my kids a fair amount of slack this year with everything, but this is not acceptable - and I seriously am out of ideas. I need my little predator to quit chomping on his sister!! Help!!
Anonymous wrote:Why haven't you taught your DD to protect herself, and fight back? If someone bit me I would smack them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is her response when he does it? If the answer isn’t she slaps the dog sh!t out of him, it is now.
Ha, I only read the title of the thread and "let her bite back" was my first thought.![]()
Anonymous wrote:DS, who will be 6 in Nov, is generally speaking a super sweet kid. Well behaved at school, lots of friends, full of hugs and love. EXCEPT. For the past 2-3 months, every time he and DD (8) get into it - which is at least once a day, because let's be honest, they have spent an absurd amount of time together - he bites her. Never bitten another soul. And he bites her HARD.
We have tried what feels like everything to get him to stop - strategies for what to do instead when he's mad at her (bite a pillow! breathing ball! come find me!), positive reinforcement for days without biting, and even taking away beloved toys and enforcing extra chores when he bites.
And it just doesn't stop. I have cut my kids a fair amount of slack this year with everything, but this is not acceptable - and I seriously am out of ideas. I need my little predator to quit chomping on his sister!! Help!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:or you could put soap in his mouth and be done in 5 minutes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He earns his freedom. Direct supervision of him at all times. Prevent it from happening in the first place.
I did this for one of my kids. Arms length until I could trust him. He slept on the floor beside my bed. I waited outside of the bathroom for him and didn't let him close the door all the way. And, I did things like clean the house and every chore I could think of. I gave no specific time frame so he had no idea when it would end. I kept it up for a few days. 100% extinguished the behavior.
It is child abuse to physically force something nonedible, that you know to be harmful in your child's mouth.
Anonymous wrote:or you could put soap in his mouth and be done in 5 minutes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He earns his freedom. Direct supervision of him at all times. Prevent it from happening in the first place.
I did this for one of my kids. Arms length until I could trust him. He slept on the floor beside my bed. I waited outside of the bathroom for him and didn't let him close the door all the way. And, I did things like clean the house and every chore I could think of. I gave no specific time frame so he had no idea when it would end. I kept it up for a few days. 100% extinguished the behavior.
or you could put soap in his mouth and be done in 5 minutes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He earns his freedom. Direct supervision of him at all times. Prevent it from happening in the first place.
I did this for one of my kids. Arms length until I could trust him. He slept on the floor beside my bed. I waited outside of the bathroom for him and didn't let him close the door all the way. And, I did things like clean the house and every chore I could think of. I gave no specific time frame so he had no idea when it would end. I kept it up for a few days. 100% extinguished the behavior.
Anonymous wrote:He earns his freedom. Direct supervision of him at all times. Prevent it from happening in the first place.