Anonymous wrote:I'd just rush him out the door and let him wear pajamas to school. Bring pants/shoes/etc to the car to pull on once in - probably won't want to go to school without daytime clothes, right? If he doesn't eat breakfast, he'll get hungry later and maybe learn to eat breakfast earlier.
It sounds like a power struggle - the more you dig in, the more negative attention he gets.
Anonymous wrote:I dressed my kid at that age on school mornings. It would take her forever with tons of complaining, and I just didn't have the patience for it, nor did we have the time. On weekends she dressed herself. She eventually segued into doing it all on her own. Sometimes you need to pick your battles.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds tough. Have you tried setting timers or Alexa to talk to him instead? When it’s time to get up set a 15 minute timer to get clothes on and then walk away. Have breakfast sitting on table but take “you” (and the attention he gets from screaming at you) out of the equation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you asked him -- not in the morning before school, but at a calm time, why it's difficult to get dressed? Do you think it's the clothing or the transition he objects to?
One of my kids has a similar response if we expect her to wake up, get up, get dressed, all quickly and efficiently. But if I wake her up 30 minutes early and let her move at her own pace, it's much better.
It could also be time blindness, where he doesn't realize how much time is passing, and then feels rushed and stressed, which causes him to shut down.
+1.
Seek connection with your child at a time when you are both calm.
Anonymous wrote:Have you asked him -- not in the morning before school, but at a calm time, why it's difficult to get dressed? Do you think it's the clothing or the transition he objects to?
One of my kids has a similar response if we expect her to wake up, get up, get dressed, all quickly and efficiently. But if I wake her up 30 minutes early and let her move at her own pace, it's much better.
It could also be time blindness, where he doesn't realize how much time is passing, and then feels rushed and stressed, which causes him to shut down.
. I told him, "You'll have to find other things to do." He was a little lonely and a little bored and the next morning he was ready for school in time. Whatever you do, remove the power struggle from the equation.