Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I joined a gym with a nursery. It saved my sanity.
Are any of those open?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once you have a kid, there is no such thing as "myself".
This is just toxic. Of course there is. You are still a human, a woman, and a wife too. An 18 month old demands hands on care and a lot of attention but there is no reason his or her mom cannot still meet her own needs.
It's not toxic. It's the reality of parenthood. If you are focused on meeting your own needs, guess what you are not doing or at least not doing well. HINT - something to do with your baby.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks 123 Magic poster. I did skim through most of the book but agree with PP that my 18 month old will not understand the counting yet. Maybe we will try in a year when he gets more verbal.
As to what I do now, I try the respectful parenting thing of acknowledging his request while holding my boundary. Functionally that looks like me shoveling food in for 3 mins while he cries and tugs at my arm and clothes. I would not call this a success. Dad tries to distract hum but not even screen time works and he only wants me.
DH also has no free time so it's not just me. The only "me time" we feel like we get is after our son goes to daycare and we are working. Other babies and toddlers we interact with seem way more chill. I think we are just slowly accepting that this is a death march til age 3 or 4 or whatever. It's so hard that neither of us have any bandwidth to even consider a second so we are most likely one and done.
Just wish I could enjoy this stage of parenting more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, this screaming at everything is not really ok. You need, 1, 2, 3 Magic and start slow and go steady.
What do you do when he starts all this? What are conqecuences?
You have to provide activities, rules too.
Again, sounds like a regular 18 months old just a bit worse, because you are allowing this nonsense to go on.
I am not saying you can stop all of it, but you can work on stopping some of it.
IDK, I think my 18 month old is way, way too young for a book like that. She has like 3 words. We're not ready for formal/abstract consequences yet.
What? So, someone is suggesting a slow start with it, bcs kid is 18 months old, and you say, nah, too young. Why even ask if you are refusing suggestions? That book is awesome. Your kid does udnerstand more than 18 words right?
What you are doing is not working, and no it is not normal that a kid starts screaming at 18 months cs mom is trying to have a bite to eat. There is nothing abstract about consequences 1, 2, 3 Magic suggests, that is the beauty of that book, that it works on YOU, changing your behavior that will result in your kid changing how the react to simple daily things.
When you read that book you will realize that you are doing things that are not ok, such as ordering your kid around like he/she is a dog.
If you scream, you say, baby doll is going in the trash, you give warning, 1, warning 2, and warning 3, baby doll in the trash in the garage. Not sure what is abstract about it. You act composed, calm, and kid tries once, twice and you are calm and two days later, no more screaming. Again, slow start due to age.
That post was from me, not OP. My 18 month old is fine, but way too young for counting. I did read the book and I liked it. I just think 18 months is too young for the book’s main strategy. Especially because you wouldn’t use counting for crying anyway, right?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks 123 Magic poster. I did skim through most of the book but agree with PP that my 18 month old will not understand the counting yet. Maybe we will try in a year when he gets more verbal.
As to what I do now, I try the respectful parenting thing of acknowledging his request while holding my boundary. Functionally that looks like me shoveling food in for 3 mins while he cries and tugs at my arm and clothes. I would not call this a success. Dad tries to distract hum but not even screen time works and he only wants me.
DH also has no free time so it's not just me. The only "me time" we feel like we get is after our son goes to daycare and we are working. Other babies and toddlers we interact with seem way more chill. I think we are just slowly accepting that this is a death march til age 3 or 4 or whatever. It's so hard that neither of us have any bandwidth to even consider a second so we are most likely one and done.
Just wish I could enjoy this stage of parenting more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once you have a kid, there is no such thing as "myself".
This is just toxic. Of course there is. You are still a human, a woman, and a wife too. An 18 month old demands hands on care and a lot of attention but there is no reason his or her mom cannot still meet her own needs.
It's not toxic. It's the reality of parenthood. If you are focused on meeting your own needs, guess what you are not doing or at least not doing well. HINT - something to do with your baby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once you have a kid, there is no such thing as "myself".
This is just toxic. Of course there is. You are still a human, a woman, and a wife too. An 18 month old demands hands on care and a lot of attention but there is no reason his or her mom cannot still meet her own needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, this screaming at everything is not really ok. You need, 1, 2, 3 Magic and start slow and go steady.
What do you do when he starts all this? What are conqecuences?
You have to provide activities, rules too.
Again, sounds like a regular 18 months old just a bit worse, because you are allowing this nonsense to go on.
I am not saying you can stop all of it, but you can work on stopping some of it.
IDK, I think my 18 month old is way, way too young for a book like that. She has like 3 words. We're not ready for formal/abstract consequences yet.
What? So, someone is suggesting a slow start with it, bcs kid is 18 months old, and you say, nah, too young. Why even ask if you are refusing suggestions? That book is awesome. Your kid does udnerstand more than 18 words right?
What you are doing is not working, and no it is not normal that a kid starts screaming at 18 months cs mom is trying to have a bite to eat. There is nothing abstract about consequences 1, 2, 3 Magic suggests, that is the beauty of that book, that it works on YOU, changing your behavior that will result in your kid changing how the react to simple daily things.
When you read that book you will realize that you are doing things that are not ok, such as ordering your kid around like he/she is a dog.
If you scream, you say, baby doll is going in the trash, you give warning, 1, warning 2, and warning 3, baby doll in the trash in the garage. Not sure what is abstract about it. You act composed, calm, and kid tries once, twice and you are calm and two days later, no more screaming. Again, slow start due to age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, this screaming at everything is not really ok. You need, 1, 2, 3 Magic and start slow and go steady.
What do you do when he starts all this? What are conqecuences?
You have to provide activities, rules too.
Again, sounds like a regular 18 months old just a bit worse, because you are allowing this nonsense to go on.
I am not saying you can stop all of it, but you can work on stopping some of it.
IDK, I think my 18 month old is way, way too young for a book like that. She has like 3 words. We're not ready for formal/abstract consequences yet.
Anonymous wrote:I joined a gym with a nursery. It saved my sanity.