You may need to remove the things that she can't deal with right now, like the Advent calendar, and try again in another year or two, or use one that has no candy. Things that work for other kids at age 4 might not be appropriate for her until she is a little more skilled.
You may wish to check the book The Explosive Child and the website ThinkKids
In the same way that kids with learning disabilities struggle with thinking skills in areas like reading, writing or math, research has shown that behaviorally challenging kids lack thinking skills related to flexibility, frustration tolerance and problem solving. Not long ago, kids who had trouble reading were thought of as lazy or dumb. Today, people recognize that these kids have a learning disability that simply requires a different method of teaching. Think:Kids aims to accomplish a similar shift in perspective and practice with behaviorally challenging kids through the CPS approach. Rather than try to motivate these kids to behave better, CPS builds helping relationships and teaches skills through a process of helping adults and kids learn how to resolve problems collaboratively. At Think:Kids, we train thousands of parents, clinicians, educators and facilities a year through conferences, workshops and consulting and help hundreds of kids and their families through our clinic and support groups.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't you just hide the thing until it's time to do it each day? This is on you, op
We are on day 4. I said we are going to figure it out. I was just wondering why it’s gotta be like this. I did ask around at school drop off if any other kid was “losing it” with the advent calendar and didn’t get any commiseration. Maybe they are lying!
It’s true we’ve been spoiled with our oldest and have no idea what’s normal.
Good to know she’s not doomed after all.
I guess I don't understand why you're making such a big deal of it. She gets the candy for the day, then put it away and IGNORE THE RESULTING TANTRUM. Just like you would for any other tantrum. It sounds like you've been indulging the behavior so of course it will continue until you do something about it. She's been conditioned to throw a fit to get what she wants.
We will do that.
It bugs me because we try to do nice things, and I don’t really think it’s worth it sometimes. I mean for her. And this isn’t just about the advent calendar. A lot of fun things we try to do end with whining and tantrums. Now obviously I don’t mean that. It’s worth it. It’s all good. She’s four and every time she waits a little bit she’s learning to wait. It’s just non stop. She’s so rarely satisfied. She’s always hungry for more. And it’s not just food. I love her. I really do think she’s great like I said in the op. This is part of who she is. It is one of the hardest parts. I also don’t think it’s terrible I worry about her. I worry about my kids. I can’t help it.
It’s good to know it doesn’t necessarily mean she has adhd, and the experiment means less than I thought. Thanks for the book reccs too. I’ll try to remember she’s only 4 and we can keep working on this. Delayed gratification training.
Anonymous wrote:I ate all the candy out of both my and my sister's advent calendars as a child. I loved that chocolate and snuck it out when nobody was looking. Now I'm a very normal, successful adult who doesn't sneak candy. Your DC will most likely be just fine!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't you just hide the thing until it's time to do it each day? This is on you, op
We are on day 4. I said we are going to figure it out. I was just wondering why it’s gotta be like this. I did ask around at school drop off if any other kid was “losing it” with the advent calendar and didn’t get any commiseration. Maybe they are lying!
It’s true we’ve been spoiled with our oldest and have no idea what’s normal.
Good to know she’s not doomed after all.
I guess I don't understand why you're making such a big deal of it. She gets the candy for the day, then put it away and IGNORE THE RESULTING TANTRUM. Just like you would for any other tantrum. It sounds like you've been indulging the behavior so of course it will continue until you do something about it. She's been conditioned to throw a fit to get what she wants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can't you just hide the thing until it's time to do it each day? This is on you, op
We are on day 4. I said we are going to figure it out. I was just wondering why it’s gotta be like this. I did ask around at school drop off if any other kid was “losing it” with the advent calendar and didn’t get any commiseration. Maybe they are lying!
It’s true we’ve been spoiled with our oldest and have no idea what’s normal.
Good to know she’s not doomed after all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so cute to imagine her little mouth stuffed with sweet, gooey marshmallows. She's confident she'll get more marshmallows later. Maybe she's so intelligent she understands the stakes are low and just wants to enjoy herself. That's a wonderful trait! Consider yourself lucky she has experienced food scarcity or other real hardships.
Cute is one word to describe it. We do think she’s cute sometimes. But there are a few more words to describe it that are not as positive. She’s greedy! She’s gluttonous! She’s ungrateful! And when we say no she whines and cries which is very irritating.
She does just want to enjoy herself. But it’s kind of scary to imagine her acting like this as a teenager. It’s embarrassing but I do worry about this.