Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty much all terrible advice. OP, talk to your pediatrician. This doesn’t sound developmentally appropriate. Advice from a professional should be in order.
Developmental educator here. Agree 100%. Repeated biting needs to be addressed.
Question for you then: what do you suspect the pediatrician will say based on a 15 minute consult in his/her office? What’s your armchair diagnosis? Could it really not be one out of control 5 year old whose parents have inconsistent consequences that the kid doesn’t care about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Next time he bites her, tell her to bite him back. HARD. He will learn if not from his sibling than the wrong person he bites.
+1 I couldn't get DD2 to stop pinching DD1...until DD1 pinched back. It never happened again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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!!
He's not going to stop until she bites him back-hard! If she makes him bleed he'll stop.
That is abuse. You are horrible to even suggest that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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!!
He's not going to stop until she bites him back-hard! If she makes him bleed he'll stop.
That is abuse. You are horrible to even suggest that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pretty much all terrible advice. OP, talk to your pediatrician. This doesn’t sound developmentally appropriate. Advice from a professional should be in order.
Ridiculous. I'm definitely in the camp of OP has barely implemented any punishment and should start there. The simplest explanation is the kid has an anger problem.
I disagree with the posters that say to allow your daughter to take things from him or even to lavish attention on her. He's not 2 or 3, which is when depriving him of attention would work, and having her participate in the punishment feels wrong to me - like it could create resentment that may be hard to resolve in the future.
I think I'd go with telling him that if he bites his sister again then none of his time will be his own until the bite mark disappears. Then he's your servant. He empties and loads the dishwasher, he folds and puts away the laundry, he helps with meal prep and clears dishes. Cleans the bathrooms, takes care of pets, yardwork, whatever. And no screens.
If that's too intense (that's a lot on you and dad), then I'd make the loss of his favorite toy permanent (might even make him throw it away), no screens, no privileges.