Anonymous wrote:Op here. Four year old has been good for about a day but then just had a big incident. He jumped on our dog (an old lab- that is a BIG no because the dog is arthritic) so I said that’s a time out. I went to go put him in time out upstairs and of course he runs away and I’m chasing him like a fool. I finally catch up to him and his bites my finger- hard. I grab him and and put him in time out. He falls asleep in the time out. I don’t want him to nap because he’s just transitioning out of naps and will be up all night, so I woke him up. In this circumstance I don’t think he learned anything. What could I have done better?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again. So give me an example. If he hits me or kicks me do I give him a time out? (For us time out means going in your room) sometimes he doesn’t care ither times he hangs on the door. Feel like we’ve tried this so many times and the behavior didn’t change. What is something I do in the moment?
By now you should have been reading 1, 2, 3 Magic instead you are procrastinating and finding excuses.
Do not hit mom or anyone. First warning. You will lose your fav toy.
Second warning as you see he is about to hit. You hit me again your “fav toy” is going to the garbage.
Third warning. Repeat. Then take away his toy while he watches, and let him see you throw it away in the garage trash. When he picks it up, from that trash, strap him in his car seat. Drive to public trash can, throw it away and drive off.
No yelling, no relenting, no negotiating. Toy gone. He will cry, you do not react nor are mad just calm.
This worked for us^^^ with similar tantrums.
This is horrible. Don’t throw out stuff.
+1. That’s insane and horrible parenting.
lol. Let’s just talk it out while your 4 year old beats you. So effective!
PP. I didn't throw away a favorite toy but a new toy I had just bought. I was at the desperate point where parents in prior generations would have spanked or hit.
Anonymous wrote:Give up now. This is what happens when children are spoiled with material things but starving for love. Maybe start with cutting down on your work and social engagements. Your child needs love. Sorry, you get what you put in.
Anonymous wrote:Give up now. This is what happens when children are spoiled with material things but starving for love. Maybe start with cutting down on your work and social engagements. Your child needs love. Sorry, you get what you put in.
Anonymous wrote:I have not read the entire thread.
Maybe he will dress himself if you buy a costume of a favorite character such as a superhero.
Won't solve all issues, but could be a start.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again. So give me an example. If he hits me or kicks me do I give him a time out? (For us time out means going in your room) sometimes he doesn’t care ither times he hangs on the door. Feel like we’ve tried this so many times and the behavior didn’t change. What is something I do in the moment?
By now you should have been reading 1, 2, 3 Magic instead you are procrastinating and finding excuses.
Do not hit mom or anyone. First warning. You will lose your fav toy.
Second warning as you see he is about to hit. You hit me again your “fav toy” is going to the garbage.
Third warning. Repeat. Then take away his toy while he watches, and let him see you throw it away in the garage trash. When he picks it up, from that trash, strap him in his car seat. Drive to public trash can, throw it away and drive off.
No yelling, no relenting, no negotiating. Toy gone. He will cry, you do not react nor are mad just calm.
This worked for us^^^ with similar tantrums.
This is horrible. Don’t throw out stuff.
+1. That’s insane and horrible parenting.
lol. Let’s just talk it out while your 4 year old beats you. So effective!