Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is definitely a parenting problem and not a neighbor or real estate problem
Exactly. Do you understand this, OP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: OP, I think that if the time outs are making her scream so much that the neighbor is complaining-it's not working for you. I mean, you need to not be homeless more than she needs a time out.
I would stop the time outs, be ready to take her to the car if she goes crazy, and don't talk to the neighbor anymore. Just move on. Spring will be here and you can get her outside to the park to run off the energy. Is there local places you and dh can take her in the winter, like a play place?
That rewards the behavior. Scream and you get to go to the playground or local place.
Anonymous wrote:Buy the neighbor some super expensive, highly rated noise canceling headphones. The newborn noises coupled with the four year older angst/ tantrums may be less impactful on your neighbor with this device.
Anonymous wrote:You should take your kid out into the cold. We did that with our toddler who did that even without neighbors. Tends to shock them. Sure it will be a pain. But do it a few times, maybe once just get in the car and drive and freak them out. They will stop doing it.
The cold is working in your favor not against it. Be really honest. "We had to go outside in the cold right now because you are bothering Mrs. Simpson. We can't go back inside until you calm down. It is unfortunate we didn't have time to get your boot and coat. As soon as we go inside we will be warmer."
Rinse and repeat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here : As for why we decided to live in an apartment - it is all we can afford. We already pay $1,700 a month for childcare, and we want to send our daughter to the school across the street. We simply cannot afford a stand alone house or a row house in this neighborhood or any neighborhood with decent public schools.
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If you know that "kids are kids" (said by lazy, entitled parents everywhere) then why did you decide to live in an apartment? I'm so shocked at the entitlement of some people. We held off on starting a family until we could move to a house for them. Even when it was a small house, and we had to give up a lot else in life to get it. It's what decent people do. Your reproduction decisions shouldn't constitute a societal problem.
Wait, so everyone with a kid in an apartment is a "societal problem"? So like the entirety of Manhattan? Who are you?
Anonymous wrote:OP here : As for why we decided to live in an apartment - it is all we can afford. We already pay $1,700 a month for childcare, and we want to send our daughter to the school across the street. We simply cannot afford a stand alone house or a row house in this neighborhood or any neighborhood with decent public schools.
_____
If you know that "kids are kids" (said by lazy, entitled parents everywhere) then why did you decide to live in an apartment? I'm so shocked at the entitlement of some people. We held off on starting a family until we could move to a house for them. Even when it was a small house, and we had to give up a lot else in life to get it. It's what decent people do. Your reproduction decisions shouldn't constitute a societal problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is definitely a parenting problem and not a neighbor or real estate problem
Exactly. Do you understand this, OP?
Anonymous wrote:OP here -
she gets up around 7. She has a 1.5 hour nap 5x a week at pre-school, and will not take naps on weekends. Like I said, the news of baby #2 seems to have made her a lot moodier and whinier.
I'm willing to try the time-ins and to take her to the car when she is loud.
I've thought of having her chat with my neighbor directly as someone suggested here, but my neighbor is so mad that I don't think she's willing to do that. It's all going through the landlord at this point.
And yea, DC is incredibly expensive - that's why so many people live in apartments, ok?
Anonymous wrote: OP, I think that if the time outs are making her scream so much that the neighbor is complaining-it's not working for you. I mean, you need to not be homeless more than she needs a time out.
I would stop the time outs, be ready to take her to the car if she goes crazy, and don't talk to the neighbor anymore. Just move on. Spring will be here and you can get her outside to the park to run off the energy. Is there local places you and dh can take her in the winter, like a play place?
Anonymous wrote:You should take your kid out into the cold. We did that with our toddler who did that even without neighbors. Tends to shock them. Sure it will be a pain. But do it a few times, maybe once just get in the car and drive and freak them out. They will stop doing it.
The cold is working in your favor not against it. Be really honest. "We had to go outside in the cold right now because you are bothering Mrs. Simpson. We can't go back inside until you calm down. It is unfortunate we didn't have time to get your boot and coat. As soon as we go inside we will be warmer."
Rinse and repeat.