Kids are all different, some behave really well, while others are wild.
BUT your discipline needs to be constant. You can't say you "tried" spanking or timeout. Those things do not work in trials. They should be consistent and a permanent rule, or you will confuse the child. Discipline or you will succumb to the kid's behavior and outbursts and then you will be the one doing what they want and not vice versa.
If you have problems taking them out to the stores now, then don't take them. Bc if they are not behaved, you will end up chasing them and ruining your trip and your day.
I like the food intolerance suggestions. I work with children like your son, and he sounds very scared to me, this can come out in anger, aggression, not cooperating etc. He needs to feel you are in charge and he doesn't, spanking shows you are not in charge! Check out 'hand in hand' parenting website as well they offer some good approaches.
I wish I had found out years ago, but thankfully did when son was 12 at least. I'm not saying this is your situation, but it was mine. Our son was so sweet, but would have these moods that were horrible as well as mean spirited...lashing out verbally. Too young for his actions.
I figured give him food, lots of play, to no avail. By the time he was older we were just really pissed off at his "in your face tirades".
I stepped back and watched him. There was a common thread, plus as he started to grow, he got tall but stayed really thin...no weight gain. Trust me, on a farm, he ate.
Stayed home for a week, fed him, watching. Bingo...food was a huge problem. Gluten gave him internal distress, getting worse as he got older. Read labels, OMG, we were in trouble. Got rid of all gluten products. Started easing up, but not over hurdle. He was still acting out, and horribly thin. He actually looked like a victim of starvation. I felt horrible. BTW, it was all blown off by doctor
We were on our own. When off gluten I saw digestive stress was gone, but attitude was still bad, really bad. There was something else I was missing and our son was feeling not normal. Remember, the brain requires nutrition, and not fed gets weird too. He was not getting nutritional requirements. There was only lactose left. BTW, you have no idea what a headache that one was. Did you know whey is in margarine? Tested cow, goat, and sheep milk and cheeses. Bingo!No more cows allowed for milk.
We now know if a food has slipped in a gluten or lactose hidden filler by his immediate physical or mood response.
We found the lactose mood could be countered by 5 Carlson omega 3 pills. 25 minutes after taking them, he'd go from a pent up, nasty, ill tempered, foul person, to "mom, can you please forgive me, I'm sorry". I have no idea how fish counters lactose, but it does.
He's 20 now, 6 ft 5 and is proudly up to 142 pounds. No sodas, candies, processed foods. Lots of proteins, vegetables, fruits. His one treat he can eat is black liable Puck Protein bar. We know now he has celiac and it can cause lactose also.
I make special pizzas with sheep milk feta or goat cheese...no problem.
Anyway, hope this benefits someone.
Sounds like he is playing a game and you are playing on his terms. It is time to turn the tables and make him play your game. Never run after a child, if the are in a safe environment, if you run you are playing his game. Always talk positive. Point out how you like him listening to the teacher. Tell him that you both will do as the teacher say, if he does not egnore and listen to the teacher. He will come on he own just remember some kids need days to figure out their game is over and them will get more attention and thing they want do if they listen. The negative attention they reseave is the same amount they would get of positive, it is up to the parent of what they want to give.
I need help with my 3 years old misbehaving,not listening, talking back, pushing people,and hitting people
I feel your pain ladies! I have a 3 and a half year old boy who has had me curled up in a ball sobbing in sheer frustration, worry, and stress through his behaviour. My eldest son is 5 and is calm, loving, trustworthy...I can leave him colouring or playing with his lego for ages while I get my housework done. No problem. Master 3 is a whirlwind! He gets away on me, and runs off and has on three occasions run across a road or car park and nearly been run over. (I have an old ankle injury so I cannot run so I need to get him to stop but he never will!) He hits, bites, screams, kicks his brother. He destroys his room, tears up books, and throws things. His behaviour has been not only disruptive but dangerous!
The breakthrough I have had that I wanted to share is that I have managed to identify that his worst behaviour is triggered by over-tiredness. Around about 11.30am he gets tired (he's up early every morning)
and the behaviour escalates the longer he is awake. Knowing this, I try to time everything around an afternoon nap. If we have dinner plans, and he hasn't slept, we don't go out. If I need to go shopping for food and he hasn't has a sleep, then I go another time when he's at preschool or late at night when dad can be here and I can go to the market alone. I have also cut out artificial food colouring and processed sugary foods, and had a vast improvement in behaviour. Keeping him physically active has also shown improvement. The behaviour is lessening and yes, we still have days where I wish I had never had the second baby but when he is well rested, and being good he really is the sweetest little boy in the world. He's just a handful.
I think our biggest problem as parents is OTHER PEOPLE judging us! Discipline wise I have let my husband take over because my softly softly approach wasn't working. We work together as a team and I back him up, no matter how much my heart hurts when I hear my child crying in his room. It's for our sanity and the sake of our family.
**Stayathome* I really sympathize with you, I ahve been where you are now, but it does get better...slowly...with time and patience. I wish you well. The advice you are getting on here is excellent. :-)
I feel like you are mirroring my situation! My son is the same way and he is 3. Runs away, doesn't listen, acts out, hits me. Spankings don't work, incentives don't work, time outs don't work either. It is very frustrating and hard because everyone has an opinion on how I should discipline him too. It is very hard to be a mom sometimes!
Hello!
I have stumbled across your thread, as I am now a mom two 3 year old twin boys. One of them is so well behaved and calm, its a joke. The other, is so wound up, and fresh, almost like he can't help himself. We can't take him to restaurants, or shopping, and it seems EVERYONE has an opinion on how I should discipline him.
I have found such help in the posts on this site. I'm wondering how your boy is today? Did he out-grow these "tough three's" and move on to a calmer, more agreeable child? That is what people tell me, but it's SO tough when you're living it.
Thank you,
StressedTwinsMom
today has been horable he has tested every bit of patience i have i am trying to stick with it but am so fed up just after 1 day i am trying so hard the karate instructer told me to try and take away everything that matters to him when we got home and give it back little by little as he does good things just something as simple as sitting down and eating super as he was told when he misbehaves take something back what do u think about that i need opionions and any advice i will try anything i am going to try this along with timeouts and other techniques everyone has suggested
Stayathomemommy, I can hear from your post that you are really trying and that is great. I will tell you that I have two sons that are 15 months apart. My oldest boy has a developmental delay called sensory integration disorder and my second son does not. Both can get wild. Both can do wacky things. What I described really has worked from me. Tried and tested and worked. It is called natural consequences. So think about what the consequence will be for something. YOu may not take them grocery shopping or to a restuarant-------- but the gym counts. Warn him about losing his favorite item and that he will leave immediately if he does X. I teaches that you mean what you say and that there are consequences and HIS behavior determines what happens. There is a good book called "love and logic" that talks a lot about natural consequences.
For 3, I'd keep it simple. If I said use your inside voice---- my boys would not hear all of the words. Rambunctious boys tend to miss some of the words. So I'm better off with a simple command (soft voice) (or say just "whisper"). For little children------- very simple and quick commands work best.
Try to always remain patient and I'd try to speak with your husband about keeping things calm at home. Discipline is for teaching and guiding and not so much for creating fear in my opinion. Real respect comes from teaching and guiding. It is hard when spouses aren't on the same page. This happens to a lot of couples----- so do the best you can with that.
And distracting with JOBS really helps my boys. So when you need him to comply and be by your side--------- mom's helper is a good idea.
good luck
also he is VERY BRIGHT and so smart for is age so yes i do agree with u on that as well
RockRose i agree with u 100% and i will talk to my husband when he gets home spanking does seem like a great short term punishment but it dosent chsnge his behavior it just stops it for the time being and dosent always do this thank u so much for all ur advice and i do believe what is going on between me and my husband is making his behavior worse
TO Chole he is the oldest but not very attached he does his own thing most of the time but when he wants attention i try to give it sometimes i even have to make him spend time w me ha ha he actually loves to go and do things with other ppl yes without me although i have been told he does want me at bed time however i think i keep him at home with me to much he wants to go but i will miss him or feel like he has been going to much lately and needs to be home
stayathome, the thing is, that keeps parents like your husband believing what he believes about very harsh spankings is the fact that in the short term, it does work. In the short term. If you were to spank this child hard enough to really HURT, and leave marks, and make it where he can't sit comfortably for a few days, he would absolutely behave better in your presence. That's why parents believe spanking works because it seems to right then.
I think the dynamic between you and your husband is actually adding to your son's misbehavior, he's playing the two of you off each other.
The thing is, you're both right. You're right in not wanting your son beaten on - you want him to behave but you want better ways to make this happen. Your husband is right that if he were allowed to beat on that child, your son would obey him. In the short term.
(this is getting long, sorry, but your story is really striking a cord with me).
The question is: Do you want revenge, or do you want to change behavior? This is so critical, to answer this question and stick with the answer. You don't want revenge, you want the behavior to change. Your husband wants a bit of revenge first, frankly.
I think if you and your husband sat down and decided not to argue in front of the child, with him bullying and you rescuing, it would work wonders.
Can you get your husband to try this for a month? Both of you, exactly on the same page, backing each other up. "Do what your father said" "Don't backtalk your mother", that kind of thing. A pop on the rear is fine, but nothing beyond that.
Would your husband go for that for a month and see what happens?
I think you would have great success, fairly quickly.
Best wishes.
Oh- and one more thing, I know you said he isn't minding at all and kids will test their parents, but, as islly as this may sound, those children, at such a young age who do that, ARE very bright kids, and this is just a phase, but I know you do want control, because you are a good mama who knows that you need help w/ him. Before you know it- he will be in middle school on the honor roll, playing soccer or something w/ lots of friends. I know this stage in their/your life just feels like a never ending ordeal... You are doing the right thing by having him involved w/ social activities. Is he totally attached to you where he wants your attention 24/7? Meaning, is he your shadow at home and doesn't like you to give attention to others because he wants you to himself? Is he the oldest or youngest? I'm just curious, because, if he is the oldest and very attached to you, this is a comman problem w/ a lot of young kids, and can be fixed w/ time...
My original major was Early Childhood Development- When I was doing my internship (At a Pre School at the college) one thing we learned was to always refer things to a positive. For example, instead of saying "Don't run!"- We would say, "Please walk..." or instead of saying, "Be Quiet!" we would say, "Please use your inside voices..." A child's brain doesn't always comprehend the whole entire sentence. Like if I was to say to a 3 year old, "Please don't walk on the grass," they hear: "Walk on the grass..." This takes time and repeating, but they eventually catch on, which, in return, turns into good behavior and positive listening skills. Idk if you read the post I wrote about my 4 yr old neighbor, but I did notice he did catch on to one thing I would constantly repeat, and that use "Using our nice hands, we always have nice hands..." (He would hit his 2 year old sister) He said the other day while playing w/ the little girl I was babysitting, "_____ used her nice hands!" That just basically showed to me he understood it was proper not to hit others. And like I said, in return, he stopped hitting his sister, and even said to her for HER to use her "nice hands." I know it may sound almost too nice and giving in, but just speaking to them in a rational matter in a positive sentence will eventually sink into their brain. So, if he was to throw a fit in wallmart, he might comprehend a postive matter sentence. Just an idea- It will also help for social development.
yes i am married but his dad dosent have as much patience as i do ( and idont have much) he gives up too easy and no he has no more control than i do he isnt about time outs he wants to whip him and this causes issues between us because i have whiped my son but i feel like he whips him to hard (not abusing him but he is a fairly big grown man and my son is a little 3 year old )and i pull my son away or take up for him which causes an arguement between my husband and myself i know this might not be good as far as my son is concerned because he is working us against each other nor is it good on our marriage but my husband believes in a good spanking i did and maybe it is for some kids but i think it makes my son worse my husband says it isnt working because my son isnt getting enough spankings or there not good enough (if u spanke d him good enough he would mind) i know this sounds bad but he has never or would i ever let him go OVERBOARD with the spankings anyway needless to say my husband and i have dif opinions on our child i know we have to agree and stick together but we have some work to do and really this has caused a big strain on our marriage
Stay at home, are you married? I assumed so since you are a stay at home mother. Is your husband better able to control him? In my experience fathers really can set the tone of discipline.
i will try i hope yall are right and i am worried if i dont get him under control it will only get worse and he will be an out of control teen or have authority issues later in life i wont so bad to help him but i need someone to help me
and i do try to praise him for all he does goodand let him be my little helper but it is hard
You'd be surprised, stay at home, at how it will change his behavior if he is yanked out of the restaurant chair and held in the foyer while the waiter prepares to go boxes and processes the credit card. If you act cold and angry (as opposed to acting kind of wild and out of control), or if you say that's it, we're going and grab his body up and grab your purse out of the walmart cart and get out of the store, this will change behavior. It doesn't seem like it will, it seems like maybe he would like to get to leave Walmart or the restaurant, but it's what happens afterwards that matters.
Once he is in his car seat continue to act cold and angry. Say thinks in a calm voice like that was really embarrassing to me, and now we don't have groceries so I guess I will have to go out later and get food, but I won't be getting any cookies or treats. I'm angry that your behavior caused us to have to leave the store without the things we need.
By this time, he will be crying. I promise. But don't let up. When we get home you're going to your room for awhile because I'm angry and I really don't want to be around you right now.
This will change behavior.
i mean he did come back arter i ran him down out of breath and put him back and i could not catch him on the stairs i was afraid he would get hurt and i know the spanking is not working if anything i think it makes it worse but sometimes i feel like i have no other option at the moment and time i dont know what else to do
I didn't clarify the second to last paragraph.
Some of the boys I've known who acted like your son have turned out really badly, and they had mothers who either didn't try at all, or gave up trying.
thank u so much for ur suggestions i think i will try taking things that matters to him away. But as far as in public thats were the big issues are and i know u said if ur in wal mart leave the buggy and go haom or out to eat take him and leave the restaurant but i feel like that wont work w him i dont think he will care and i feel like th that is letting him control the situation heacts out so i dont get groceries or we dont get to eat but thank u and im open to any options i talked to his dr about him just to get her opinion on wether she thought there was a medical problem or what( I dont really want him medicated) and she said i just need to be consistant
Usually the behavior gets worse when you clamp down, temporarily.
Sounds like it's hitting home for him.
Keep at it - we're pulling for you!!!