Pray...because I think that's the only way most of us are getting through them đ. Seriously though. I reassure my son that its ok to be upset but it doesn't change the outcome, offer hugs and let him get it out his system or redirect him to something else. I've also heard passively ignoring them to reinforce that it doesn't get them attention works. We tried that but didn't work for us. Our son prefers the hugs and redirecting.
My 20 month old drives me crazy with her tantrums. This past week itâs been worsening. Every little thing triggers her, my husband and I are at each otherâs throats. Would love some advice myself that actually worksâŠ
My daughter is the same way she's a year and a half and her tantrums
Are horrible
Sorry, no advice because we're dealing with the same thing. Glad to know I'm not the only one, though! My son is the same age. We're also in the Atlanta area.
Use your judgement based on the situation, but ignoring the whining and crying can help. If theyâre in a tizzy and nothing is helping, be a calm quiet presence without giving it any more attention. And then when they catch their breath or start calming down, redirect. Ideally, youâve started doing some housework or something that you can engage them into while calmly waiting. With my girl, the tantrums are most often miscommunications because she doesnât have the words yet to be specific and we are trying hard to understand. All behavior is communication. Good luck! Weâre really in the thick of it :)
@Tessa how do you get your baby to sit in timeout mine will never sit still unless he is sleeping.
Lots of practice! We started in the rocking chair in his room so I could shut the door. And watch him on the monitor (to keep him safe) And now itâs any chair thatâs near. I tell him to find a seat and he does.. Because heâs still so young itâs only a minute and if itâs 40 seconds and heâs calm itâs close enough. Just be consistent. On how you do timeouts and they catch on pretty quick! Iâve always been short and sweet âwe donât hit.â Remove and take to timeout. Set down walk away. Timer goes off. And then explain âyou went to time out for hittingâ apologies and hugs and kisses and move on. He is starting to tell me âwhy did you go to time outâ and he will say âhit mamaâ or âmadâ and trying to get him to verbalize his actions. Has been helping the tantrums!
Does he still hit again after timeouts?
Thanks so much for the tips!! Iâve tried ignoring but he just gets more aggressive with the throwing himself around and stomping his little feets lol..he doesnât throw them often, just mainly when I try to serve him some food that he doesnât want.. so yesterday I sat quietly on the floor with him while he thrashed around in his chair and eventually he stopped after about 5-10 minutes.. Iâm just trying to find ways to keep calm and to calm him enough to learn to use his words.. definitely gonna try the redirecting but I donât want to just give in to him eating a snack instead of real food.
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My son (20m) is in the same boat. We stopped giving him screen time. And if he did get a show it was low stimulation. That has definitely helped. He also gets timeouts (1 minute) for hitting or physically hurting someone. Then we talk âyou went to timeout for hitting we need gentle handsâ he says sorry hug kiss and on our way. I tell him itâs okay to be mad. We can stomp our feet. Or clap our hands. We then take deep breaths to calm down. (This isnât an instant thing it takes a few minutes and ALOT OF help to calm down.) Hang in there mama itâs the age and itâs so hard when they canât verbalize there feelings