Has anyone implemented the plan from the book "Parenting the Strong Willed Child"? We're running out of patience with DD's behavior and need to set some better parenting ground rules for consistency in discipline. She's always been strong willed, and we love that about her, but with all the changes in our lives lately it's beginning to manifest as whining, tantrums, and noncompliance. I like the first several chapters of this book because they focus on reinforcing positive behavior and ignoring benign negative behavior (boy was I practicing this yesterday when she was screaming "bootie butt!" at the top of her lungs for 15 minutes straight and laughing hysterically)... But then we get to the time out section. We've never really done time outs. We do "let's take a break in your calm down spot" during tantrums, but we don't punish bad behavior or noncompliance. We respond to misbehavior by saying no, explaining why something isn't allowed, and redirecting. Tantrums get "calm-down time" but this is in her room with toys and comforting objects. Let's admit it, we're softie parents.
But we've reached a point where a) she knows what's not allowed and she's doing it anyway, and persisting; and b) she's noncompliant with basic daily tasks like allowing me to wash her hair in the tub, allowing me to brush and braid her hair before school, brushing teeth, getting dressed, staying in her seat for meal times, etc. Those are the biggest offenses - she runs away, throws tantrums, rolls around on the floor when I'm trying to do her hair, etc. So pretty mild as misbehavior goes - she's usually not hurting anyone - but those are also essential daily tasks and I'm not going to reward her by letting them slide. She has to get out the door to daycare every day, clean and put together. So we have daily battles about it, and the battles seem to be getting worse lately, and she's digging in with more tantrums when she doesn't get her way.
I don't usually like to go all-in with specific parenting philosophies, and this book rubs me the wrong way in just a couple ways - the heavy reliance on time-outs and the lack of attention to emotional management - ignoring tantrums doesn't really teach your kid to manage their emotions, does it? But I'm at a loss for other tools. Wondering if there are other options or styles that might help here. I think we literally need a list for me and especially DH to follow, because our inconsistency really is the big problem here.
But we've reached a point where a) she knows what's not allowed and she's doing it anyway, and persisting; and b) she's noncompliant with basic daily tasks like allowing me to wash her hair in the tub, allowing me to brush and braid her hair before school, brushing teeth, getting dressed, staying in her seat for meal times, etc. Those are the biggest offenses - she runs away, throws tantrums, rolls around on the floor when I'm trying to do her hair, etc. So pretty mild as misbehavior goes - she's usually not hurting anyone - but those are also essential daily tasks and I'm not going to reward her by letting them slide. She has to get out the door to daycare every day, clean and put together. So we have daily battles about it, and the battles seem to be getting worse lately, and she's digging in with more tantrums when she doesn't get her way.
I don't usually like to go all-in with specific parenting philosophies, and this book rubs me the wrong way in just a couple ways - the heavy reliance on time-outs and the lack of attention to emotional management - ignoring tantrums doesn't really teach your kid to manage their emotions, does it? But I'm at a loss for other tools. Wondering if there are other options or styles that might help here. I think we literally need a list for me and especially DH to follow, because our inconsistency really is the big problem here.
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