Tantrums, Fussing and Whining OH MY

by Kasey on August 29, 2009 · 6 comments

crying toddlerAs a mother of a preschooler, a toddler and a daycare provider, I deal with tantrums, fussing and whining on a daily, if not hourly basis, in my house and I’m always open to new advice on curbing these behaviors.  So, when I heard about Elizabeth Pantley’s NEW Book,The No-Cry Discipline Solution, I headed to her website to check it out.

Thankfully she offers some tips and advice to get you through until you can run out to Barnes & Noble to grab a copy or order one online from Amazon.com.

I wanted to share with you what I learned in case you’re dealing with the same issues in your household. After you read, please share with me any tips or tricks you use with your preschooler to cut back on some of the normal (even though they drive you crazy)  issues you deal with daily.

no cry

Tantrums, Fussing and Whining

If you ask parents to list the most frustrating discipline problems during early childhood, you would find that these three items appear on every list. All children master their own version of these behaviors – every parent has to deal with them!

Controlling their emotions
Most often these behaviors are caused by a child’s inability to express or control his emotions. Tiredness, hunger, boredom, frustration and other causes that ignite The Big Three can frequently be avoided or modified. When your child begins a meltdown, try to determine if you can tell what underlying issue is causing the problem. Solve that problem and you’ll likely have your sweet child back again.

Handling tantrums, fussing and whining
No matter how diligent you are in recognizing trigger causes, your child will still have meltdown moments. Or even meltdown days. The following tips can help you handle those inevitable bumps in the road. Be flexible and practice those solutions that seem to bring the best results.

Offer choices
You may be able to avoid problems by giving your child more of a say in his life. You can do this by offering choices. Instead of saying, “Get ready for bed right now,” which may provoke a tantrum, offer a choice, “What would you like to do first, put on your pajamas or brush your teeth?” Children who are busy deciding things are often happy.

Get eye-to-eye
When you make a request from a distance your child will likely ignore you. Noncompliance creates stress, which leads to fussing and tantrums – from both of you. Instead, get down to your child’s level, look him in the eye and make clear, concise requests. This will catch his full attention.

Tell him what you DO want
Instead of focusing on misbehavior and what you don’t want him to do, explain exactly what you’d like your child to do or say instead. Give him simple instructions to follow.

Validate his feelings
Help your child identify and understand her emotions. Give words to her feelings, “You’re sad. You want to stay here and play. I know.” This doesn’t mean you must give in to her request, but letting her know that you understand her problem may be enough to help her calm down.

Teach the Quiet Bunny
When children get worked up, their physiological symptoms keep them in an agitated state. You can teach your child how to relax and then use this approach when fussing begins.

•  You can start each morning or end each day with a brief relaxation session. Have your child sit or lie comfortably with eyes closed. Tell a story that he’s a quiet bunny. Name body parts (feet, legs, tummy, etc.) and have your child wiggle it, and then relax it.

•  Once your child is familiar with this process you can call upon it at times when he is agitated. Crouch down to your child’s level, put your hands on his shoulders, look him in the eye and say, let’s do our Quiet Bunny. And then talk him through the process. Over time, just mentioning it and asking him to close his eyes will bring relaxation.

Distract and involve
Children can easily be distracted when a new activity is suggested. If your child is whining or fussing try viewing it as an “activity” that your child is engaged in. Since children aren’t very good multi-taskers you might be able to end the unpleasant activity with the recommendation of something different to do.

Invoke his imagination
If a child is upset about something, it can help to vocalize his fantasy of what he wishes would happen: “I bet you wish we could buy every single toy in this store.” This can become a fun game.

Use the preventive approach
Review desired behavior prior to leaving the house, or when entering a public building, or before you begin a playdate. This might prevent the whining or tantrum from even beginning. Put your comments in the positive (tell what you want, not what you don’t want) and be specific.

When it’s over, it’s over
After an episode of misbehavior is finished you can let it go and move on. Don’t feel you must teach a lesson by withholding your approval, love or company. Children bounce right back, and it is okay for you to bounce right back, too.

Excerpted with permission by McGraw-Hill Publishing from The No-Cry Discipline Solution (McGraw-Hill 2007).

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }

Firefly August 31, 2009 at 1:50 pm

Great tips :)

Reply

Kasey September 1, 2009 at 12:25 am

Yes, and can’t we all use tips on tantrums?! I know I can these days! LOL

Reply

Allison September 6, 2009 at 3:05 pm

Great advice. We’re just getting into the tantrums at our house. I like giving Eli options, gives him a sense of control and helps him learn to make good decisions.

Reply

Kasey September 8, 2009 at 12:38 am

Yes, options are good. My daughter has always been much easier to get along with if she feels she has a say in things and that we actually care.
Sometimes that works, sometimes not. Every situation is so different!

Reply

karissa September 7, 2009 at 8:23 pm

You mean you can’t give them nyquil? or benadryl?

totally kidding. sounds like some really great tips. remind me of this if I ever have children ok?

Reply

Kasey September 8, 2009 at 12:42 am

You know, they frown upon NyQuil and Benadryl these days! LOL
PLEASE come over to my house on a day that I have a daycare full of sick kids – you may never want children after that!! LOL Talk about tantrums, fussing and whining – it NEVER ends on days like that!

Reply

Leave a Comment

CommentLuv Enabled

Previous post:

Next post: