i couldn't read and not give you ayou are doing the best job you can at the moment and i bet you're a great mum.
no advice.
Its probably the hormones and the fact i am just feeling so run down but i am at a loss at what to do with DD. She just doesn't listen to me, she does the same naughty things over and over. Eg. Putting toilet paper in the toilet as well as other objects, getting into the laundry into the powder.. I am forever telling her off, she went to time out yesterday after jamming two rolls down the toilet. I felt awful for yelling and putting her there, she ended up falling asleep for 2-3 hours but i sat and cried the whole time.
I try and vent to DP and even my mum but i get the same stupid jokes from them which DON'T help. Keeping the doors closed is useless she knows how to open them hence why she keeps doing it! Ive suggested more child gates but thats more obstacles i have to go over (we already have two)
I know she is coming up to "terrible twos" and i am thankful hers aren't full of tantrums yet but she is just SO destructive. Yesterday after putting her in time out i went into the loungeroom and saw she had poured milk ALL over the entertainment unit which got onto DPs centre speaker, his ps3 and his power amp. I almost died when i saw it and instantly cleaned it up. But i sat there thinking "WHY??????"
I often yell at her, i hadn't smacked her in a while i hated the feeling but ive resorted to that because i just have no patience. I really do feel like i suck at being a parent.
i couldn't read and not give you ayou are doing the best job you can at the moment and i bet you're a great mum.
no advice.
You're not failing, first and foremost! We do what we can to get by. It sounds like your DD is a high energy little girlI guess the only advice I can give is to try to either be in the same room she is in, or keep her in the same room you are in, because I think no matter how baby proof you make a house, kids will always find something that is breakable etc. Do you have any sort of a routine for her? I find that when I deviate too much from DD's little self imposed routine, she doesn't have as good a day as if I stuck to it. I haven't ever put her in a routine, just watched for her cues and structured stuff around that. So we wake up (used to be 7, now 8-9), have breakfast, read a few stories. Then it's a bottle, nap for an hour (wish she'd sleep longer lol!) then up for a snack and a play, outside if it's nice. Then lunch, toy pack up, bottle, nap for an hour. Then it's up, snack, cleaning the kitchen and lounge while DD plays in the exersaucer, then into the playroom. When it's nice we take a walk. Then DH gets home, dinner, bath/shower, bottle and bed. DD has a lot of energy and likes to interact heaps, so I'm constantly talking or singing to her. I suspect she'll be all up in everything when she's running around too. So that's my only advice, stick with her if possible and tire her out
But you are not failing! She's always got the biggest smile on her face in pics, so you're doing it right!!
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Hugs to you - we all fail at this parenting lark, and usually keep on failing until our offspring have children of their own.
While you're probably not in a headspace to do this, what with being towards the end of pregnancy, but is it worth trying natural consequences rather than time out? Your DD has to help clean up the mess she makes. I find I get grumpier cleaning up others' mess so I need help or I get all shouty and mean. I liked doing lots of outdoors time with Liebs as the mess didn't matter so much then - at least until DH changed the back gate so it could be opened easily!
honey. I don't have any advice for you but you are so not alone. Did you see my facebook status a couple if days ago? You are not failing. It's just what some toddlers are like I think. At least thats what I tell myself.
I don't really have any advice but to say that ALL kids go through these stages and that we've def all been there.
Hell my girls are 2.5 & 3.5 and they both still get into things.
Regarding the milk, can you get a lock put on the fridge? We had to do this with DD1 as she would get all sorts of random things out and either spill or eat them.
You can buy baby gates that actually have a gate built into them so you lift a little handle and you get to walk through rather than jumping over, it might be worth looking into some of those.
I know it's a PITA but can you get her to 'HELP' you when your doing other things, DD1 loved thinking she was helping and it meant i could keep more of an eye on her, it made it so much easier when i was PG with DD2 if DD1 was happily joining in.
I also found i had to engage her more, i had things to do YES but she needed my attention also and no matter how fat & tired i was (being PG i mean) i had to realise that she NEEDED that attention.
Can you set aside a time of day that is for reading, playing or craft that she KNOWS she will get at roughyl the same time every day, if she's naughty then she doesn't get to do craft etc.
I also agree with her having to help clean up her mess, DD1 has on numerous occasions been made to clean the carpet or the walls.
One thing that really helped me was to accept that these behaviours were all normal. Not necessarily naughty or destructive but just part of normal development. Once I realised that, things became a whole lot easier. I even joined in once flinging the laundry powder around and then we cleaned it up together. Good times.
I found that DS1 would only do stuff like that when he was bored. He either wanted me or he wanted something to do. So I kept him busy. I tried to set up stuff the night before by either swapping toys around so they were 'new' ones or using some ideas from this cool website Play at home mom. I joined the local toy library which meant we always had "new" toys to keep him busy.
I'd also try and prepare all of DS1's food for the next day in a lunch box so I wasn't having to have time away from DS1 doing that too.
Life felt a lot like groundhog day for a while, but at least he wasn't being a complete feral because he had more of my attention and interesting things to do. I don't have to do as much of this now as he's older but it really helped when he was going through that stage.
put the toilet paper up higher, put a lock of the fridge and cupboards, put some of the gates around where you have to lift them to open then not climb over them.
how much is she sleeping? you siad she slept for 2 -3 hours after the time out incident. Could it be that she is overtired and she is acting out? go for a walk, read books, craft, playdough, get her helping you with washing and cleaning up.
Some people are lucky in that they get a child that does what they are told at 2 years old. Others have normal children that get into stuff. Your job as a parent is to remove the accessibility of said stuff until she grows out of this phase. Either remove the things she is getting into or block her access to them. It's not rocket science![]()
I agree with Raven. It sounds like you're making it harder for yourself than it needs to be. Put things out of reach or in a locked cupboard![]()
Not sure what kind of door handles you have, but if they're round knobs you can actually get something to put over them so 'child proof' that room. You have to squeeze 2 points together which then 'grabs' the handle and allows you to turn it (which is easy for an adult) but when a little munchkin tries to open the door it just spins. Might help keep her out of some rooms like the toilet.
I agree with the others, you need to keep her away/ out of areas. We used those covers over door knobs to keep toilet door closed, a latch on our sliding laundry door (powder always out of reach). Perhaps when giving liquids make her stay in the kitchen til finished etc...
Its a hard age, they're very curious as to what happens if they do this or do that, like others said its just trying to move everything out of reach. For the toilet you could try those cupbord lock things, hard to explain but the ones that has the dot that sits on either side and it stretches over, our old place had it on the loos. And I'f find there was always something new to lock or hide, was forever babyproofing.
If you're failing, I'm majorly failing!
DD plays in the toilet... thats fine if the bigger kids have bothered to FLUSH!! We have toilet rolls dumped on the floor & in the toilet. Toys in the toilet. Last night she smeared moisturiser all over my bedroom wall, & in a power point that she turned on while doing it. I'll give her a tiny drink in a cup, or the kids will leave one where she can reach. She'll dump it on whatever/where ever. Usually the loungeroom carpet.
I yell every single night for the toilet door to be kept shut. I still have to say it every bloody night.
I'm at my wits end with DD, but I know that its just a stage & soon she'll hopefully have the capacity to understand WHY you don't put your bikkie in the toilet water like you do a coffee![]()
She's not even two yet. She's unlikely to listen to you when you tell her not to do stuff. She's WAY more likely to lisen to you if you tell her to DO something.
Try to remember she'd not being destructive. She has not idea what being destructive means. She is playing and having fun. I would doubt she made the link between being smacked and the thing she'd just done wrong. She's too young. She'd more likely to just think she can't do anything.
You will be more preoccupied when a new baby comes. You need to sit down with DP and really, really invest some time and energy into protecting DD from toilets and laundry powder etc. Those things can cause her real harm, if you aren't looking and you already know she's a curious little soul. The time and energy and money will pay off. It's just something that a lot of parents have to do to make things easier for everyone in the long run.
I'm not sure you can 'blame' terrible twos. Children don't just turn two and become terrible.
Perhaps you need to schedule some serious mum and DD time in say, 30 min blocks doing lots of fun things - singing, drawing, play-dough. Then she might be more content to play quietly for 10 mins. Then you can join in and play with her and get her little brain active...and tired out. Then she'll sleep well and you'll get a good decent break.
Involve her in the boring stuff like hanging the washing - she has to pass you a peg. She can watch or 'help' while you peel potatoes. My kids used to crack up at all the silly peeling shapes - i have no idea why! Then you get stuff done - and she gets to be stimulated and spend time with her favourite person.
I don't really leave my kids alone yet - and they are much older than yours. They still require lots of my attention to play and keep occupied. They've never really wanted to play on their own
No-one's perfect. Just try to go easy on her. She's only so little, you might be expecting too much from her.
Oh honey - I can hear how frustrated you are.
Like others have said - she isn't purposely being naughty - she is just experimenting to only with what she is playing with but also with how you react. She is only little and these things are all really exciting.
My DD is a bit older and is constantly doing crazy stuff but it is because she thinks that it is hilarious to put paper in the toilet - mummy does it after all.
One thing I will say - there is no way that my DD would understand timeout. She understands me stopping her doing something by moving her to another room but there is no way that she would understand that she is being ignored etc because she was bad. I'm not sure it is a good idea to let her fall asleep in timeout. Maybe explaining why she shouldn't be doing something then distracting her with something else would work better.
You only have a few more weeks with just you and DD so why not ignore the dishes and vacuuming (and BB if necessary - we will understand lol) and go on some adventures with DD. I know it is cold outside but the days are actuall beautiful so throw on a jacket and walk to the playground, she will be happy and worn out and you will get some quiet time when she is asleep afterwards. If it is really too cold outside then do something with her inside like playdo or drawing or sitting on the kitchen floor drumming on the pots and pans - remember that you and time with you are more fun than anything else in her whole world.
:yeahthat: (just for you Lenny)
I think you are expecting a bit much sorry. She's not even two yet. She's not trying to be naughty, she just hasn't developed the impulse control to be able to stop doing things she's not supposed to even though she knows she shouldn't. I often see my DD2 touching things she shouldn't while saying to herself 'No, don't touch'. She knows she isn't supposed to touch but she's just a baby and hasn't developed impulse control yet, she can't help herself. There's no use punishing her for something she hasn't developed yet, just like you wouldn't punish a baby for not being able to walk yet ITMS?
So all you can do is put away things you don't want her to get in to.
Thanks everyone.
When i posted this earlier i was very frazzled and frustrated with her. She is a great little girl and is VERY inquisitive (sp?) so i know she does these things because i do them (the toilet and the laundry) when i said she poured milk, i meant from her drink bottle she doesnt have any access to the kitchen. Ever since she got in the pantry at 10 months and broke a vodka bottle on the floor she hasn't been back in since.
I really do need to start reminding myself how little she is, and how sometimes she isn't being naughty but trying to be like mummy. When she fell asleep in time out i felt awful, she wasnt supposed to! So when she woke up we had big cuddles and looked at toy catalogues together.
Another reason i don't feel cut out to be a parent is the lack of patience and understanding, im the type of person who i expect everyone to be on the same page as me and do things the way i want them done (its one of my many flaws im sure)
We had a great day together today. Even at my crankiest she always gives me kisses and cuddles which sometimes im surprised she does as i can be quite mean (since being pregnant with raging hormones).
I've asked DP to bring home some little locks for the doors, he has one on his computer room so she cant get in so ill put one of the toilet and laundry.
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