thread: Why are my girls like this-I need some serious advice

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  1. #1
    Registered User

    Aug 2006
    141

    I can't say I have any experience with this (ie no children of my own)....It sounds incredibly frustrating. My sister and I were about 3 years apart and did our fair share of fighting when we were younger. We shared a room too...

    Are there any activities that your daughters can do by themselves (ie not together)? Is it any better that way, or so they just try to distract each other?

    Would you older daughter enjoy teaching your younger daughter something new? I remember my sister learnt the recorder at school and I loved it when she come home and gave me a lesson!

    Do you have a library nearby? Perhaps Moni (I've just noticed the names in your signiture!) could choose some books for Miah to read to her.

    Good luck!

  2. #2
    Registered User

    Sep 2008
    South West Vic
    275

    Miah tries to read to moni but Moni gets sick of it in the end, miah even tries to teach moni to read but moni will eventually just get sick of it and push the book away.
    They will sit down and draw but moni doesnt like it when miah is quiet so she will try be nasty & scribble on miahs drawing or put dots on it or bump miah so she messes it up, same things happens at tea time, moni will put food on miahs plate or touch her food with sauce (miah HATES sauce) I have to put one at each end of the table at meal times.

    Im starting to think Montana has some sort of behavioural issue but then again when she is on her own she is magic.

  3. #3
    Lucy in the sky with diamonds.

    Jan 2005
    Funky Town, Vic
    7,070

    You just have to keep them busy. It's the only thing that works for me, but its hard because they can't play together (have to have the same crayon etc), so I have one at one end of the house and the other with me, then I swap.

  4. #4
    Registered User

    Sep 2008
    South West Vic
    275

    You just have to keep them busy. It's the only thing that works for me, but its hard because they can't play together (have to have the same crayon etc), so I have one at one end of the house and the other with me, then I swap.
    But how do u manage to keep one at one end of the house while the other is with you, my girls wouldnt have a bar of that without MAJOR crying and "thats not fair" statements

  5. #5
    Lucy in the sky with diamonds.

    Jan 2005
    Funky Town, Vic
    7,070

    I do it by stealth...

    Get one absorbed in one thing (tv, blocks, drawing), then quietly grab the other one and start an activity down the end of the house, but usually I give them little housework jobs to do with me.
    Generally, the older one likes to get stuck into something interesting, but the younger one does all she can to thwart him, knock things over etc. So I say sympathetically - 'here, I'll get her out of your way darling" and he is thrilled to be left alone..

    I only get about 30 mins each time, but I break up the day as much as I can. Sometimes I even pit the little buggers against each other to see who can pick up more toys at cleanup time

    Although now DS is more patient I'm looking for activities that will have them working together to achieve things so they can appreciate each other more.

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Jul 2005
    Rural NSW
    6,975

    Sounds like you need some "back up". Your girls sound a bit like my boys at the end of the day. Most of the time they are ok... but during the witching hour (6 - 7pm) they act just as you described. I'm worried my older 5yoDS is going to break my 2yoDs's fingers in a slammed door one day!

    One tip is to be aware that children of that age still reflect the mood of people around them. If you get agitated (I KNOW how hard it is not to!) then they will get worse. What I find works best is when my Dh comes home from work. in a good mood, not too tired and creates a fresh outlook. He calmly diffuses it by using distraction "hey who wants their bath first? They'll get the biggest bubbles!" while encouraging the other one to do something somewhere else (Lulu's 'divide and conquer' strategy is great!).

    Personally this is where a member of ones extended family should be stepping in... an aunt or uncle to say; "hey, calm down, listen to your mum". Us poor mums have a bad deal these days... kids just tune out too quickly because we do it solo for too long. JMO.

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Sep 2008
    South West Vic
    275

    Sounds like you need some "back up". Your girls sound a bit like my boys at the end of the day. Most of the time they are ok... but during the witching hour (6 - 7pm) they act just as you described. I'm worried my older 5yoDS is going to break my 2yoDs's fingers in a slammed door one day!

    One tip is to be aware that children of that age still reflect the mood of people around them. If you get agitated (I KNOW how hard it is not to!) then they will get worse. What I find works best is when my Dh comes home from work. in a good mood, not too tired and creates a fresh outlook. He calmly diffuses it by using distraction "hey who wants their bath first? They'll get the biggest bubbles!" while encouraging the other one to do something somewhere else (Lulu's 'divide and conquer' strategy is great!).

    Personally this is where a member of ones extended family should be stepping in... an aunt or uncle to say; "hey, calm down, listen to your mum". Us poor mums have a bad deal these days... kids just tune out too quickly because we do it solo for too long. JMO.
    We have no family that lives around here unfortunatley, I wish we did coz i could do with someone taking the girls every now and then.