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thread: 4.5 year old behavior help/vent

  1. #1
    2013 BellyBelly RAK Recipient.

    Apr 2006
    Winter is coming
    5,000

    4.5 year old behavior help/vent

    My DS is very challenging at the moment. From the second we get home from kindy he is full of meltdowns and misbehaves. The meltdowns are about anything trivial, he wants to sit where I have sat on the couch, did/didn't want what was left in his lunchbox when I asked etc. He is always asking for me to play with him but every time I do it is all over within a short time because he does something really silly - like he wants to play lego so I sit down with him and make a car. He has a great time playing with the car for a little while and then a bit breaks off (on purpose). So I fix it. Then it breaks again and I fix it but tell him I won't fix it again if he keeps breaking it. Then he breaks it again, I refuse to fix it and he then cries, yells and flops around on the floor for the next half hour.
    Or he will draw a picture, then rip the picture, then have a big upset because the picture is broken.

    It is driving me crazy. I feel like I haven't spent any time with him for ages because whenever I try he is just terrible to be around. He never seems happy We stayed at home this weekend for the first time in ages and it was really terrible. He was naughty all day and really horrible to his sister. He is bored at home but I can't get him engaged in anything. Either he is not interested in even starting or he ruins it within a minute or two. We try to give him lots of positive attention but it seems like he is so desperate that he is willing to be growled at all day

    Is this just what other 4 year old boys are like? Because he isn't very enjoyable to be around lately

  2. #2
    Registered User

    Mar 2006
    4,542

    I am no help I'm sorry because my DD is doing exactly the same thing. Everyone tells me this is a phase but I am really starting not to believe them.

    Sending us both hugs becasue I'm praying it is a phase and we can survive.

    Hoping tomorrow is a much better day for you.

  3. #3
    Registered User

    May 2008
    Melbourne
    1,838

    My experience with my only just 5 year old is that yes, these tough and challenging times come and go in phases. We can have a couple of weeks of defiance, challenge and insistance in things going HIS way to all of a sudden have our cruisey, easy to get along with beautifully natured boy back.

    I hope this is the case for you. Good luck

  4. #4
    Registered User

    Aug 2006
    1,074

    I find that as well EJ. It comes in phases. He is happy and we are all happy then boom, he's difficult, sulky, defiant. We just had a few days of sulky. It was driving me insane. I have tried to turn it around today by taking him to the park to tire him out and bought some craft for Easter and we did it together. It made him happy but as to whether tomorrow he will be happy I guess we will see.

    He might be tired after daycare. I try to keep things very low key on these days as he is exhausted and make sure he goes to bed on time. Is it everyday that it happens or daycare days? Could he be feeling sick? Has something maybe upset him lately?

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Dec 2007
    Sunny Qld
    14,682

    I dunno, but mine hasn't gotten any better since turning 5.. I say bring back the terrible 2's!!!!!!

    (and that is with one already going through the terrible 2's!)

    Tonight he was SO disrespectful that he got sent to bed early and without his nightly cup of milk. Which caused him to have a bloodcurdling scream (my neighbours HATE us I think) because I wouldn't give him his milk as punishment for him being nasty to both me and DH. He then apologised - to get the milk. And I said no because he wasn't apologising because he knew he was being a brat and totally disrespectful, he was apologising because he thought it would get him the milk.

    Mama don't roll that way in this house. Dis mama is mean.

    He went to bed without milk. And early. LOL

  6. #6
    Registered User
    Add fionas on Facebook

    Apr 2007
    Recently treechanged to Woodend, VIC
    3,473

    I just spent the morning with my 4.5 year-old at kinder and TBH I can see why she has meltdowns after spending the morning there, then going to childcare. The kids spend a lot of time concentrating on small but detailed stuff like painting, playdoh, pasting, threading stuff. I know they're just playing but they're still using their little brains and concentrating. I think it all gets too much and they just need to chill.

    I think the park is a great idea or a bike ride/swimming - just anything physical that doesn't require too much brain energy.

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Feb 2006
    Inner East, Melbourne
    312

    my kids are like that when they're either exhausted, sick or having growth/developmental spurts. Or all three at the same time. It's exhausting but it'll pass. Eventually!

  8. #8
    Registered User

    Oct 2007
    Perth,WA
    2,942

    Excuse me, I think you have my child. That's ok... You can keep him lol!!

    I hope it passes soon too. You're not alone!


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  9. #9
    Registered User

    Mar 2006
    4,542

    Excuse me, I think you have my child. That's ok... You can keep him lol!!

  10. #10
    Registered User

    Jun 2007
    Dandenong Ranges, Melbourne.
    5,673

    hi arte- I'm going to go against the grain here and say that ds1 is not like this at all. it could be a personality thing. i don't know?
    i know these sorts of things have been going on for a while for you though, and to be completely honest, i think maybe you might need to get some outside advice about it all. please take this in the way that i mean it, out of concern, not critiscm. you know that we are friends and thats why i feel that i can say this to you xox

  11. #11
    BellyBelly Member

    Feb 2007
    3,734

    G said what I was going to say. Whilst N has his moments what you describe doesnt sound like him - the meltdowns, almost 'sabotahing' his own games etc. If I am giving him attention he doesnt get upset while we are playing or if something goes off course.
    It isnt so new for you - you have these cycles - perhaps related to his sleep?
    I agree with G why dont you get someone to check it out for you - it keeps coming up and I dont know how you deal with it all.
    Like G - this all comes from our friendship and how much I care for you and your kids. x

  12. #12
    2013 BellyBelly RAK Recipient.

    Apr 2006
    Winter is coming
    5,000

    Thanks everyone. Glad to see he isn't the only super surly 4 year old around.

    I should have added that this isn't a passing thing - he has been doing it for at least the last 3 months. Don't get me wrong, he can be such a nice kid when he is good, it can just go bad so quickly. It is way better on kindy days. Staying at home is a complete nightmare.

    G and MP, thanks - I do appreciate the honesty. The GP did refer us to someone about the sleep and I was going to bring up the behavior stuff then. He is acting like he was back before we started kindy, when he needed more stimulation. Perhaps there is something in this 'gifted' thing like his teachers say. I really hope that he hasn't outgrown kindy, it is still 6 months before he starts school.

  13. #13
    Registered User

    Jun 2007
    Dandenong Ranges, Melbourne.
    5,673

    when do you see the person that you were referred to arte?

  14. #14
    2013 BellyBelly RAK Recipient.

    Apr 2006
    Winter is coming
    5,000

    Dunno. Saw the GP a month ago and still haven't received anything in the mail. Will ring the GP tomorrow and make sure he actually made the referral I think.

  15. #15
    Registered User

    Dec 2005
    In Bankworld with Barbara
    14,222

    I really think you need to follow this up with the GP. Personally, I don't think a label of *gifted* can be thrown around on his own like that - the bigger picture needs to be looked at too and saying he is gifted is easy - everyone wants a gifted child, but when you add into it that the apparent *giftedness* is a part of something else it's not so good anymore, so it's just better to stick with the *gifted* tag. It can't be looked at in isolation like the kindy teachers are doing. They see this incredibly bright kid at kindy, but they don't see what he is like at home and if they did I don't think they'd be saying he's gifted. And lets be really honest, this isn't just the last 3 months it's been going on, it's been like this for years with a few bright spots in between to lull you into thinking it's just a passing stage or developmental. I have 4 kids all with different personalities and NONE of them have acted out like that continuously. I don't know a single 4 year old who is continuously like that unless they have a reason to be like that. I've spent a lot of time at preschool while my kids have been there and you can tell the difference between what is normal bratty 4yo behaviour and what is a sign of a bigger issue.

    I think he thrives on kindy days because he is getting a fully structured day and when he gets home and it's not structured he can't handle it. You know how he likes routine and things to be *just so* and kindy gives him that. I know it puts you in a crappy position because you can't dedicate the time to him to give him the structure and routine of kindy because you have the two girls and a house to run. At kindy the teachers are there solely to provide them with activities and things to do that will engage them. When you've spoken to them, have you talked about what he is like at home? No one wants to contemplate that there may be something else going on, but it can't go on like this.

  16. #16
    Registered User

    Jan 2008
    Brisbane
    5,039

    I think it sounds totally normal for a tired growing little man!

  17. #17
    BellyBelly Member

    Feb 2007
    3,734

    Arte
    Def worth checking when the appt is for – I have no idea what they may find but it is so worth checking. I am just hoping you get some strategies/advice/direction on how to deal with it and it all becomes easier for you all. I cant imagine how hard it is for you.
    I hope there is nothing else going on in some ways – but at the same time if it is something you can get help with perhaps that would be a relief and it would be good to have a ‘framework’ to work within.
    Hugs to you my friend – you are doing a great job.

  18. #18
    2013 BellyBelly RAK Recipient.

    Apr 2006
    Winter is coming
    5,000

    Trill, from what I have read about giftedness, there is a large behavior aspect to it. I must have given the wrong impression along the line. He is an anxious boy, and he does like to have fair warning of what is happening and he is a perfectionist but he is nowhere near as rigid as you think. He is chatty and social, he plays with other kids. I am 99% sure he is not on the ASD.

    But you are right, it has been going on in one form or another since he was about 18 months old. There is an issue.

    I have been wondering for a while if it is possible that his intellectual side and his emotional side mismatch. I just googled and it is real thing - Asynchronous Development. It fully describes him, he is very smart but emotionally he can't cope with as much as you would expect from a 4 year old. Or maybe I expect more from him because he is so smart.

    I will talk to the kindy teachers and see if there is any sort of help they can access. Just some tactics on how to handle him at home would be great.

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