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A three year old would have started understanding and therefore you have to adopt a carrot and a stick policy- more carrots should be the policy. Keep your child close to you as often as you can and let him start handling some books with lots of sketches and educative material that is good for the 3 year old child.

2006-09-04 09:06:14 · answer #1 · answered by ingos 2 · 0 0

When he does this, walk away and ignore him. Do not give in to him or try to reason with him He is 3 and 3 yr olds cannot reason. If you are in a store, leave and try to go without him next time.At home, completely ignore this type of behavior. I know this sounds like it won't work, but I went through the same thing with my child. I read some book (sorry I don't remember the name) and it suggested what I told you. I had tried everything from time outs, to spanking, to taking things away. When we were in stores and he acted out, I would give him whatever he wanted to hush him up to keep down the embarrassment. Then after reading that book, I did what it suggested and within a couple of weeks it was much better. But now, you have to be very committed and consistent. When he sees you will not put up with it, he loses the control he has over you. I walked out of the grocery store twice. Left my buggy with food and everything sitting there and I picked him up and walked out. I took him home and went back when my husband came home from work. After that second time, I began leaving him at home from the start. I guess he decided that he would rather behave and get to go to the store than throw a tantrum. Be strong and don't give up. It is well worth the effort, and I am speaking from experience. Good luck.

2006-09-02 15:32:25 · answer #2 · answered by sherry c 2 · 0 0

it depends on what kind of melt downs yur talking about some times three year old just know how to pull the buttons of mom
i have 2 children anf my son has adhd and odd i read a book call dare to displane byu dr dobson . also storng wiil ed child , tat and being up bpys those books or base on godly points of veiw that an they also have a bible study to go along with it that and pray pray pray the pray of aparnet is never ending that and lend on other goldly people to help you also rember that you child is only three that and you might want to try a program called 123 Magic it seem to help me all of these thing that i have listed.

2006-09-02 15:16:25 · answer #3 · answered by fit_tech04 3 · 0 0

Three is way worse than two if you ask me. You just need to face the fact, you have a good whole year of this, bear with it, if you are somewhere with him/her and they act out, just realize there are parents everywhere around you, they have been there with there own, it is not that you are a bad parent, it is just a phaze they go through (unfortunately) The best thing you can do is walk away or do not watch her throw fits, it is what she wants, trust me, she is watching you and waiting for your reactions. She may want more attention or know it sets you off and thinks it is amusing, set her up and place her in a time out of two minutes. Tell her to calm down and go play. God Bless!!! Isn't parenting fun???Don't ya want more!!!

2006-09-02 15:32:52 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

When a child throws a fit pick a spot in a room where they can go every time. You take the child by the hand set her/him down and tell them calmly "when you are done crying you can get up". I use this on my very spoiled nephews, the 2 of them try to throw fits with me all the time but after making them sit in the "time out" spot a few times I only have to warn them. Be firm with your child, if you give in it only makes the next time worse.

2006-09-02 19:57:08 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You need to put them into separate empty rooms with a beds. No TVs, no radios, no toys, nothing that makes them un-bored. Lock the doors and keep them in there until they cool down. Let them out, get on your knees, and explain to them in a calm voice that you don't like when they get melt downs and that if they say they are sorry, let them go. If they don't say they are sorry, or have another melt down put them back into their rooms until they cool down again. Repeat procedure if necessary.

2006-09-02 15:10:46 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

initiate your ordinary a sprint till now in case you do no longer make your objective of 8:30. My son's ordinary is a mild winding down technique. First we do some thing actual like wrestling or taking part in capture (this might hep her burn of capability). Then we take a seat and study. Then we get his jammies on & the teeth brushed, etc. Then he gets in mattress and we sing and that i supply him his crammed animals. be sure going potty is likely one in all the final issues she does earlier she gets in mattress and supply her something actual looking (like a sip of water) earlier she asks. Then get hard and refuse the different requests. If she comes out take her top back in and don't say lots. in case you preserve being employer she will at last bypass to mattress with out combat. additionally, seek for little issues which would be at the back of this habit: is her nightlight too superb? or does she no longer have one and he or she is terrified of the dark now? or any style of issues.. however the ideas above might do the trick.

2016-11-06 07:45:33 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Seriously, my son is about to be 28 months old, and I am about to kill him sometimes. I love him to death, but holy crap, sometimes, ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!
I sometimes try ignoring, but that only last for a very little time. Sometimes I act just like him when he has his tantrums, but that really doesn't work. Timeout sometimes works. My son will usually scream while in time out, but I try so hard to ignore him. A few nights ago, I thought I was about to lose it, I had to have my husband come in and help me. That was at bedtime. That's been a nightmare lately. Spanking only works sometimes. I sometimes have to threaten about taking away his favorite toys (Buzz and Woody). They weren't kidding about the "terrible two's"!

2006-09-02 15:10:42 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

It can be so hard sometimes..I know. There are days that you want to rip out all of your hair!

I have noticed that ignoring my son during his tantrums works very well. The other thing that I do is take away his favorite toys. Never give in..that is key. They need to know that you are the boss..not them!

Good luck!

2006-09-02 16:09:29 · answer #9 · answered by Chewie 7 · 0 0

You just need the patience to ignore the tantrums. If you give in to them they will increase.

2006-09-02 15:13:17 · answer #10 · answered by notyou311 7 · 0 0

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