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My one year old son has started hitting me in the face... It really makes me sad because I am a very gentle person. I try hard not to raise my voice and I NEVER hit! I don't know where he learns to be so aggresive. Any ideas on how to get my son to stop hitting me and others?

2006-09-26 13:28:45 · 17 answers · asked by kourtney j 2 in Pregnancy & Parenting Toddler & Preschooler

17 answers

Explain to him that it hurts and remove him from the situation. If he is hitting you while you are holding him tell him it hurts mommy and put him down.

2006-09-26 13:31:24 · answer #1 · answered by mommysrock 4 · 0 2

I, too, am a gentle Mom but when my boys started hitting me, I hit them back! Not hard, just enough to let him know you mean business and it hurts to be hit. Tell him, NO, NO, and if he hits you back, hit a little harder and repeat the NO, No. This won't ruin him for live, he's only 1 but he needs to be corrected now and not wait until he's 3 or 4 because when they hit or bite then, it really will hurt. When my grandson started hitting, I did the same thing with him. It only took twice for him!

2006-09-26 13:44:53 · answer #2 · answered by Nana 1 · 1 0

Hi Kourtney, Your son doesn't know hitting is wrong.You need to teach him whats right and whats wrong.If you don't,he will grow up a big bully,and he just might hurt someone.I know this is going to sound mean,but the next time your son hits you,give him alittle push,and when he falls down,tell him we don't hit or push anyone this is wrong.If you have 2 do this a half a dozen times,you need to do it.Kids now a days are really smart,and learn things easily.The time is now,before it's 2 late.This is not a laughing matter at all. I wish you luck,and stay with it. A friend..

Clowmy

2006-09-26 13:40:51 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You could try this: squeeze your son's hand (but don't hurt him) every time he hits you or anyone else and say NO.
When you utter the words don't hit, all he hears is the word hit so it's not a good strategy to say don't hit or don't do that naughty thing. You can overcome this problem by acting patient and loving.

2006-09-26 13:34:47 · answer #4 · answered by flugelberry 4 · 0 0

My daughter went through that stage. Sometimes she still does once in a while (biting is another one!! watch for that one.. it's real fun!!). Usually it's out of frustration due to lack of communication skills (not you, him..he is young still). Don't worry about it right now, but I totally understand with the getting sad about it.. I am not as relaxed as you I dont think, but it still makes me sad to hear it!... all I could do was hold my daughters hands away from me , and her face..if she decided biting would be the next thing. .... basically restrain, and tell her no hitting/biting.... DIRECTLY in her face though.. definitely eye to eye. and hold them still at your level and make them look you in the eye when telling them.,.. usually can tell you are being serious this way.
anyway, he'll grow out of it based on your attitude toward it (which is good~) , so I wouldn't be too worried, but I know that sad feeling!!..

2006-09-26 14:50:09 · answer #5 · answered by lollipops 1 · 1 0

ok ok ok
so you are a passive person
and your son hits you
hmmmm
tell him no
grab his hands and tell him ..mommy says no that is not good

there is nothing wrong with slapping his butt you know? if the former does not work

he is approaching the terrible 2's and he is trying to find his boundries......now is the time for you to set them
you will not let him hit you
you will not let him have a tantrun in the supermarket

who do you think is in charge here.....him or you?

he is just like anyone else
give him and inch and he'll take a mile

and it is a normal part of a child's growth

have fun

2006-09-26 13:57:11 · answer #6 · answered by Blondie 3 · 1 0

Children have the right to use their bodies to express their feelings, but they don't have the right to hurt someone. Even if you generally let other kinds of toddler misbehavior slide, you need to draw the line at letting your child hit you in anger.

Of course, this doesn't mean that when your toddler hurts you it's okay to hurt him back. If your child hits you and you spank him or discipline him by force, you'll only teach him that aggression is an acceptable way to express his feelings or get what he wants. Instead, take your toddler's hands and say, "No hitting. I know you're angry, but we don't hit people. Hitting hurts." If you can tell that your toddler is about to hit you, stop him beforehand and firmly tell him "no."

Some experts suggest that parents offer an angry child a harmless way to "vent" his pent-up fury, such as pummeling a special pillow. This, in my opinion, is a mistake. Anger is a feeling, and feelings don't get "used up." In fact, it's clear from recent research that "harmless violence" is a contradiction in terms. A toddler who's encouraged to wallop his pillow in anger is more — not less — likely to see walloping a person as an acceptable alternative.

When your toddler behaves aggressively, make sure he understands that it's not his anger you disapprove of but his violent expression of it. Don't tell him not to get angry or not to show that he's angry. Simply acknowledge his feeling — and perhaps even sympathize with it — but then remind him that it's much more constructive to use his words to tell you why he's upset. Help him practice expressing his anger verbally. Show him that once he can talk about his anger, the two of you can try to come up with a solution to whatever's vexing him.

Hope this helps!

2006-09-26 13:32:35 · answer #7 · answered by wd2crv 3 · 1 1

do not spank him for this, through fact it is going to be much less effective. holiday will artwork, yet you need to do it appropriate. start up by utilising telling him, flippantly, why he's being given holiday, and for the way long. Then forget approximately approximately all his outbursts. If he strays from the timeout center, place him back in, and say in basic terms 'you are able to not depart the time-out center.' Or regardless of you call it, and so on. as quickly because it is over, tell him back why he became into in timeout and why his habit is unacceptable. Then supply him a hug and thank him for staying in timeout (whether he did not on the start.) At 3.5 the timeouts ought to be somewhat short, through fact it would be merciless to lead them to stay in one place for too long. i might think of five-10 minutes max. you need to coach him which you're an unstoppable rigidity - no be counted how plenty he cries or complains or fights, what you assert will finally take place. to 3 quantity this might take a on a similar time as, through fact some youthful teenagers flow into those stages that lead them to extra tricky. attempt your maximum suitable to stay calm in the face of his tantrums and combating. practice him that each one his efforts won't substitute what is going to take place.

2016-12-15 15:04:52 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You can't reason with a 1 year old. You have to give him a telling off every time he does it. You don't have to hit him, just the threat of a smack will do. But you do have to raise your voice, you might not like doing but it's for his own good. Otherwise he'll just keep doing it.

x

2006-09-27 04:30:02 · answer #9 · answered by tom 5 · 1 0

Its NOT anything you have done. I know. My kid is 2 and he does that too. A friend who is a child counselor told me that this is the child's way of showing its frustration. He is trying to express something and we are failing to understand what he means so though he has not learnt violence from his environment the baser human instinct takes over and the child hits.

Be patient try and understand what he wants at that point of time. He cannot verbalise his needs yet.(my son is almost two and still he does not talk much)

He WILL outgrow it.

2006-09-26 17:44:04 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

It's a phase...and the more you make a big deal about it..the more the child says.."hey...I'm getting attention" and they keep doing it...My son is almost 3 and ALMOST done with the hitting of others..(he also was biting~that may be the next phase he goes through..just warning you!) I ignore it and pretend it didn't happen and he forgets he was doing it..He may just be an aggressive kid..it's not taught..it's just in them..

2006-09-26 15:32:11 · answer #11 · answered by just me 4 · 0 1

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