It's called the terrible two's for a reason!!!
That said in jest, I truly think this is a phase for her. She is going through the normal period of child testing their boundaries. Simply be consistent in whatever punishment you decide on for the misbehavior. If you are consistent and loving, she will grow out of this phase once she feels secure in her limits.
But be prepared in the future. Children regularly go through periods of testing their parents and the boundaries set by them.
2007-02-21 08:11:45
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answer #1
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answered by Raising6Ducklings! 6
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It sounds to me like she just wants attention. With other siblings, she may not be getting the attention she needs. Some kids need more attention than others (some are more needy) and it's hard for a mom to do so with multiple children. I have 3 kids (7,4,2mo) and each one is so very different. My 4 year old is a girl and I notice that when I don't give her the attention she needs, she looks for it in different ways like getting in trouble. When kids aren't getting the positive attention, they'll try for the negative attention cause it works. It will be hard at first, but what I did was stop giving her the negative attention and encourage her more to want the positive attention. Sounds difficult, I know, but when she did something to upset me I told her I didn't like it and what I didn't like and then I walked away. If she did it again, I would ignore it. But when she did something good, even if it was something little, I made sure I praised her and rewarded her with a game to play together or something. The time with me is what she wanted, so that was her reward. Hope this helped a little. Hang in there, things will get better. Sounds to me like you are really trying and doing a great job at parenting.
2007-02-21 08:21:24
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answer #2
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answered by impossiblemama 4
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Firmness is your best bet. When you say no or stop doing that don't budge, just make sure she knows your not going to give in to her when she is crying, or throwing a fit. When she starts to harm her siblings tell her that is wrong if she doesnt stop put her in the corner and let her watch her brothers having a good time while she is not. the food issue let her throw up but tell her to go to the bathroom and if she does throw up send her to bed without supper. I have found it best to let my daughter have a choice nothing to extreme but a choice, when she eventually finds out it's not helping she will realize maybe you were right.
2007-02-21 08:16:27
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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The punishment should fit the crime. If she is beating her brothers, give her a good spanking (after you are calm and collected). If she is biting, give her a small bite. She doesnt understand what she is doing. Show her there are consequences to her actions. Posetive reinforcement is BS. 2 year olds can also be taught time out (if its boring enough) or be shown a "bad girl chart". Make a chart with pictures of a girl doing bad things, and what happens when she does those bad things. (time out, spank, take away toys etc). You can have another column for what happens if she is a good girl, (if she puts away her toys, kisses mommy, plays nice with brothers) and give her a reward (reading a book with mommy, bath time, etc)
2007-02-21 08:14:31
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answer #4
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answered by Soon2BMommy 3
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First of all, you need to establish boundaries. If she throws up, she goes to her room and she gets nothing further to eat until her next meal. If she hits, she gets a punishment. Punishment has to be immediate, it has to have a reason, and it has to be a real consequence. Threatening does nothing. If you say, "If you hit, you get a time-out/go to your room/whatever" then you have to DO it.
How is she staying up all night? Put her to bed at her bed time and that's it. If she wants to sit in a dark room all night, that's her problem. But she is not allowed to turn on the light. She's not allowed to leave her room. If she cries and throws tantrums, let her. If she tries to leave, take her back. Put a lock on the door in you have to. Make sure she understands that you have rules and she has to obey them.
Parenting isn't about being mean. And it isn't about being your child's best friend. It's about showing them that you are in charge. Remember that discipline is letting your child choose the consequence of their action. If you hit: you get a time out. If you play nicely: you get to play play-doh or color or whatever.
If you stay up all night, you sit in a dark room with no one paying attention to you. If you go to sleep, you wake up happy and mommy and daddy are there when you wake up.
You're the parent.
2007-02-21 08:14:06
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answer #5
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answered by leaptad 6
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I have a cousin who is exactly like that and what we do is we reward her good bahvior and ignore the bad. When she forces herself to throw up she has to clean the mess up herself, and then has to remain in a room away from toys the rest of the day.
You need to reward her when she is doing something that you want her to be doing, and if she isn't she needs to be faced with immediate and forceful consequences or completely ignored at all, and that is your judgement as to what needs to be ignored and what needs to be punished, but so far these means have proven effective with my cousin so they might work for you too.
2007-02-21 08:17:54
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Pick a form of correction and then be consistent. It doesn't matter the circumstances if she breaks the rules then she get the punishment.
She will grow out of this but the key is consistency. Punish her the same way every time. It will take a few weeks before she gets it but she will get it. Be tough.
2007-02-21 08:12:50
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Bud (pal) has a chop up character. around different human beings, he (pal) is so alluring and so amazing. absolutely everyone seems to be so shocked that he isn't something like the memories that I incredibly have instructed them. He facilitates human beings to puppy and make over him like he's a few physique's infant. With me, he (Bud) is crafty and sly. he's packed with trickery...he's often tearing into his luggage of nutrition and treats. understanding that he can't flow out, he sits by potential of the door and acts like he's asleep, till the door is opened and then out he is going I under no circumstances comprehend from sooner or later to the subsequent if i'll awaken to pal, the reliable cat or Bud, his evil alterpersonality..
2016-10-16 04:48:38
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answer #8
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answered by ? 4
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neither angel nor devil *LOL* just a typical 2 year old, there is a reason that they are called the terrible twos, just curtail the violence and as for the rest...it will change as she gets older. hang tough mom!
2007-02-21 08:10:22
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answer #9
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answered by dances with cats 7
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SHE IS GOING THROUGH WHAT WE CALL "TERRIBLE TWO'S" BUT I WOULD NOT ALLOW HER TO BEAT UP THE OTHER CHILDREN , SHE IS CONTROLLING YOU , AND NOW IS THE TIME TO TAKE CONTROL HER..WHEN SHE IS 13 , YOU WILL BE ROCKING ANOTHER BABY..SERIOUSLY , NOW IS THE TIME TO CORRECT HER..DON'T WANT WAIT UNTIL SHE IS 10-13 THAT'S' TOO LATE, IF YOU CAN'T CONTROL HER ,..GET HER SOME COUNSELING !
2007-02-21 08:10:42
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answer #10
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answered by Swm 39 4 Younger Swf Forever 4
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