Toddlers: 12 - 24 Months

1/2 hour time-out today

Awesome.  I was changing DS when he got bold, grabbed my glasses off my face and threw them.  I picked them up and told him to "tell mommy sorry" to which he said "no"  So I told him to sit there and think about it for a minute, and then asked him again to say "sorry" This went on for a 1/2 freaking hour!  He was crying, asking for his blankie, milk, a tissue, to watch a movie.  Anything he could think of to ask for.  

He finally caved when my parents popped by to drop something off (He ADORES them) and I told him he couldn't see them until he apologized to me.  He couldn't get the words out of his mouth fast enough then! 

Is it wrong I feel super victorious?  I mean, I'm giving myself a high-five for outlasting a 20 month old.  How wrong is that? 

«1

Re: 1/2 hour time-out today

  • I'm not sure what to say, other than that I don't think I'd be bragging about "outlasting" a toddler for a 30 minute timeout. I don't put my 3.5 year old in timeouts that long, she wouldn't get it.
    image
    Annelise 3.22.2007 Norah 10.24.2009 Amelia 8.7.2011
  • Loading the player...
  • This situation is one of the things that DH and I are hesitant to do time outs.  Such a battle.  He said sorry, but only as a means to get something else he wanted. 

    As a spin off, can I ask what age people usually start time outs?  What age do they get it and it is not just a game?

  • I have always heard 1 min for every year of age for timeout.

     

    ETA: I tried one min timeouts briefly but it was clear he had no idea what was going on. Maybe closer to 2 they may understand - IDK.

  • By the time he apologized he didn't remember what he was in time out for, I can guarantee that.  Plus, everything I've read says 1 minute per year of age and that time out is only really effective starting at 2.  Congratulations for spending half an hour fighting with a toddler because you weren't disciplining, you were fighting.  It only counts as discipline if it's developmentally appropriate and the child understands what's going on and why.
    imageimageBaby Birthday Ticker TickerBaby Birthday Ticker TickerBaby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • You do know that about 45 seconds in, he had NO idea what he was asked to "think about", right? He is way too young for any of this to have really sunk in.
  • imageKailyn S:

     

    Is it wrong I feel super victorious?  I mean, I'm giving myself a high-five for outlasting a 20 month old.  How wrong is that? 

    Yes and very. HTH :headdesk:

  • imageKailyn S:

    Awesome.  I was changing DS when he got bold, grabbed my glasses off my face and threw them.  I picked them up and told him to "tell mommy sorry" to which he said "no"  So I told him to sit there and think about it for a minute, and then asked him again to say "sorry" This went on for a 1/2 freaking hour!  He was crying, asking for his blankie, milk, a tissue, to watch a movie.  Anything he could think of to ask for.  

    He finally caved when my parents popped by to drop something off (He ADORES them) and I told him he couldn't see them until he apologized to me.  He couldn't get the words out of his mouth fast enough then! 

    Is it wrong I feel super victorious?  I mean, I'm giving myself a high-five for outlasting a 20 month old.  How wrong is that? 

    You're beautiful. 

  • imagekit443:

    I have always heard 1 min for every year of age for timeout.

     

    ETA: I tried one min timeouts briefly but it was clear he had no idea what was going on. Maybe closer to 2 they may understand - IDK.

    Yeah, 1 min for every year is what I've heard. We just started them with AJ, but he doesn't even make it a minute. I think he does "get" that "time out" means he's going to have to stop what he wants to do, though. But who knows if I'm just reading into that and all I'm really doing is super effective redirecting...bah!
  • I agree with the pp's.  I think your intentions were good... IF your LO was older. However, at your LO's age I think it was an ineffective way to go.

    We do time outs with DS, but they are quite loose since he's still too little to fully understand what they're about.

    AlternaTickers - Cool, free Web tickers Lilypie First Birthday tickers
  • imageH4'sFan:
    imageKailyn S:

    Awesome.  I was changing DS when he got bold, grabbed my glasses off my face and threw them.  I picked them up and told him to "tell mommy sorry" to which he said "no"  So I told him to sit there and think about it for a minute, and then asked him again to say "sorry" This went on for a 1/2 freaking hour!  He was crying, asking for his blankie, milk, a tissue, to watch a movie.  Anything he could think of to ask for.  

    He finally caved when my parents popped by to drop something off (He ADORES them) and I told him he couldn't see them until he apologized to me.  He couldn't get the words out of his mouth fast enough then! 

    Is it wrong I feel super victorious?  I mean, I'm giving myself a high-five for outlasting a 20 month old.  How wrong is that? 

    You're beautiful. 

    Just for fun because this is where I pulled that quote from:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQ-3rikUQ34

    I PPH Heathers!

  • imageH4'sFan:
    imageH4'sFan:
    imageKailyn S:

    You're beautiful. 

    Just for fun because this is where I pulled that quote from:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQ-3rikUQ34

    I PPH Heathers!

    I'm going to have to pop that movie in now. I haven't seen it in ages. Love it!

  • Totally inappropriate for the age IMO
    image

    ~Working Mom~Breastfeeding Mom~Cloth Diapering Mom~BLW Mom~

    Blog - No Longer on the DL ~ The Man Cave
    Shawn and Larissa
    LO #1 - Took 2 years and 2 IVFs ~ DX - severe MFI mild PCOS homozygous MTHFR (a1298c)
    LO #2 - TTC 7 months, surprise spontaneous BFP!
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • imagebrideofscowboy:

    I agree with the pp's.  I think your intentions were good... IF your LO was older. However, at your LO's age I think it was an ineffective way to go.

    We do time outs with DS, but they are quite loose since he's still too little to fully understand what they're about.

    I agree. I don't want to flame you for good intentions, but you should relax on the forcing of the time outs in the future otherwise it lose it's impact.
  • imageSage Mommy:
    imageH4'sFan:
    imageH4'sFan:
    imageKailyn S:

    You're beautiful. 

    Just for fun because this is where I pulled that quote from:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQ-3rikUQ34

    I PPH Heathers!

    I'm going to have to pop that movie in now. I haven't seen it in ages. Love it!

    It is a classic. I wish I owned it. :)

  • So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

  • imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    My advice would be to lower your expectations as to what a toddler is able to comprehend.

    Also, you could research child development. He doesn't understand your reindeer games. (Sorry, another Heathers reference.)
  • imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    He doesn't need to apologize at this age. Tell him why he was in time out and why it was wrong. Hug and it's over.

  • I think the problem is that timeouts aren't recommended for children under 2 because they just don't understand.  They definately don't understand what saying "sorry" is.  Children that age understand actions more than words

    In your situation I'd just say, "we don't do that" and remove him from the situation and re-direct.

    Since a child that age has an attention span of less than 2 minutes, he had no idea what you were asking or why.

  • imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    The problem is that he had NO idea what you were asking him to apologize for. Apologies at his age are largely cursory anyway...they simply cannot process what that means because they have no ability to empathize. So you're forcing him to do something he can't understand, then when he doesn't do it, you're punishing him further. Is it any wonder he kept telling you "no"? Also, I think your goal of getting him obey you, for the sake of obeying you, is completely premature at this age. He needs to learn that he can't throw your glasses, for sure, but you missed the boat when you switched gears to forcing him to say sorry. If AJ does something similar, we do "1,2,3...time out". When he gets done with time out, we ask him to "show gentle" (pat our cheek). If he doesn't, we don't put him back in timeout, we just tell him to be gentle next time and let him go play. 90% of the time he does gentle, but if he doesn't, we let it go at this point because he has NO IDEA what we're doing and it does nothing to teach him not to be aggressive with other people.
  • imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    The thing is, after a few minutes, he had NO CLUE what he was supposed to apologize for. When he did apologize, it was an empty apology. He didn't learn anything from it, other than "If I tell mommy what she wants to hear, I get my way". 

    FWIW, I would have done a 1 minute time out, then explained as simply as possible what and why he can't do what he did. Then you hug him and let him go on his merry way. Does he learn a long term lesson every time? No, but consistency is the key with kids that age and after 5 of those kinds of timeouts, he starts to retain the lesson. Discipline needs to be developmentally appropriate and a not-even 2 year old doesn't have the capacity to understand a 30 minute time out. Period. 

    image
    Annelise 3.22.2007 Norah 10.24.2009 Amelia 8.7.2011
  • imagebriderx:
    imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    Does a LO have to say sorry to get out of time out? At that age I would think an explanation of "we do not throw mommy's glasses" should be enough.

  • imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    He doesn't even understand apologizing at that age.  You're expecting too much from him.  Just tell him it's not nice to throw your glasses and keep a better eye on his grabby hands next time.

    It's like when I tell ds he need to stop whining and say it politely.  So he stops whining and says "Politely"  He doesn't understand what it means to be polite.  Sometimes we forget they are just large babies.

  • Does he even understand what apologizing or saying sorry means. I know my 18 month old son and my 20 month old niece would have no idea. My son will sometimes kiss me if I say ouch you hurt mommy when he gets to rough but theres no way hed say sorry and know what that means.

     He tries to tke my glasses all the time. We say no we don't take mommys glasses or glasses aren't toys and move him away from me. 30 mins is a long time for a child to concentrate on something. He probalby didn't he remember what was going on. Hes testing limits and playing when he takes the glasses. He doesn;t understand consequenes yet to that extent.

    My mom 10/8/1959-10/31/2011 image Dylan image
  • Why does he have to apologize?  He's 20months old, he doesn't even truly get that what he did was wrong or why it was wrong.  I think you're expecting too much of him, cognitively and emotionally.  I would've given a simple explanation why that's not okay, ask him to pick them up and hand them to me (help him if he won't/doesn't understand), then move on to doing something else.  You may have felt victorious, but I promise you when he apologized he had no idea what he was apologizing for.  You turned it into a huge power struggle that was totally unnecessary IMO.  But congrats I guess?

    Warning No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
  • imageKailyn S:
    imagebriderx:
    imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    Does a LO have to say sorry to get out of time out? At that age I would think an explanation of "we do not throw mommy's glasses" should be enough.

    If he's done something purposly "naughty' than yes, we always ask him to say sorry. He's never had a problem saying it before, so it's never progressed to this level.  Normally he looks right as us, says sorry, we hug & it's over. 

  • imageKailyn S:
    imageKailyn S:
    imagebriderx:
    imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    Does a LO have to say sorry to get out of time out? At that age I would think an explanation of "we do not throw mommy's glasses" should be enough.

    If he's done something purposly "naughty' than yes, we always ask him to say sorry. He's never had a problem saying it before, so it's never progressed to this level.  Normally he looks right as us, says sorry, we hug & it's over. 

    You do realize that he has no clue what sorry means right? 

    Warning No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
  • imageKailyn S:
    imageKailyn S:
    imagebriderx:
    imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    Does a LO have to say sorry to get out of time out? At that age I would think an explanation of "we do not throw mommy's glasses" should be enough.

    If he's done something purposly "naughty' than yes, we always ask him to say sorry. He's never had a problem saying it before, so it's never progressed to this level.  Normally he looks right as us, says sorry, we hug & it's over. 

    Again, read my "politely" post.  He's parroting.

    I assure you, even if he's saying it before, he honestly doesn't understand what the concept means. They can't empathize at that age and certainly cannot understand social norms enough to know that they are in the wrong and the way to make it right is to offer an apology.  He just knows you tell him to say a word and if he says it, mommy's happy.

  • imageKailyn S:
    imageKailyn S:
    imagebriderx:
    imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    Does a LO have to say sorry to get out of time out? At that age I would think an explanation of "we do not throw mommy's glasses" should be enough.

    If he's done something purposly "naughty' than yes, we always ask him to say sorry. He's never had a problem saying it before, so it's never progressed to this level.  Normally he looks right as us, says sorry, we hug & it's over. 

    It's a conditioned response and doesn't mean anything to him at this age. Just skip it.

  • imageEchowysp:
    imageKailyn S:
    imageKailyn S:
    imagebriderx:
    imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    Does a LO have to say sorry to get out of time out? At that age I would think an explanation of "we do not throw mommy's glasses" should be enough.

    If he's done something purposly "naughty' than yes, we always ask him to say sorry. He's never had a problem saying it before, so it's never progressed to this level.  Normally he looks right as us, says sorry, we hug & it's over. 

    Again, read my "politely" post.  He's parroting.

    I assure you, even if he's saying it before, he honestly doesn't understand what the concept means. They can't empathize at that age and certainly cannot understand social norms enough to know that they are in the wrong and the way to make it right is to offer an apology.  He just knows you tell him to say a word and if he says it, mommy's happy.

    By that rationale, do you not request your children to say "please" and "thank you" at this age?  He doesn't truly understand those meanings either, but we still ask him to say it every time he asks for something or receives something. 

  • I get you.  I think you fully understand that you have to be consistent and follow through.  I think the hoopla is over the age appropriateness.  I see your frustration that the second he was motivated, he complied without batting an eye, so I completely understand your issue.

    I agree that "say sorry" is lost between his age and the duration between the offense and the actual apology.  After having a very easy first child, and then my twins, one of whom is very headstrong, I believe that parenting to the child's abilities and individual personality is trickier than can be assumed.  In your situation, with my more challenging one, it would have gone like this:

    Slap

    "No ma'am.  Those are mommy's glasses.  Hands down."

    And then if she repeated, I'd have remained at the diaper changing table/station and repeat until I was able to put my glasses on without her swiping at them. 

    I find the timeout thing waxes and wanes= with my first, when I was on the boards, I remember being shocked that people were doing it witih their 18 month olds.  Now the general response is not before they're 2... so I guess you will just have to wait and see if he does it again to see if it worked. And then adjust your approach until you learn what works for him.  Unfortunately they are all about cause-effect right now and trying to figure out what "buttons" make mommy do what right now.

    Warning No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
  • imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    He's too young to get it. FFS. Put him in time our for a minute and be done with it. You're not teaching him anything.

  • imageKailyn S:

    By that rationale, do you not request your children to say "please" and "thank you" at this age?  He doesn't truly understand those meanings either, but we still ask him to say it every time he asks for something or receives something. 

    I think its totally fine if you want to instill saying sorry as a habit. I just don't really think its reasonable to put him in time out and wait for him to say it. It seems completely futile because he doesn't understand what it means to really be sorry. 

    I think your intent with the timeout, and your desire to be consistent and not give in are good, but a 30 minute timeout is ineffective and excessive. 

    image
    Annelise 3.22.2007 Norah 10.24.2009 Amelia 8.7.2011
  • imageKailyn S:
    imageEchowysp:
    imageKailyn S:
    imageKailyn S:
    imagebriderx:
    imageKailyn S:

    So what would any of your advice be?  I'm seriously curious, because as I'm standing there asking him to apologize and he repeatedly says "no" I feel like giving in is just making him realize that he doesn't have to do what I ask him to do. 

    You may not agree with my method, but fwiw, I didn't leave him screaming in a corner for 1/2 and hour.  He would be quiet and then start crying for something.  I would come over and tell him "you can have your blankie, but you have to say sorry to mommy first"  he would reply "no" and so I would leave for another minute.  He'd cry a few minutes later, I'd go back in and repeat my request, he would repeat "no". 

    Does a LO have to say sorry to get out of time out? At that age I would think an explanation of "we do not throw mommy's glasses" should be enough.

    If he's done something purposly "naughty' than yes, we always ask him to say sorry. He's never had a problem saying it before, so it's never progressed to this level.  Normally he looks right as us, says sorry, we hug & it's over. 

    Again, read my "politely" post.  He's parroting.

    I assure you, even if he's saying it before, he honestly doesn't understand what the concept means. They can't empathize at that age and certainly cannot understand social norms enough to know that they are in the wrong and the way to make it right is to offer an apology.  He just knows you tell him to say a word and if he says it, mommy's happy.

    By that rationale, do you not request your children to say "please" and "thank you" at this age?  He doesn't truly understand those meanings either, but we still ask him to say it every time he asks for something or receives something. 

    Yes, it's also parroting.  I do it so that it's habit by the time he does understand what it actually means.  

    I'm getting the impression you still think that your 20 month old understands apologies.  Am I wrong?

  • imageLoveEeyore:

    I get you.  I think you fully understand that you have to be consistent and follow through.  I think the hoopla is over the age appropriateness.  I see your frustration that the second he was motivated, he complied without batting an eye, so I completely understand your issue.

    I agree that "say sorry" is lost between his age and the duration between the offense and the actual apology.  After having a very easy first child, and then my twins, one of whom is very headstrong, I believe that parenting to the child's abilities and individual personality is trickier than can be assumed.  In your situation, with my more challenging one, it would have gone like this:

    Slap

    "No ma'am.  Those are mommy's glasses.  Hands down."

    And then if she repeated, I'd have remained at the diaper changing table/station and repeat until I was able to put my glasses on without her swiping at them. 

    I find the timeout thing waxes and wanes= with my first, when I was on the boards, I remember being shocked that people were doing it witih their 18 month olds.  Now the general response is not before they're 2... so I guess you will just have to wait and see if he does it again to see if it worked. And then adjust your approach until you learn what works for him.  Unfortunately they are all about cause-effect right now and trying to figure out what "buttons" make mommy do what right now.

    I don't think there's anything wrong with time out itself at this age, but it has to be an appropriate amount of time. That's the problem. A 30 minute test of wills is just pointless.

    We've been doing TO for a couple months, and DS knows now that when I say he's in timeout, stay put until I get you he stays.  Does he get it? No, probably not, but the point for me, for now is to take him out of whatever the situation is and build the groundwork for when he's older.

  • imageKailyn S:

    By that rationale, do you not request your children to say "please" and "thank you" at this age?  He doesn't truly understand those meanings either, but we still ask him to say it every time he asks for something or receives something. 

    But that IS the point of "please." It has no other intrinsic value. You say "please" when you want something and "thank you" when you get it. Sorry is intended to have meaning. It's intended to convey that you recognize you did something wrong or that you wish things were different for the other person (as in "I'm sorry for your loss"). It is a recognition and acknowledgement of another's pain or discomfort either of your doing or otherwise. Your child has NO possible way of understanding that. So, by all means, force him to say a social "I'm sorry", but at least recognize that he is not internalizing the message and is just learning the word, not the meaning. Personally, I'd rather my child learn the meaning.
  • imageKailyn S:
    imageEchowysp:
    imageKailyn S:
    imageKailyn S:
    imagebriderx:
    imageKailyn S:

    By that rationale, do you not request your children to say "please" and "thank you" at this age?  He doesn't truly understand those meanings either, but we still ask him to say it every time he asks for something or receives something. 

    Yes, I do, but we're not having a half hour power struggle over it. That's the difference.

  • The appropriate response to him grabbing your glasses would have been to say  "No, these are mommy's. Don't grab." - put him down and walked away. The end.

    The reason he does things over and over is to GET A REACTION. He grabs your glasses, you have a reaction and he gets your fairly undivided attention for half an hour.  He doesnt understand what he did was "wrong", just that it got your attention. Saying "I'm sorry," doesnt mean is is sorry, just that he knows he's supposed to repeat what you say.

    At his age, it is definitely important to model appropriate behaviour and manners (saying please, thank you, etc), but your expectations are way out of whack. Playing the time out game for 30 minutes didnt teach him a single thing and as others mentioned, after about 1 minute there was ZERO correlation between what you were trying to get him to do and what he had already done. 

    For now, tell him if what he's doing is wrong and correct him then redirect and move on.

  • I agree with PP. It's not developmentally appropriate to expect this from him.  He doesn't know what empathy is or what apologizing means so it seems pointless to have him say that he is sorry. It makes it an empty gesture. It would be better to teach him that his actions hurt and to teach how he can ask/touch appropriately.

    <Lilypie Fifth Birthday tickers>
This discussion has been closed.
Choose Another Board
Search Boards
"
"