Hi ladies....
Lately, my little guy has started biting, and it's not because he's teething. He's biting only when he's angry or frustrated. Once he's upset, he will dive for whatever part of my body (usually my shoulder or collarbone) he can get to quickly and bite as hard as he can.
Maybe I'm just being a wuss, but it's really painful and nothing DH or I are doing is stopping this. He's at the stage where he clearly understands the word "no" but even though we say it every single time, it doesn't seem to make a difference.
I hate that he does this, but if it was just DH and I, I could deal with it if it's just a faze. I'm more concerned that he will learn this behavior and continue it when his little brother or sister arrives later this year. We just can't have that happening.
What's worked for your kids? How did you teach them not to bite?
Re: Desperate for Help
So I don't have that problem and can't really speak to possible solutions, but I just recently bought a book (and am about 1/2 way through it) called the "No Cry Discipline Solution" that I think has a lot of great insight, tools to try, etc for disciplining toddlers and preschoolers. It focuses a lot on what is causing the behavior, motives, etc and how to deal with those. I know there is a section on biting in the book.
Was he biting because he was angry or just biting from teething? Some of the time I can't just put him down because I'm trying to keep him away from something he shouldn't have- I think if I put him down, he would go right back to it.
A time out might just work. We would have to establish a place we can use for that- right now we're just not set up for that. But if that's what it takes, we can certainly come up with something!
Shock and horror. I acted horrified when my then toddler bit me. He got the scolding of his life the second time he did it. Never did it again.
Stop the bite before it happens. Over and over and over again if needed. Some kids bite, so don't feel badly. But you need to catch and correct the behavior every single time in order for it to stop.
He would bite out of frustration. If I put him down and used my firm voice, he was always stunned and would forget all about what he was doing before he bit me. He would either crawl after me or sit there and cry for 5 or so seconds until I came back and picked him up to go play with something. It worked for us, but maybe that won't work for you if he will just go back to what he was doing.
I wish this would work for us, but usually the kiddo just goes back to whatever mischief he was doing in the first place whether it was playing with an outlet or playing with the on/off knobs on our stove.
Maybe it'll work for the next kiddo? [crossing fingers]