Same thing. We have a thinking chair (well, any chair we deem the thinking chair right then)--and he goes in there for 3 minutes (since he's 3). It's a time for both of us to think really. When done we talk quickly about why he was there and then hug.
I'm pretty sure that if I told my 2 yr old boy to go sit and think about what he did-he'd end up sitting there picking at this toes....or nose for that matter.
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I'm pretty sure that if I told my 2 yr old boy to go sit and think about what he did-he'd end up sitting there picking at this toes....or nose for that matter.
Exactly
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You can decide on discipline, you can decide on punishment, but you can't decide on what a child is thinking about at any given point in time, EVER.
If you tell a kid to think about what they did wrong, most of the time they're more likely to think about how you suck. "thinking time" is just a time out.
Re: What is "thinking time"?
same thing - just less putative sounding.
think abuot what you did/your choices, etc.
Same thing. We have a thinking chair (well, any chair we deem the thinking chair right then)--and he goes in there for 3 minutes (since he's 3). It's a time for both of us to think really. When done we talk quickly about why he was there and then hug.
My new "mom" blog: http://realityofamommy.blogspot.com
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Notes:
Pointless discipline in general.
You can decide on discipline, you can decide on punishment, but you can't decide on what a child is thinking about at any given point in time, EVER.
If you tell a kid to think about what they did wrong, most of the time they're more likely to think about how you suck. "thinking time" is just a time out.