I haven't posted here since before baby was born, but I'm back seeking the wisdom of the internet mamas. My 20 month old has started hitting me and my husband in the last few weeks. He doesn't do it in anger really, just out of the blue to see what my reaction will be. Over and over, with a twinkle in his eye, probably at least 100 times a day. I know that this is developmentally normal, but it's driving me crazy and making me mad, frustrated and emotionally drained. All of the "gentle" approaches aren't doing a thing. I've tried saying "no hitting, hitting hurts, touch gentle" while making eye contact. I've tried getting up and walking away. I've unfortunately tried yelling (which was about the only thing that got his attention.) We don't believe in spanking but I'd be a liar if I didn't think about doing it. I'm kind of at my wits end. I know they say not to do time outs for kids under 2 but I need to try something. Any advice with time-outs? Success stories? Commiseration?
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Re: Time-outs for 20 month old? Beyond frustrated
I think we started with time-outs around that time. It seems to work. I found a quiet spot in the house and sat him down in it for about 1.5 minutes before getting him.
Yeah, I don't think they get it. For us, at least, we've tried it, and it became a game of "chase me!".
When he hits us, we go down on his level, grasp his hand firmly (but not to hurt), look at him in the eye and say "We use nice hands" and walk away.
Consistency is key.
I ignore the vast majority of his negative behaviors (screaming, throwing food, whining, etc.) but I can't ignore hitting. Mostly because there's no way I could be consistent about it. When he hits another kid at the playground, I have to address it. When he's sitting in the shopping cart smacking me over and over and over, I can't just do nothing. I could ignore it at home, but that gives the impression that hitting is ok sometimes and not others. I could only address it when he hits other people and ignore it when it's my husband or I, but that gives the impression that it's ok to hit some people but not others. I agree that consistency is key, so my only option is to address it every single time he hits.
As far as time outs I'm glad to see that it's worked for some around this age, so I think I'll give it a try. I do my best to follow natural consequences, and I think a short time out follows that in this instance. I view it as more of a "If you hit you are going to go to time out so you can't hurt anybody" rather than "You're bad, go to your room and think about what you've done." He's a smart kid, and I'm hoping he'll catch on quickly.
I walk into another room and shut the door. This makes him upset, and he stands outside the door crying and pounding on the door. After a few minutes have passed I open the door, get down to his level and say "we don't hit, hitting hurts" to remind him why I went in there in the first place. Sometimes he'll even say/sign "sorry" and then I offer him a hug and say I love you.
Then he immediately smacks me again. And then it starts all over. He keeps challenging, keeps trying it again. This goes on and on and on.
We've used mini-time outs and found them very effective. I also use the general rule of thumb of a 1 minute per year. I got the idea generally from my lactation consultant whose advice on biting was to de-latch, put them down, say "no biting", get up & walk away. That really worked in getting her not to bite again when she was a baby so we do a similar 1) put down 2) "no hitting, that hurts" 3) walk away. If she's repeating the behavior over & over, then I'll put her down in her crib for the time out and I do time it. I'm usually the one she hits, so when the time out is over, daddy goes in and I don't re-engage for another few minutes.
If nothing else, it should at least give you a few moments to collect yourself.
My 18 month old does the same thing and I finally resorted to putting him in time outs because nothing else worked. I do a 3 minute time out because anything shorter wasn't effective, he would just go right back to hitting and throwing toys. I put him in his crib or on a chair (depending on where we are), tell him why he is in time out, and that I will get him in 3 minutes. He carries on for a little bit, but by the time 3 minutes is up, he is calm and waiting for me. I pick him up, reiterate what the time out was for and that the behavior isn't okay, he gives me a hug and a kiss and we go on our way. He has been hitting less since we started time outs, so that's what works for us!
Try 1,2,3 magic! I have a very stubborn 17 month old, and we started two months ago. He picked up quickly, he usually stops whatever behavior action on the very first warning now. We probably do a one minute time out twice a day max now. It is really magic in our house.
My Ovulation Chart
My son did not understand timouts until he was 2 years old. And it was still a negotiation. He was like "no time out." But it was like one day he saw another little boy at a playdate party get a "time out", and he told the other little boy---"You got a time out." And now he really gets time outs. He likes to give "time outs" to his baby sister. And we decided that we needed to make "time outs" for everyone. So if grandpa says a bad word, then grandpa get a "time out."
It does get better, and my son is understanding it a lot more that he is getting closer to 3 years old. And his vocabulary just took off when he was 2 years old. When they are 1 years old, their vocabulary is limited, and they do not understand everything. So when they have a better vocabulary, discipline is a little bit easier.