Attachment Parenting

at a complete loss with our 2-year-old

Hi everybody! I lurk here pretty often but don't post much. Hope you don't mind me soliciting some advice.

We have a VERY independent little girl who turned 2 in July. As she's gotten older and started doing things on her own and being very verbal about wanting to do them on her own, we've tried to foster that. I want her to be confident and independent. Plus, we learned pretty quickly that it might seem slow when she's doing things her way, but it will be even slower if we try to do it for her, have to let her freak out, calm down, and then do it herself anyway. For example, there's some major construction happening on our street right now, and our sidewalk and the end of our driveway are now just mud. If one of us tries to help lift her over the mud to get in the car, she'll say, "No, let MEEE do it," get down, and walk back to the place where you initially picked her up so she can walk that distance herself. We've gotten used to these things during the day and do pretty well for the most part.

The big problem is at night. She wears panties while she's awake now, but we still put diapers on her at night and for naps. For a few months now, she's been throwing giant fits about putting her diaper on at night. There is just no reasoning with her. We give her plenty of warning and let her know how things are gonna be - "after this we'll take a bath, then daddy will come upstairs, then we'll go in your room and put your diaper on. Please cooperate with us and lay down on your diaper like a big girl." And she says Yes.  But when the time actually comes, it's a huge issue. Like I said, you cannot do anything for her. So we can't actually put her on the diaper because she freaks out. So instead she spins all around her room, and we keep asking her to come put her diaper on. Tons of time passes, and she gets more tired and even harder to reason with. Most nights we either end up leaving her room and telling her to tell us when she's ready for her diaper, or we actually try to hold her down and put it on her (which is torture for all involved and doesn't work anyway :( ).

We typically let her watch a little bit of TV after dinner, then take her bath. Well a couple nights this week I reversed things instead, so that she could get her diaper and jammies on while she watched TV. That worked really well and was so easy... but I don't want to have to do that all the time!! We really limit her tv, and if she's already watched some during the day, I don't let her watch more after dinner.

Another thing I've thought of is buying disposable pullups. :-/  I really don't want to. I love my CD's and hate disposables. But I wonder if having a one-step thing that she could pull up herself would help.

Any thoughts??

Jess & Adam, married 2009, precious Audrey born in 2011. BFP 1/6/13, 6-wk MMC discovered at 9 wks 2/11/13. D&C 2/18/13, second D&C 4/23/13 for retained placenta.
BFP 8/24/13!! EDD 5/1/14, delivered healthy and sweet Zoey Leanne on 5/5/14 by repeat c-section.
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Re: at a complete loss with our 2-year-old

  • I'd just go for the Pull Ups. But I do disposables at night anyway, so it's NBD for me. I think parenting is learning to pick your battles, so this might be one case where letting her do it herself is more important than CDing!
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  • Welcome to life with a 2 year old. It has gotten more intense as we get to 3. Seriously, pick your battles wisely. Once you pick one, don't lose. That being said, she is fighting for one of two reasons... 1. She thinks diapers are for babies. Pull ups might help this. 2. She sees putting on the diaper as a step towards bedtime and she is stalling. Pull ups will not help this.
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  • On the nappy front, could you invest in some cloth pull-ups?

    That aside, I agree with pp that sometimes you simply have to gently enforce the boundary.

    I also agree that 2 is a tough age. Hang in there.
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  • Yep, we're facing the boundary testing here pretty hard core too.  I'd try giving her options - like diaper on first or brush your hair first (or whatever part of your routine is flexible) and then tell her if she doesn't choose by the time I count to three, Mommy will choose.  Whatever she chooses we stick to (even if that choice was not choosing).  We still have battles over things at times, but I feel like I've given her the opportunity to exert control and laid out what she needs to do and what will happen if she doesn't. Even if she's not happy tonight, maybe tomorrow will be different.  Good luck!
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  • You could also put on cloth training pants with a waterproof cover, or just the cloth pants and put a sheet protector on the bed.  But if a few minutes of TV works, that would be OK with me too.  This too shall pass and she will likely find a brand new way to try to buck the system in a few weeks.  :)
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  • I use Best Bottoms cloth diapers and I know they make a pull up version for potty training so there are cloth versions of Pull-Ups out there.....

    When I was putting dd and ds1 to bed when they were young I told them they had X number of minutes of "Mommy's time".  They could either use that time for getting ready for bed and then have no snuggle time afterwards or they could hurry through getting ready for bed and have the remainder for snuggle time.  I was lucky in that the age spread between my first two allowed me to put ds1 to bed and have his "Mommy time" before it was dd's bedtime and she could have her "Mommy time" before it was my "bedtime".

     

     "after this we'll take a bath, then daddy will come upstairs, then we'll go in your room and put your diaper on. Please cooperate with us and lay down on your diaper like a big girl."   To me, this sounds like you are giving her the option to NOT do what you want her to do and she is choosing that option.

     

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  • Pull ups or diaper her standing up.  

    My DD hated the "turtle on your back" feeling of laying down to be diapered "like a baby" when she was 2.  After a loonnggg time of strife, I realized -- duh -- she didn't HAVE to be lying down.  It's possible to diaper a standing child.
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  • Pull ups or diaper her standing up.  


    My DD hated the "turtle on your back" feeling of laying down to be diapered "like a baby" when she was 2.  After a loonnggg time of strife, I realized -- duh -- she didn't HAVE to be lying down.  It's possible to diaper a standing child.
    We absolutely did standing diaper changes here too. Playing with something on a shelf really really helped changes go quickly. I actually prefer a standing change to a laying down change. :-)
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  • nosoup4unosoup4u member
    edited October 2013
    Just get disposable pull ups or some Super Undies, which are cloth overnight pull ups. Or you can attach one side of the diaper and have her step in them. Life is too short to fret about disposable pull ups, it's worth not having a battle.
    DS1 - Feb 2008

    DS2 - Oct 2010 (my VBAC baby!)

  • There's not much point in reasoning with a 2 year old. I would stop asking and tell her that we wear diapers at night and call it a day. Or let her wear undies and clean up pee. Either way, there is a line whereby you are the parent and she is the child, and for me, 45 minutes before bed might be it.
    "Hello, babies. Welcome to Earth. It's hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It's round and wet and crowded. At the outside, babies, you've got about a hundred years here. There's only one rule that I know of, babies. God damn it, you've got to be kind." - Kurt Vonnegut
  • I think we did standing diaper changes starting at 18mo or something.  
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  • I use Best Bottoms cloth diapers and I know they make a pull up version for potty training so there are cloth versions of Pull-Ups out there.....

    When I was putting dd and ds1 to bed when they were young I told them they had X number of minutes of "Mommy's time".  They could either use that time for getting ready for bed and then have no snuggle time afterwards or they could hurry through getting ready for bed and have the remainder for snuggle time.  I was lucky in that the age spread between my first two allowed me to put ds1 to bed and have his "Mommy time" before it was dd's bedtime and she could have her "Mommy time" before it was my "bedtime".

     

     "after this we'll take a bath, then daddy will come upstairs, then we'll go in your room and put your diaper on. Please cooperate with us and lay down on your diaper like a big girl."   To me, this sounds like you are giving her the option to NOT do what you want her to do and she is choosing that option.

     

    Well she needs to put a diaper on either way. I guess the option is to cooperate and do it the "easy way" or to resist, run away, and scream her head off.

    Thanks for the suggestions. I have seen the BB pullups. I just wondered if they would be absorbent enough. Right now she still wears a big fitted diaper, and it's really wet every morning.

    Jess & Adam, married 2009, precious Audrey born in 2011. BFP 1/6/13, 6-wk MMC discovered at 9 wks 2/11/13. D&C 2/18/13, second D&C 4/23/13 for retained placenta.
    BFP 8/24/13!! EDD 5/1/14, delivered healthy and sweet Zoey Leanne on 5/5/14 by repeat c-section.
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  • I'm not clear on why she can't wear undies to bed. DS1 was ready at that age to switch to undies at night. Might she be? We keep a potty next to his bed on a waterproof cloth. He potties by himself at night or holds it until morning. Is something like that possible? For the first couple weeks, we put a pad under him. We CDed so we had a wool cover we put on him, too.

    As for the mud thing--there are some things I cannot for whatever reason let my kid go back and redo. In that case, I think my job is to listen with empathy, re-articulate what he's saying so he knows he's been heard, and help him grieve the loss of the experience he wanted.

  • Would some cloth training pants (that look like undies) and maybe a hemp liner be absorbent enough for her over night?.

    Also I wouldn't worry about too much tv. Because if you're worrying about too much tv you aren't going to be giving her too much tv. Parents who don't thin ktv is a problem are the ones who give too much, kwim? 

    I also agree with picking your battles. Sometimes my son decides he must have or do the oddest (to me) things. But as long as no one is getting hurt I let him try and explore. 

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  • I'm not clear on why she can't wear undies to bed. DS1 was ready at that age to switch to undies at night. Might she be? We keep a potty next to his bed on a waterproof cloth. He potties by himself at night or holds it until morning. Is something like that possible? For the first couple weeks, we put a pad under him. We CDed so we had a wool cover we put on him, too.

    As for the mud thing--there are some things I cannot for whatever reason let my kid go back and redo. In that case, I think my job is to listen with empathy, re-articulate what he's saying so he knows he's been heard, and help him grieve the loss of the experience he wanted.

    I agree with all of this. I never used a diaper or pull up at night after I started potty training. I know that's not going to work for every situation but once my kids were ready they wanted nothing more to do with diapers.
  • nosoup4unosoup4u member
    edited October 2013
    DS2 stopped peeing at night when he potty trained - he's about to turn three. DS1 is 5.5 and still pees overnight. Some kids just don't stop peeing overnight after potty training.

    I have a pocket diapers type overnight pull up I got for DS2, and have been using regular inserts in them. It's bulky, but does the job.
    DS1 - Feb 2008

    DS2 - Oct 2010 (my VBAC baby!)

  • Maybe I made this sound like it was more about the diaper than it really was. LOL   Bedtime is by far the hardest time of day for us, so it stands out. But what I really struggle with in a lot of different situations is just how strong-willed she is. I feel like I'm always struggling between trying to be consistent (continuing not to let her do something if I've already said she can't) and asking myself how important each "battle" really is. At times, like @Emerald27 said, I admit that I do probably get a little too permissive, because it is SO EXHAUSTING to struggle with her constantly.

    I read [most of] Positive Discipline for Toddlers, and I really wanted to go with that method, but I didn't feel in the end like there was much practical advice I could use. At this point we mainly try to talk through things, keep routines, and talk through things ahead of time so she knows what to expect. But then when something tiny happens that sets her off, I just don't know how to handle it.

    Jess & Adam, married 2009, precious Audrey born in 2011. BFP 1/6/13, 6-wk MMC discovered at 9 wks 2/11/13. D&C 2/18/13, second D&C 4/23/13 for retained placenta.
    BFP 8/24/13!! EDD 5/1/14, delivered healthy and sweet Zoey Leanne on 5/5/14 by repeat c-section.
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  • You may find this article completely irrelevant to your situation, @jesstellina, but I'm always looking for ideas for positive, gentle discipline for DS, and I like some of the ones listed here.

    The article is written as "alternatives to time out", but I think it's great in general.

    Not to say that you need to be disciplining DD, but just to help you have some ideas for how to handle the being consistent, following through, and helping her learn a lesson when she can't do something, needs to do something, etc.

    https://theattachedfamily.com/?p=4168

    Best of luck! I always thought it must get easier as they grow. I'd say to myself "oh, how easy it will be when he's mobile/bigger/can talk", and now I realize that it just becomes more complicated as time goes by! I do love my little bundle of toddler more than life, but he's a handful! ;)
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  • Emerald27 said:
    You may find this article completely irrelevant to your situation, @jesstellina, but I'm always looking for ideas for positive, gentle discipline for DS, and I like some of the ones listed here. The article is written as "alternatives to time out", but I think it's great in general. Not to say that you need to be disciplining DD, but just to help you have some ideas for how to handle the being consistent, following through, and helping her learn a lesson when she can't do something, needs to do something, etc. https://theattachedfamily.com/?p=4168 Best of luck! I always thought it must get easier as they grow. I'd say to myself "oh, how easy it will be when he's mobile/bigger/can talk", and now I realize that it just becomes more complicated as time goes by! I do love my little bundle of toddler more than life, but he's a handful! ;)
    I love that article! I will definitely employ those techniques when DS is a bit older!
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