I know the 'terrible twos' are a real thing. I know that everyone struggles with tantrums and hardheadedness. However, I think my son is abnormally difficult. He's been ruled out for autism (at least so far), but he has warning signs that something is wrong. For one, his speech is delayed. It's not silent. He talks. All the time. But never in English. At 2.5 he is impossible to communicate with. He seems to understand at least 80% of what I say, and I give some pretty complex directions. But I get nothing back. Only about 1/3 of the time does he actually do what he's asked. He's in speech therapy but I've not seen much of an improvement.
He's strong willed and will have a MELTDOWN when he doesn't get what he wants. I'm not a permissive mother who gives in. He melts down no matter what. And he will have his meltdown for over and hour sometimes. He doesn't play with toys like they are supposed to be played with, no matter how many times I show him. Basically he wants to either break them apart, or just throw them all over the floor.
I get so frustrated, it's not even fun to play with him. I cry daily because I don't know what else I can do and I start to think he will never be well behaved enough to take out in public for any extended period. Even at his grandparent's house, he's a nightmare. They don't want to babysit him. We hired a babysitter, hoping that by paying someone, they'd just deal with it without complaint.Here's the thing...he's a perfect angel (well not perfect, but you get the idea) with the babysitter. She never has problems beyond the norm with him.
I DON'T UNDERSTAND! Anyone have any ideas, hints, similar issues?
Re: HELP! My 2 Year Old is driving me INSANE!
I'd be willing to bet that a lot of his behavior stems from the speech delay - the inability to communicate is so frustrating. And at this age they are so very aware of their wants, that being unable to get them is bound to cause unwanted behavior.
My son's friend is also speech delayed and has some behavioral problems - like your son, it makes him more difficult to deal with than your average "terrible twos." They're in school together, and he's not necessarily an angel there - he seems to have more problems listening/following directions than many of his peers, resorts to throwing/biting/pushing/etc. He's just starting speech therapy and behavioral therapy. I think they both kind of go hand in hand.
DS1 - 7/2011, DD 12/2012, DS2 - 4/2014, MMC - 12/2015
I have a girl and a strong willed boy that can test my patience and push buttons like a pro. My boy is much harder to parent at this point. I understand how overwhelming it can be, but I have found that I have to stay calm. I think DS likes negative attention almost more than positive.
I went into parenting thinking I would parent one way, but I am finding it doesn't work. I thought I'd be the tough one, but it just isn't working with my kids. They are much better behaved when I do not yell. There are still consequences, but I do more logical consequences or I will calmly put my DS in his crib for 2 minutes. If you son is tantruming for an hour, I would try holding him and giving him comfort. If my kids are tantruming for attention I ignore it, but sometimes they are tantruming because they don't know how to handle their emotions. So I will take them to the rocking chair, try and identify the issue - I see you are angry because your brother took a toy you were playing with. It is ok to be angry but it is not ok to yell at him.
It is touchy feely, but it works. I'm not willing to beat my kid into submission, which is the only way I can see to get out of some of the power struggles, so I avoid them when I can. Check out: https://www.ahaparenting.com/_blog/parenting_blog
My nephew was like this for a while. He had major speech delays- didn't say a word till after 2 and was VERY frustrated. He also had sensory issues. So sometimes he just needed to be held super tight when things felt overwhelming.
He did speech & occupational therapy for a few years. as his communication got better, he calmed down and they learned how to best handle the other freak outs.
Take a deep breath. I would try other ways of handling like PP said- and see how he reacts.