The first incident happened at an outdoor Science class. A girl found a frog and was holding it. All the kids were gathering around and looking at it with their moms. The girl was letting each individual kid hold the frog, and then the kids gave it back to her because she found it. DS held it once, and then begged for it again. He kept saying that he was going to put the frog back in the pond. I told him that it was the girl's frog and he needed to give it back to her. As soon as he got it in his hand, he ran toward the pond. I caught him in time and told him he either needed to give the frog back or we needed to leave. He proceeded to throw a major temper tantrum (hitting/yelling) while holding the frog. I tried to keep my hands on him to prevent him from falling in to the pond, and also keep control of the hand holding the frog so he wouldn't drop it. He dropped the frog completely and totally freaked out. I had to carry him to the car (while also carrying the baby) while he was thrashing, kicking, screaming. I couldn't let him down because he would run from me into the parking lot. It was scary!
The next problem happened at an outdoor music class. They were all given instruments to play with that had to be returned. He refused to return his instrument. I asked the girl collecting to come back around and talked to him about the importance of giving back the instrument. Girl came around again, and he refused. I told him this was his last chance, or we needed to leave. He sat on the instrument. I removed it from under him and said we needed to go. He ran away from me toward the street. I caught up with him in time, picked him up, and the tantrum began. Once again, I had to carry him away (while trying to manage DD in her stroller) as he tried every which way to scream, hit, kick, and bite me.
Today, we were at a playdate with a friend. He hit the little girl in the face. I asked him to apologize. He refused. I told him that his friend was hurt and we need to apologize when we hurt somebody. He hid under a blanket and shouted, "I am not talking to you, go away!" I gave him some space to cool off and tried talking to him. He ran under the table. I told him that this was his last chance, he could apologize to his friend or we would need to leave. Still refused.This time, I put DD in the car and came back for him. He hid under the table, and ran as I tried to get him. I was finally able to get him in my arms and he threw the biggest tantrum yet. This time, he added to his tantrum by pulling my hair and smacking me in the face multiple times. I was certain he gave me a bloody nose, he hit me so hard.
I have tried talking to him on the way to an event about expected behavior. I tell him that if he is not kind to the other children or does not follow directions that we will need to leave. We have talked about privileges at a time when everyone is calm. I give him opportunities to correct his behavior, and he chooses not to do so. I give him choices, but he will not respond. I give him chances to come with me without physically having to carry him, but he either runs for me or sits in a place that I cannot reach. I have tried waiting it out, he waits longer. I have tried walking away, he doesn't care. I cannot think of other natural consequences for these behaviors.
Re: Help with behavior -VERY LONG
Is he in school...? If so, is he having any of these issues there...?
1) Consistency. We had to be absolutely consistent about every rule and boundary. If I said we were leaving if she exhibited X behavior, we left, no questions asked. Often it involved carrying her crying/kicking/screaming while carrying her brother.
Get some backup and get it on the radar with your Ped.!
I'd recommend posting this to the "Special Needs" board - they're great about questions like this and knowing WHO to turn to for assistance because let's face it, a Ped gets 20 minutes tops with you and it's on to the next kid, there isn't enough time usually for them to actually get to experience the kicking/screaming/hitting tantrums yet enough time to brush off your concerns as "that's a normal kid" - well, when a parent says "this isn't normal" when they've observed other kids the same age NOT behaving like that in general, there's a problem...
The teachers that DD had when she was at DC at that age were fantastic about letting us know if there were problem behaviors they experienced. I swear those women were saints!! But if your LO's teacher in the short time he was there found it enough of an issue to mention it to you, it's also worth noting.
We're just now starting the trek that is getting the proper evaluations done. With DD we finally hit the point where "enough was enough" and noticing how her 2.5yo brother has better situational behavior than she does over the past year was the REAL eye-opener! Things like "it's time to clean up so we can go" - DS would be coaching DD along! And DD will shut down when she's challenged at all whether it's school or home. Even a simple request (i.e. throw the dirty clothes from your room into the hallway so they can get washed - is like you've just insulted her personal being! Let alone the he** that was trying to get her to even do her homework - we had no time for anything other than dealing with her battles every single night of the school year)... I've had to deal with plenty of tantrums like you've described - we finally hit the turning point when it was time to get ready for school and I physically had to get her dressed and carry her to the car - a week from the end of school - THIS YEAR! It was then when we determined that this summer we have to do something because we've done the spectrum of what's suppose to work for extinguishing negative behaviors and nothing has worked.
I know it's not something ANY parent wants to do, but if you've taken a good hard look at the behaviors, whether your behaviors contribute to them or not, and whether this is something that happens whether you're there or not, if it doesn't matter the setting and the behavior continues, then it's time to get linked up with the right resources to help nip some of these problems in the bud because they only get worse as they get older and bigger!! The SN board is a good start, then asking people you know who have experience in the field for recommendations is the next step. Then comes the difficult breaths needed to pick up the phone and say "Houston, we have a problem!"...
The thing about saying "Sorry" is a good point too. And I want to say the age for true empathy is surprisingly older than you would think, like maybe 8? I could be wrong about that but yeah, it is better to try to solicit remedy than force an apology. Like, what can we do to make so-and-so feel better? The other part of forcing an apology is that it puts you into a power struggle that is much easier for the child to win (by refusal to apologize). No need to fight a losing battle.
I'm not an expert on this, but I think it sounds more like an extreme than an SN situation. I would try what penguingrrl recommended, inquire with your pedi, and then if you don't see improvement, seek additional resources.
WTF?? This is awful advice!! Seriously you are crazy.
I ditto everything penguin said. My 4.5 year old is going through this right now and it's so hard
We talk a lot about "sincere apologies" in my house. When we apologize, we look people in the face and say WHY. They don't even have to say the words "I'm sorry" if they aren't ready, but they have to acknowledge the bad behavior (ie: "It was wrong to hit you, John").