I asked this in my other BMB, but I have grown to value you ladies opinions as well and would love to hear from mom's with older kids how you guys handle this. For some background info, my son is almost 2.5 (27 months):
Ok ladies, I need some advice on how you handle fibbing in your house. I know its a normal stage of development and is a sign that the child is practicing his/her imagination, but the line needs to be drawn somewhere and DS's fibs are getting out of hand lately. Yesterday he was crying because I wouldn't give him more candy and MH came in and asked him what was wrong and he said "mommy hit me in the face"! I couldn't believe it. There have been many other instances where he tells me the dogs did bad things when they didn't and he even told me his teacher bit him (which I know is not true). I never know when to believe the little fibber!
How do ya'll handle fibbing in your house? Do you correct them? Do you tell them its not nice to fib/tell stories/lie, etc? Do any of you even have this problem or am I alone in this? Thanks!!
Re: STM's- Fibbing
Thanks @Rquinlin! In the beginning, I didn't worry about correcting the little fibs like going to the zoo or seeing a lion in the toilet and whatnot, but now that fibbing is becoming a regular occurrence, I've been trying to point them all out, even the little ones, and remind him that its not nice to fib and to always tell the truth. Sometimes he gets pretty adamant about things though and will even cry about it if I try to tell him something didn't really happen. This probably boils down to him lacking the concept of time, like you said, and maybe in his mind he truly thinks he is telling the truth. Maybe I just need to focus on correcting the important ones? I'm at a loss here really. Thanks for the advice though!
I really hope a mom who has gone through this chimes in here!
This doesn't mean that he doesn't listen to what you ask or tell him to do and he absolutely knows that doesn't mean he can do something bad and get away with it as long as he tells the truth. Doing the right thing and telling the truth are both important and he knows this.
I do agree with pp in the fact that when they are that young, saying they saw a lion in the toilet wouldn't classify as a lie IMO but saying that you slapped him in the face is not ok and he should be aware that you can't lie like that. Sorry for the long post!!
But as a nanny, I didn't have to deal with it as much. With most things, the fibs were to be funny and get a reaction. So i would often just give my girl a look and say,"that sounds really silly, did that really happen?" But these fibs are a little worrisome. As you never know what your son might say to his teacher! He's telling you that his teacher bit him, and he told your H that you hit him. He may say something like that to his teacher. My brother actually did do something like that. He told his teacher that my step dad kicked him in the face! That didn't go over well.
I guess my only advice is to tell him that the things he is saying aren't true, and that they can really hurt someone like @wamom said. And try to have a discussion about playing pretend, and accusing people of doing mean or hurtful things.
Thanks everyone! this parenting thing is tough and toddlers are such enigmas. I think most of ya'll are right about only correcting the important ones. I am just so blown away by the things he comes up with in his little mind sometimes! He rarely gets into trouble and is pretty well-behaved, but the fibbing seems to be escalating and I'd really like to put an end to it. It's hard disciplining a child that doesn't really understand why he is being disciplined though.
I think I will just stick with explaining why we tell the truth and reiterating that lying about things that can hurt others or get them in trouble is wrong. Hopefully this is a stage and will pass, but if it isn't, then hopefully he will gain some understanding of why its not OK to fib in the coming months. Right now it seems a little over his head, but I talk about it with him anyway. Glad to hear I'm not alone in this though!
I know! Who knows really, maybe he has been reprimanded or heard another child being reprimanded for hitting in the face at daycare? I'm not sure. I know that's where he got the biting lie though because a child in his class has had a biting issue so I'm sure he has witnessed it before.
#1 BFP 11/6/12 EDD 07/19/13 Delivered 07/23/13 - Baby boy Everett John
#2 BFP 07/06/14 EDD 03/12/15
Something that we did, when the fibs were more frequent was to read all together and then talk about "the boy who cried wolf". We explained to him why lieing was so bad, that it could hurt people and that it makes people not believe you (like the boy in the story). This has not fully solved our fibbing issues but has helped dramatically.
Eta: typos