I had a horrid time potty training DD who was 4. We had our first trip planned and we were weeks away,DD 4 at the time, pooped her pants. She just did not want to take the time to go do it the bathroom. I told her while cleaning up, "ya know, TinkerBell does not meet little girls who poop in pants." She got this big eyed look on her face but said nothing. Over the next few days more and more poop ended up in the toilet. (thank goodness)
Meeting TINK. She gives Think a big hug and says "I don't poop in my pants anymore". Think just said "well, what a big girl you are">.<
A person posted a little while back about something she saw in the parks. A child was having a meltdown or tantrum or something and the child's grandmother told her that children who cried were turned into the dolls on It's a Small World to entertain the good little children.The poster said it worked.
Pretty sure I've said exactly the same thing at some point in time. I'm 100% certain I threatened to take away some ride experience or another in response to selfish behavior.
It feels wrong, but it does seem to work.
I was on the Express Monorail and a Dad said to his misbehaving child:
"Keep that up and there will be NO Dumbo for you!"
It worked.![]()
Best part about the Dumbo thing is that it probably wouldn't have hurt the parents at all to miss that ride.
I feel sad for the RnR girl. DS sometimes doesn't quite trust that we're doing things correctly, and rather than yelp at him, it's almost always better to really really explain things out to him again. It's almost always because there was a total misunderstanding of the way things work, or we've been too brief with him. The other times it's because he hasn't eaten properly that day, and like in the Snickers commercials, he just isn't himself when he hasn't eaten properly. (though a Snickers and its ingredients would make it SO much worse, so we don't give him THAT, LOL) Anyway, sounded like the girl was really stressed out and scared...not that she was being bratty.