NHdisneylover
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2007
- Messages
- 18,120
Well obviously as the mother of an only child I have no rights whatsoever to comment according to someBUT I do agree with what you've said above. My DD has had her fair share of tantrums but at no point did I think it was cute or amusing and if she EVER barricaded herself into her room the door would be removed until she could be trusted to have it back. My DD is not perfect but there are some things that will not be tolerated in my home...end of!
Oh and BTW...my DD is an only child but I brought up my niece from the age of 18 months when her mother's health deteriorated and she is now a wonderful 20 year old who works with people with severe learning disabilities.
Oh and did I also mention I work as a specialist practitioner for people with special needs including ASD, ADHD and other developmental delay disorders, providing advice and support for families in dealing with behaviour problems....but then, as I said, I only have one child so I'm not really in a position to comment obviously!!!!![]()
As long as you do not assume that all children are identical and will react jsut like yours, you are qualified

What I hate is people who assume all only children are spoiled/selfish/etc (hey, why not bring up more controversy in the thread
==but that does really bug me--and yes I am an only child
)Back to the whole prior tantrum debate--I also think it is really important for parents to lookat the whole picture. Things like me knowing my DD has truly never encountered something she didn't grasp ASAP and added to her perfectionism it just sent her over the edge at 7. It didn't mean it was okay to lose it, but it meant I approached more from a "help her learn how to deal" standpoint than from a punitive one. Likewise, all of her tween/teen tantrums (and there were many here for about four months) were in not only the midst of hormones (OMG her body changed daily) but also in the midst of her having a very hard time at school after we had moved to a new country (rough on anyone much less a 12 year old) and were ALL struggling to learn the language and the culture and figure out the educational options etc. I did not encourage it or baby it, but I did not take the hard line I might have in other less stressful circumstances (geez even adults can lost it under such circumstances). Once we figured out that we could put the kids in a Waldorf school instead of a traditional German school their behaviour went back to normal almost immediately (the system here is rather different with tiered tracks and DD could not be college track because she did not have French since 4th grade--so she would have to go mid level track until 10th grade and then switch and then end up spending 1-2 more years in school, all because we moved and this was really upsetting to her in addition to other stress at that school for both kids).
In more day to day terms I think I parent should take a much harder line with a toddler who melts down because they want a candy bar at the checkout than with a toddler who has a midnight meltdown after being at Magic Kingdom since rope drop. A melt down is not good in either case but is much more understandable in one than the other.

(I would let them have pink hair now--but that is me and there are other things I think 27 sounds perfect for
)
). She went to her room--mission accomplished. DS's issue is that he has always known he needs space sometimes and just gone off on his own to get it--lately people have tried to follow him and ask him what is wrong or want to talk about whatever right then. He has actually said "I just need some space right now" they continue to pester him. At that point he LOST it: screaming to "Get out, get out, get out" and then slamming the door when they did leave. Pretty much played out the same with grandpa and with a family friend. On the one hand I was mortified and on the other I feel like they pushed when he started off being respectful and just telling them what he needed. In the end I did not get mad at him (he was mad enough at himself after) and just told him to try to hold it together long enough to come get me, his dad or his big sister is that happens again and we will advocate for him when he is that close to losing it. Hopefully there will be no next time but we will see if there is how it goes. Sometimes parenting is a trial and error kind of thing (for me anyway).
great read everyone! This has been one of the better threads lately! Keep it up.