Eh, just give your MIL a hug and tell her you know she hates tantrums.
She gets to feel what she feels. No point in telling her her emotions are bad or uncalled for. Tantrums upset her. End of story.
I don't get the feeling she was trying to manipulate you, or make you feel guilty by showing she was upset... t
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I would go with all of that. I agree with it entirely.
I"m sure everyone was tired and worn out, and sad about going etc etc. We had a small family reunion this month at WDW, and at the end of the big family part of it, the grownups were on the brink of tears at the thought of it being over, and the kids were being emotional...it was one big emotional situation. So I've been there done that!
You were all feeding into her tantrum. As long as you let three year olds run the show, there will be chaos. Somebody's got to be in charge; be the leader, and that should be you. You explain to the child "we have to go now but the toys are coming with us and you can keep one for the ride and play with them when we get home", etc. Then you pack up and go. (Being the meanie that I am I would also have had her sit on a chair quietly, perhaps saying a nice goodbye to grandma, while we pack as well - and additionally added "if you're well behaved" at the end of "when we get home", too, and then follow through.)
Sorry if this offends, it's not meant to. Just pointing out my take on the situation. If you're not consistent and/or if you try to reason with them during a tantrum, kids will escalate their behavior until you meet their demands. So every time you let this go on, it gets worse. In effect, she's conditioned you and your DH to give in to her tantrums. You need to put a stop to it by setting limits and being consistent, and you and your DH being on the same page each and every time. Allow for natural consequences is she continues with tantrums. Learn to get comfortable yourself with those consequences - you'll be doing her a favor. Nobody wants to be around a child that behaves this way, and that includes family and friends, and later schoolmates and teachers.
Your way of doing things might have worked with your kids, but they would NEVER have worked with my son. Having DS sit on a chair and try to be quiet would mean he was alone, and feeling alone while he was upset would SCARE him, and make it so so so much worse.
When DS was just about to turn 3, we moved. We talked to him all the time about it, we showed him where we were moving, etc etc. This was an ongoing, all the time, discussion of what the new place would be like. He was completely involved.
A few nights before we left, maybe even closer to the move than that, he asked if we would leave some of his toys at the old place. We asked him why. Well, it turned out that somewhere in his head, he decided that DH and I were moving, and leaving him. And he wanted some toys to keep him company after WE left.
NOw we had talked about this move thoroughly with him! But he still got it in his head that he was being left.
So a tired 3 year old watching her toys get packed away, only being told what was happening right before it was happening, and not being able to hear it once she was distraught???? You KNOW she couldn't understand it. And even if she could, it meant she was going away from her grandparents, which can be very hard for little kids. Time is so weird when you're little...she had no true idea of when she would see grandma again... So in one part of her mind, she's losing her toys forever. In another part, she might not see grandma forever. 3 year olds...their little minds are so mysterious...
I think the OP's way of dealing with her daughter was just right. The husband wasn't helping matters, IMO, by taking the toys back out. From experience, I definitely wouldn't have done the toy-packing in front of her after she started reacting, but it would be getting done!
Yes. Hubster. That's how I refer to him in the online world/blogs.....going on 12 years now of being called that online.
I call my husband that as well online.
