How can I make her behave?
Mar. 27th, 2006 06:33 pmThis is a problem I cause for other people, I'm sure, but it bothers me more when other people cause it for me.
How can I expect Linnea to sit still when other kids are running around? Most relevant in bookshops and restaurants. So far, I don't; if I don't have the energy to chase her, I avoid like the plague places with running kids.
Everyone else has a chocolate biscuit and she has none. She's dairy intolerant. It's really very sad to see. So why shouldn't she sulk and stamp her feet?
Other kids grab her drink. But she's still not allowed to grab theirs. Should I just not care? Is there a point where I only enforce the standards of other people, in public places, and not my own?
I suppose the most irritating one is that her attention span is much longer than most of her peers', and I get annoyed when she plays with them and they flit from activity to activity - if it's just a pile of toys, it's not so bad, but if it's ten minutes' telly and 20 minutes' painting and 15 minutes' building blocks and so on, things that mean moving from room to room and doing prep and undoing prep, she ends up unsettled and sort of odd and unLinneaish.
This is just a whinge; I'll deal with it the way I deal with everything else parenting-related; I'll muddle through as best I can. But it's easier to parent in a bubble.
And much, much more tiring.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-27 05:54 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-27 06:09 pm (UTC)That's just an example. It's *different* standards; arbitrary lines drawn in different places.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-27 08:05 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-27 06:31 pm (UTC)Just feel proud you have taught Linnea the way to behave in different places - after all, these other children obviously don't know there is a difference between a restaurant and the park.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-27 06:35 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-27 06:38 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-28 05:52 am (UTC)As for other children's behaviour as applied to my child (as per your example of taking Linnea's drink, above), I would have stopped the other child and said "We don't take people's drinks without permission". If the person who was minding the child had a problem with it, they could take it up with me. No-one ever did.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-28 10:09 am (UTC)This is somewhat adjacent to one of my favourite rants about how often the people who say that kids "can't sit still" until x age are the same ones who compliment me on how well mine sit still in church/cinemas/restaurants/whatever, and how said people seem to expect that their own kids will magically acquire this ability when they hit x age and are then surprised when x comes and goes without any noticeable alteration... What, put work into your parenting? Nah, it's all supposed to happen automatically like in the fairytales, innit.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-28 05:53 pm (UTC)Drink-grabbing I stop. Jack isn't allowed to snatch other people's drinks and other children aren't allowed to take his. I explain that we don't take other people's drinks/biscuits/pens/whatever. No-one has called me on this. Again, I fully expect other people to do the same if they see Jack taking things from other children. I think I'm lucky, being mostly at church in this situation, because everyone views the children as a shared resource and everyone feels secure in attempting to gently instill some degree of manners in the toddlers.
I'm afraid Jack is one of the short-attention-spanners, so I can't help there.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-28 05:54 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2006-03-28 06:18 pm (UTC)I think I might just be firmer about cup-sharing. There *is* a small circle of us who have cupsharing kids - 4 families - but I really am not happy about it going further than that, so I might stop it in that circle too.