Q&A with Christine Fonseca discussion

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Brooke (The Cover Contessa) wrote: "How about some advice? My almost 6 year old is ALWAYS yelling at me. Just me, no one else. He's good in school, good for others. But me, well, he's always yelling when he talks to me, tells me I'm ..."
My first question when I read this is what do you do when he yells and what do you do when he makes a request or response without yelling. In order for him to stop yelling, it has to stop working.
A fabulous parenting guru, Barbara Colorosotalks about the three cons kids use to get what they want. Guess what #2 is....
My first question when I read this is what do you do when he yells and what do you do when he makes a request or response without yelling. In order for him to stop yelling, it has to stop working.
A fabulous parenting guru, Barbara Colorosotalks about the three cons kids use to get what they want. Guess what #2 is....

I try to just walk away, telling him I will not tolerate him yelling at me. But eventually he gets nuts and so do I. Today hubby and I decided if he yells at me, he goes to his room, or a time out place if we are not home. And that I do not talk to him until he calms down and speaks to me in a normal voice. He gets so angry at me so easily. I try not to react, it doesn't always work. Our relationship seems so volatile, and he's not even 6 yet!
Brooke (The Cover Contessa) wrote: "Christine wrote: "Brooke (The Cover Contessa) wrote: "How about some advice? My almost 6 year old is ALWAYS yelling at me. Just me, no one else. He's good in school, good for others. But me, well, ..."
I get it. One of my daughters is more my trigger, and the other triggers my husband. The key to stopping the behavior is 1) not allowing it to work any longer; 2) teaching a replacement behavior; 3)reinforcing the behavior you WANT to see while reducing any reinforcement of the behavior you don't want; 4) patience...lots and lots of patience.
Bad behavior, especially in a young child, is a teachable moment. A stressful, Grrr moment...but a teachable one.
It sounds like your plan is a good one. Be sure to positively reinforce him when he is communicating without yelling.
I get it. One of my daughters is more my trigger, and the other triggers my husband. The key to stopping the behavior is 1) not allowing it to work any longer; 2) teaching a replacement behavior; 3)reinforcing the behavior you WANT to see while reducing any reinforcement of the behavior you don't want; 4) patience...lots and lots of patience.
Bad behavior, especially in a young child, is a teachable moment. A stressful, Grrr moment...but a teachable one.
It sounds like your plan is a good one. Be sure to positively reinforce him when he is communicating without yelling.


Yeah, I am not patient at all. DH is much more patient. I need to work on that. Perhaps I need a book for myself! LOL! Learning patience, your next book????

I think the best gift you can give a kid is learning how to entertain themselves. For my girls, that meant having a box of...well...anything. They used to for all sorts of crafts and such. And for me...well for me I suddenly had blocks of time and could actually breathe, do laundry, etc

My oldest and little one can totally entertain themselves. My oldest could do it from a VERY early age, I mean months old. My little one just really learned this when he turned 2 (he's 3 now). My middle still doesn't know how to do this, thus all the stuff I wrote above!

Nereid wrote: "Yes some kids are different I agree, my son is 4 and an only child whose father works away most of the time. He is more dependant on me as I am the only constant in his life and has never been one ..."
Kids are all different...and I think it is great that you guys are figuring out what will work
Kids are all different...and I think it is great that you guys are figuring out what will work
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