Read The No Cry Discipline Solution Online
Authors: Elizabeth Pantley
job.
Toothbrushing
279
Mother-Speak
“ After many months of trying to get my son to cooperate
with toothbrushing, it fi nally occurred to me that Elmo was
on his toothbrush and I could use this to help. I mustered up
the best Elmo impression I could and said, ‘Elmo is REALLY
hungry. Elmo heard that you ate burritos for dinner. Would
you please give Elmo some, too?’ Samuel smiled, giggled,
and gladly opened his mouth to feed Elmo. Now he and
his little sister usually run off down the hall to ‘feed Elmo’
before bed.”
—Morgan, mother to Samuel, age 4, and Abby, age 2
• Be creative.
Pretend the toothbrush is a train and the teeth
a track. Make enthusiastic train noises, and encourage your child
to drive the train. Give the toothbrush and teeth voices, and have
them talk to each other. Make up a toothbrushing song, or use a
variation of a favorite tune. There’s no reason that this daily ritual
can’t be a fun one!
What Not to Do
• Don’t let your child off the hook to avoid the battle.
Not
only can cavities develop quickly if you don’t brush, but you are
setting in place important lifelong habits.
• Don’t threaten future problems.
Telling a toddler he’ll have
to have a cavity fi lled at his next checkup or threatening a pre-
schooler that he’ll have dentures at age forty won’t have much
impact. Children can’t think that far ahead.
See also: Car Problems; Restaurant Behavior
When we go on trips with our children, it seems to
bring out their worst behavior. What should be a fun
vacation turns into a trying chore.
Think About It
A new location, unusual foods, mysterious unfamiliar people, loss
of household routines, and a liberal dose of excitement—all of
these contribute to your children’s unruly vacation behavior. There
are a number of things that you can do to turn things around and
have a delightful excursion with your children.
What to Do
• Keep your normal routines.
Disruption of the familiar can
create chaos with children. When planning your travel times and
vacation events, try to keep four things consistent with your usual
routines: morning wake-up time, nap time, mealtimes, and bed-
time. Of course this isn’t always possible, but the further you veer
from your usual routines the more likely your children’s behavior
will deteriorate.
• Have realistic expectations.
Adults are able to transform
their normal behavior to vacation behavior, but children don’t
function this way. If your child is a picky eater at home, she’ll be
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Traveling
281
a picky eater on vacation. If your children argue at home, they’ll
argue away from home. If your child dawdles at home, she’ll move
slowly on vacation. When you expect something different from
the norm just because you are away from home, you are setting
yourself up for disappointment. Yet almost all parents fall prey to
the belief that their children’s behavior will magically improve
because they’ve bought airline tickets and rented a hotel room.
• Banish boredom.
We expect a vacation to bring all the fun
our children need. However, here are many hours of unfi lled time
involved: waiting in lines, sitting in buses, waiting for meals to be
served. Boredom is one of the main culprits for cranky children
and misbehavior during trips. Prevent boredom by packing “fun
bags” and keeping a few with you at all times. The party aisle of
your favorite toy store has lots of inexpensive ideas to fi ll your bags, such as tiny plastic animals, Silly Putty, stickers, drawing paper
and markers, playing cards, comic books, and miniature travel
games. These toys can be used anytime you need to keep your
child occupied.
• Tell them what to expect.
In advance of your journey, let
your children know what the travel plans are—how long the jour-
ney will take, the expected time of arrival, where you will sleep,
and what you will do all day. The better prepared they are and
the fewer the surprises, the more pleasant your children will be to
travel with. For younger children, you can even role-play the trip
in advance. As an example, set up chairs as an airplane in your
living room. Pretend your bedroom is the hotel room. Play-act the
trip, discussing what will happen when you’re on vacation.
• Have vacation rules.
Children will respond much better if
they know exactly what is expected of them. At the start of the
trip, or even before you leave, write down a list of rules. (Add
to them as necessary as the trip goes on.) Review the rules each
morning. This is a fantastic way to avoid power struggles during
the day.
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Specifi
c Solutions for Everyday Problems
• Use your parenting skills.
Remember to use all the skills
you have learned. Offering choices, using 5-3-1 Go!, engaging the
imagination, and having clear, specifi c, eye-to-eye discussions will
all help prevent you from losing your patience.
What Not to Do
• Don’t expect perfection.
It doesn’t matter how much money
you’ve paid, how much time it took to plan, or how excited you are
about the trip—your children’s behavior will be dictated by what’s
inside them, not by where they are in the world. They aren’t mis-
behaving because they are ungrateful or bad—they are just being
normal children.
• Don’t be too rigid.
Relax and pick your battles. Bending
a few rules is okay when you’re away from home. Don’t worry so
much about the little things, and focus on having a good time
yourself.