All posts by Bella

Some strategies for dealing with the dreaded temper tantrums

Periodically, I've received emails about temper tantrums and how impossible they are to deal with. Tantrums usually escalate in frequency from about 18 months to about 2.5 years old. Most kids don't full-out tantrum anymore by the time they are 4 or 5. But apart from waiting these hellish episodes out, what else can we do? Here's just one example of an email that I think summarizes most parents' concerns:

This is an email of desperation.  O is going through another series of wicked temper tantrums – tantrum every morning when we change his diaper (doesn’t want it changed), tantrum getting dressed, tantrum when dinner isn’t ready right away every night, tantrum putting on his mittens, tantrum last night because I called “may” by its proper name “milk” AND dared to put it in a yellow cup.  Often these tantrums are accompanied by the classic face-down on the floor fist beating etc. 
 
So, we wait them out.  He escalates to the point of hyperventilation and my heart starts to break and I fear that I am being the worst mother ever, sitting passively by while my child gets more and more worked up.  We tell him, “O, I’m not going to do XX while you are screaming at me.  You have to stop whining/crying/ask nicely etc.” After a while (15-20 minutes), he’ll stop, he’ll say, “I’m done now.”  I try distraction but, often, he’s too worked up to be distracted.

This is SO classic and, indeed, distraction and ignoring are often the most commonly suggested ways of dealing with full-out temper tantrums. But there are a few additional strategies to consider. Part of the problem with the (approximately) 2-year old stage is that their verbal skills can’t catch up to their thinking skills, so they get easily frustrated. And also? 18 – 22 month-olds are ALWAYS frustrated. So are 2.5 year olds. It's just part of the major developmental transitions that they're plodding through.

Here are some thoughts and suggestions to manage those temper tantrums when they pop up:

1. The idea of ignoring the temper tantrum when it occurs and not giving into the tantrum-ee's demands is straight out of any behavioural modification program of reinforcement (It's part of the "coercive cycle" we've talked about before). Those are still good ideas. The only thing I’d add is to walk away from the child and go to another room when he’s tantruming — but remain in earshot so that he doesn't feel totally abandoned. Having you present, even though you’re not giving in, can be amping up his frustration (you are the evil being who is blocking his goal DAMMIT!). It’s not that he’s intentionally freaking out (in other words he’s not manipulating in any sophisticated way — he doesn’t have the cognitive capacity), but you ARE the object of his wrath and his hysterics are simply communicating that, as well as expelling his anger/frustration.

(Although you can see why many parents feel like they ARE being manipulated by these temper tantrums. Check out this video.) 

2. Forget the mommy guilt. Crying isn’t a terrible, bad thing that we should try to avoid in our kids at all costs. The only way our children learn to regulate their emotions is to express them first. As parents, we can try to take what we all feel, and the original poster expressed so well: “my heart starts to break and I fear that I am being the worst mother ever, sitting passively by while my child gets more and more worked up.” And reframe it with this: "Kids cry. Kids get pissed off.  Crying and raging aren’t in and of themselves bad (many kids just need to emote… A lot, especially when they can’t reason or talk it out). And I'm not a bad mom for simply witnessing his distress." You are doing everything possible not to escalate, you are not punishing him for his emotions, you are just there to witness them and therefore you’re inadvertently teaching him that emotions CAN be expressed (doesn’t mean he’s getting what he wants, but he can wail all he wants and you won’t hate him).

3. Try this set of responses, from the fabulous book, How to Talk so Kids Will Listen and Listen so Kids will Talk (works for some, not others). Give words to his feelings, mirror those emotions, repeat the rule you're trying to enforce, fantasize with him about his wishes. The steps are as follows: (1)  When he’s starting to whine/complain (but is NOT tantruming yet), give him words to express what he feels (e.g., O, you’re feeling so mad that mama won’t let you watch TV! Mad, Mad, MAD!), (2) Scrunch up your face and look mad, so he gets that that’s what he looks like and YOU get that that’s what he’s feeling, (3) Repeat your rule, accepting his feelings, but not his behaviour ("You can only watch TV after dinner; You can be mad at mommy but you can’t throw things/scream, whatever"), (4) Fantasize with him: "You know, I ALSO wish it was TV-watching time. I LOVE watching TV with you O! I wish mommy didn’t have to work, but I can’t WAIT until after dinner when we can watch together." Seriously… sometimes this set of steps work MIRACLES. The trick is to REMEMBER the steps in the heat of our frustration and anxiety.

4. Provide him with lots of opportunities throughout the day where he has the illusion of control (if not the reality). He’s being told what to do all day long: with parents in the morning, with child-care providers or at daycare, during mealtime, and so on. Children sometimes need to feel like they have some say in the way their day unfolds. Most of you have heard this stuff many times and have mentioned this in the comments sections. Provide choices: Do you want the blue or the red pants today? Do you want to take off your diaper now or after breakfast? Do you want to have cereal or toast?. Also, I'd suggest being very attuned to his behaviour so that you can catch him being strong, good, powerful, brave. And then praise the hell out of him (he needs to feel his power and control and that you recognize those things, not just put him down for it).

5. Look for reasons for escalation of tantrums: Sleep changes? Nap dropping? Missed snacks? Missed meals? Too much sugar/preservatives? Too little sleep at night? Sick? Teething? Too many transitions? Working on new skills (e.g., verbal)? This doesn't help us deal with the tantrums in the moment, but it does help us understand them better and it may help us to avoid them sometimes as well.

What are your favourite ways of dealing with temper tantrums? If you're past this stage with your child, what was the best advice you received?

Effective discipline strategies for toddlers Part I

Alright, alright, let's get down to some concrete suggestions for some discipline practices that work for the younger ages. I've pulled these methods from various sources including some fabulous books (that I will list in a separate post with lots of link-love), parenting programs (both intervention and prevention programs), and wise parents around me. To be clear: I have not come up with any of these methods on my own. And when I say these methods "work," keep in mind that what I really mean is: that they work for some kids, some families, some of the time at some ages and not others. I will also clearly state that all the strategies that I advocate are non-aggressive and generally non-physical. Especially with the under 3 or so group, I'm throwing out this caveat because many parents advocate spanking (at least as a last resort) in the toddler/pre-verbal stage. When I get the strength and the time, I will finish the post I've been working on that addresses spanking, but that's for another time (in the meantime, you can go join this thoughtful discussion on the topic).

I wanted to cover some of the most successful methods for the under 2 years old group first. This is the age at which children are very limited in their verbal abilities, so they often get very frustrated because they can't communicate to us what they really want. I'd say the vast majority of behavioural issues emerge at this young age because children feel misunderstood, ignored, or just plain frustrated that they can't get you to UNDERSTAND what they want. Their RECEPTIVE language, however (especially after 12 – 18 months) is quite good. So they may UNDERSTAND you, but they just can't COMMUNICATE with you. Can you IMAGINE how infuriaDisciplineting and frustrating that could be?

Another caveat before we get to the list: I think of discipline episodes as two-sided. The first is the emotional component: All parent-child conflicts are emotional and offer opportunities for parents to learn about their children's inner lives and to also teach their children some important lessons. We want to teach our children to understand and regulate their emotions while also being able to communicate what they feel to others in effective ways. Conflicts of will that often involve applying some discipline strategy provide the most common context through which we can do this type of emotional learning and teaching with our children. The second component to discipline episodes is the behavioural one: we want to teach our children to behave appropriately, safely, with kindness and so on. Following many, many wise authors (again, links to books are coming in a future post), I think we need to acknowledge and accept children's emotions and allow them to feel them without fear of reprisal while still teaching them appropriate ways of ACTING on those emotions. I'm going to focus on the behaviours in this post and talk more about emotions and how to label and work with them in another post.

Here are some of the top strategies that could work for you and your young children. Keep in mind that some of these methods could work brilliantly at older ages too, while others may be less appropriate. Also, you'll note that these methods are ways to AVOID a power struggle. My aim (in theory, unfortunately not always in practice) is NOT to "show my kids who's boss" but to gain their compliance and teach them new skills through other means.

1. I maintain that one of the most effective strategies for avoiding coercive cycles or nasty discipline episodes is to ANTICIPATE the most commonly-occuring conflicts and find ways of AVOIDING them

2. Children under 2 can often be easily distracted. So, if a 9-month old is spitting his food all over the floor, read him a book/sing him a song/rattle a funny toy and see if his attention is diverted. If your 18-month old insists on pulling the cat's tail, start playing tug-of-war with him with your scarf instead. And so on…

3. Teach your pre-verbal child sign language. (This is kind of in the middle of the emotion/behaviour split). The link I provided (and there are tons more; go ask Dr. Google) allows you to put in all sorts of words and watch as an overly-smiley lovely young woman shows you the sign for said word. Personally, I don't really think you need to spend the money on a DVD or book, not at first anyway. Ten simple words will do at first (even less: milk, sleep, all done, MORE, banana, etc.). Babies as young as 6 – 9 months will eventually GET that the word is the same as the gesture, but most babies won't actually start USING the signs until about 1 years old or more. For those of you uninitiated, you'll be tempted to scoff. Beware the baby sign-language scoff lest you miss something that will SO WORK for you. Giving your 1-year old the ability to communicate to you that "NO MOMMY!  You have it all wrong… I want MILK, not water/a hug/my soother!" or "NO! Don't take that away, I want MORE!" can be priceless. For SO MANY children who do not have the ability to talk yet, a few simple signs can be the key to avoiding innumerable tantrums and, just as precious, the key to connecting with your child in a way that you never realized was possible at such an early age. Baby sign-language: Not just for the granola-hippie-hemp-eating mommies anymore (mmmm… granola!).

4.ATTEND like mad to positive behaviours you want to encourage and try to ignore or at least respond in a flat emotional tone to behaviours you want to discourage. (Again, this stuff comes straight out of the behavioural techniques of Skinner and those whacky pigeons he taught to press bars for food.) This is SO IMPORTANT to remember: Your attention is like crack to your baby/toddler. The number one thing your child craves is your attention, preferably your smiling, adoring attention. You can use that beam of attention to tune your child's behaviour — when she is doing stuff you want her to do, or just being an adorable, sweet child, praise the hell out of her, smile gloriously, do a little dance, throw a mini party. When she is doing something you would like her to stop doing (that is nevertheless not harming her or anyone / anything else), withdraw your attention: in response to the slamming doors, throwing food, screeching at pitches only young dogs and mothers can hear, walk into another room or pick up a book to read or start lavishing loving attention on her sibling instead. As SOON as she stops the yucky behaviour and does something more to your liking, start the happy dance, pick her up and mush her sweet little cheeks into yours, smile and clap and generally go over the top. I know… sounds ridiculous. But it is UNCANNY how well this can work if you can keep your cool and keep your eye on the goal: you want to simply stop or redirect the behaviour, NOT let her know that you won some battle of wills.

5. Focus your requests on what you DO want your child to do, not what you DON'T want him to do. Babies and toddlers have miserable shor
t-term memories so they'll remember the LAST thing you've said in most cases. If you tell Johnny: "Don't bang the glass table. Banging the glass table will break it," he will likely hear, "wah, wha, wah, bang the glass table, break it." Instead, focus on an alternative behaviour you would prefer him to do: "Don't bang the glass table. You CAN bang this drum. Come on, bang this drum with me!" Also, they may not KNOW an alternative behaviour that would be alright for you and still feel fun for them; kids need us to TELL them and SHOW them what we're ok with.

6. Related to #5, when our child DOES misbehave (for example, hits another child or grabs a toy from another child's hand), teach him the more APPROPRIATE behaviour once the situation has been diffused and PROVIDE HIM THE OPPORTUNITY TO PRACTICE that more appropriate behaviour. Oftentimes we reprimand our children for doing something wrong (for example, we give them a time-out), but then that's the end of that. Most often, we don't give them the chance to practice the more appropriate behaviours we hope they'll use next time (using their "strong" words, sharing, asking instead of grabbing for a toy). This "do-over" is ESSENTIAL for giving children the skills to deal with situations differently the next time they arise. I've heard this idea from several sources, but I'm a big fan of Sharon Silver at ProActive Parenting, who emphasizes how powerful these learning experiences can be for children.

OK, having written another novella, I'll stop now and give you a chance…  What have I missed? What works or worked best for your toddler?

Most common cause of early discipline problems

We're back to thinking about discipline this week (and I could probably go on for weeks to come, so stop me when you get bored, 'kay?). Before we get into specific discipline strategies, I wanted to give you a bit more background about some of the research that's gone into understanding the development of defiant behaviour. In particular, I want to focus today's post on the most common parent-child interaction pattern that's associated with the development of oppositional, defiant and/or aggressive behaviour. There are SO MANY studies that have focused on this deceptively simple pattern, often referred in the research literature as "coercion" or the "coercive cycle." The pattern was first documented and analyzed by researchers from the Oregon Social Learning Center, most notably by Gerald Patterson (my academic mentor's mentor, a brilliant and inspiring man, and one of the most interesting and awesome people I know). Patterson collected videotapes of hundreds of parents and children interacting with one another in their own homes. And here's one of the most common interaction patterns he identified…

The coercive cycle starts with a parent requesting something of her child — let's say, mom asks her child to put away the blocks he's been playing with. The child responds by either ignoring mom or saying "NO!" The parent then responds to this defiance by escalating her request (either by increasing the urgency with which she delivers her request, raising her voice, threatening to take away privileges or threatening to punish, etc.). The child continues to refuse to comply (either actively or passively, but either way, he's not budging). Mom again escalates her request. The child then starts to whine (eeh gad that whiiiiiiiiiiiine), scream, cry or tantrum. The mother gives up: utterly exhausted at this point and realizing how much easier it would be to just pick up the darn blocks herself.

Who among us has not experienced almost this precise interaction? Who among us has not been frustrated enough, sleep-deprived, exhausted after a full day at work, desperate enough for a little peace that we have just given up? Sometimes we need to just pick our battles, right? Right… to a certain degree.

Here's the problem: This little scenario happens to ALL of us, at some point. But the OPPORTUNITY for this type of interaction happens hundreds of times over the course of a week (and often over the course of a DAY). And each little episode teaches the child something (as well as the parent). For the child, he learns that if he ignores long enough, whines loud enough, or full-out tantrums quickly enough, he will get his way. This is the "coercive" part of the cycle. The parent is ALSO learning something: Mom learns that if she gives up quickly enough, then peace and quiet will be restored to the household. In "behaviourists'" terms, both the child's "coercive" behaviour and the parent's withdrawing behaviour is being reinforced by this scenario. What is compelling about this situation is that, in some ways, it is so banal, so innocuous. In the moment, the interaction doesn't seem like a big deal at all. In the short run, both the parent and child are actually coming out the other end of this feeling relatively relieved and alright. BUT!  Wash, rinse and repeat hundreds and thousands of times and, in the LONG RUN, we've just created a potential little tyrant, one that now whines at EVERY. SINGLE. REQUEST. One that throws himself on the floor screaming and flailing each and every time we say "no" to one of HIS requests.

A few more points to emphasize about the coercive cycle:

1. When I say that the child is being "coercive," I don't mean that she is INTENTIONALLY and CONSCIOUSLY doing something to piss off her parents. These patterns develop outside of consciousness — which is part of the reason they can be so tricky…

2. For almost all children and parents, these mini-conflict scenarios start emerging most notably at around 18 months and continue on through early childhood. As we've talked about already, oppositional and defiant behaviour is COMPLETELY normal at this age. It's what we DO about it, as parents, that really matters.

3. Between 2 – 4 years old, these behavioural issues may not seem so serious (and they're not, at this stage). Children are small, can't do much damage, and their defiance can be relatively contained (and kinda funny too). But the trouble is that if we DON'T start attending to the defiant and aggressive behaviour early on, these are the skills and strategies that our children will take with them into the classroom, playground and into the homes of their peers as they get older.

SOURCES: There's loads of data I can link to that has identified the coercive cycle as a strong causal process that leads to the development of oppositional and/or aggressive behaviour. Here are just two of the summary articles that pull together this large body of research: Hinshaw, 2002 and Kazdin, 2002. If you're interested in the actual original studies, email me and I'll send you a few. Here's my own review of the research literature in the area (although I do NOT recommend reading it unless you're really into esoteric modeling, dense and inaccessible writing and the application of complexity/chaos theory to psychology). Perhaps the best two books on the topic — with all the data and theory summarized — are authored or co-authored by Patterson.

So… do you recognize the "coercive" cycle in your family? How about in other families that you see around you? Are there strategies you use to try to avoid these scenarios? Under what circumstances do you find it almost impossible to avoid these situations (I'll tell you mine in the comments if you tell me yours…)?

The US edition of Bedtiming is HERE!

I am THRILLED to let you all know that the US edition of Bedtiming is out! For those of you who have no idea what I'm talking about, a couple of years ago, my husband (Marc Lewis) and I wrote a book that was first published in Canada. The US edition is now out (published by The Experiment) with a brand spanking new cover and subtitle (nothing else of substance has changed from the Canadian version, for those of you who have asked).

Book cover
We wrote Bedtiming while trying to figure out the ins and
outs of our own children’s sleep habits and how to ultimately change
those crazy habits so that we could regain our sanity. The book goes through the best ages and stages to attempt your favourite sleep-training method. There are several chapters outlining the developmental research that points to several sensitive stages across infancy and early childhood — these are the stages we recommend that you avoid sleep training. There are other stages that children are more resilient, more focused on the "external" world of objects, and less anxious about separations — these are the stages we recommend giving your favourite method a go. The feedback I've received from several readers is that they have found the chapters that outline all the cognitive and emotional developmental stages useful in and of themselves, just to understand what is going on in the mind of their own child. I LOVE this because it was exactly our intent — we are developmentalists and so consider these developmental milestones so intrinsically fascinating and useful to understand for a range of children's issues (including, but not limited to, sleep training).

In terms of sleep issues: We are very clear in the book (like I am on this blog) that there is not one perfect sleep-training technique that is right for all children and all families. There's a chapter in the book that summarizes the pros and cons of the top 5 or so sleep-training
methods, but we don't recommend one over any
other. The method is yours to pick, according to your parenting philosophy, your own upbringing, cultural background, support system, your child's temperament, and so on. The main message of the book is that the TIMING of sleep-training may be just as (or more) important to success than the method you pick.

This blog was
first developed as a place to talk about the issues raised in Bedtiming, to highlight particular research findings that form the basis
of the book and, most importantly, to provide readers a space to ask
questions and trouble-shoot through their own sleep-training highs and
lows. If you go through the archives for the first 6 months of this blog, you'll find loads of Q and A's associated with the issues raised in the book. I hope that I can continue to use this space for that purpose, for those of you who pick up a copy and have additional, more specific questions.

For those of you who HAVE read the book, may I ask you to share with people what you thought of the book? I'm VERY open to critical feedback (as much as lavishing praise ;-)). I'm not good at this self-promotion thing at all, but I think it would be very useful to readers of this blog if they could access honest feeback about the book from real parents in the trenches (I promise I do not delete any comments, btw).

(To purchase the book, just go through any of the links under BUY THE BOOK, over on the left hand side of the blog… or go old-school and visit your nearest bookstore. Pssst… it's a bargain online at $10 and change).

Two Good Questions To Ask Yourself About Your Disciplinary Strategies

3954fbc34ff9e32eLet's put the cognitive processing (child and also parent) in the whole disciplinary issue under a somewhat different microscope. I'll just cut to the chase on the two questions here then I'll back up and flesh them out. These are two important questions I think you should ask yourself BEFORE you are in the throes of disciplining your mini-me (though you may ask them again in the heat of the moment if, like me,you sometimes give yourself a time out and go and watch the oven clock for 1 or 2 minutes as you catch your breath and remind yourself calmy of your answers to these two questions). Your answers can have a huge impact on how you are going to proceed. For the record, my son is now rapidly approaching 5.5 and it's been sometime since I needed to commune with the oven clock. Light…tunnel…you get the idea.

Question 1:  Who's driving this relationship anyway? Answer: ESPECIALLY if your child is under 4 – YOU ARE!!! No really, you are.

Question 2:  What are you really hoping to achieve by disciplining your child?  Answer: Depends upon the parent.

Let's take 'em  in order.

Q1:  A parent who believes that their child is in control might have the following thought processes…"I hate it when he/she DOES THIS TO ME. He/She is just TRYING TO GET THE BETTER OF ME. The world does NOT evolve around him/her. I need to make that clear to him/her.". This sets up a huge challenge because the parent is now not only facing dealing with the incident that seems to warrant disciplinary action, but they are faced with the task of showing the child who is in control (that would be you). 

Some parents will immediately acquiese, not so much as a means to obtain a different end in the larger scheme of things (an excellent suggestion in one of Bella's recent posts, see also next q), but because it's just easier, puts an end to episode right away and we can all get on with our lives. Effectively this parent HANDS THE CONTROL OVER to the child and the more you do this, the more you reinforce the idea that they, NOT YOU, are in charge. So, you were right anyway. Net result: you are helpless to change this and can only hope and pray it will pass. Maybe it will, maybe it won't.

Other parents may see this as the opportunity to set the record straight on who is actually in charge. Little so and so needs to be taught a lesson. So the parent asserts him- or her- self (sometimes even harshly). Read: I am wrestling control from you, you need to be taught that I am in control here, not you. The stern even harsh disciplinary action sets up resistance in the child (it's not very nice of you after all) and now the battle can go on indefinitely. My guess is that it will.

Interestingly, there is research on parent's sense of control in their relationship with their child/children that shows that parents who attribute control to the child, rather than to themselves, are more likely to use harsh measures, even abuse them (as in the second scenario, described above).  In contrast, parents that view themselves as being in control are more likely to negotiate or reason with their children.

My point is that misattributing control to the child, rather than to yourself, will lead to a very different set of actions than if you go in thinking that you are in control in the first place. In the latter case you don't have anything to prove – you take it as given that you are in control. Now you are free to focus on the incident at issue and how to deal with it. You may now be more likely (even able), to see it from your child's point of view ("Darn it, can I just have a little control in this world of random rules imposed by parents all the time…"). So now you can give in but with a bigger plan in mind e.g. "I'll give in on this (not that worried about whether they put on the red or the blue socks, just put on some socks for heaven's sake!) and not make it into a huge battle. I'll give him or her a choice of actions or a time limit etc. but still use reasoning, explain why it has to be this way. OKAY, FINISH YOUR GLASS OF WATER QUICK AS A BUNNY, YOU NEED TO GET SOME SLEEP OTHERWISE YOU'LL BE TIRED AT PLAYDATE/PRESCHOOL/SWIMMING LESSONS etc. in the morning."

The reasoning approach probably describes most of you based on your comments, the other one may seem remote/extreme. But it's worth remembering who is in control in the heat of the moment. Might just help you gain some objectivity (hard to do in the heat of battle) and re-orient you to your larger goals here. Which leads me to question 2. 

Q2: What are you trying to achieve here anyway?  Here's the scene: End of a hectic day, you just picked up the little one (s) from daycare/preschool etc., gotta get some groceries and get home to throw something together in about an hour (why did you invite the neighbours over tonight of all nights anyway, what the heck were you thinking?). Little so and so is tired too, maybe needs a snack. So naturally after you run around simultaneously loading up the shopping cart, while "gently" removing small hands from unwanted items/shelves etc. and finally get into the huge line up, he or she throws the tantrum of a lifetime. Cue: disciplinary action from you. 

What are you after here?  Quick end to the episode – you are red with embarassment, everyone is looking disapprovingly at you and your child, this is a really uncomfortable public display for you and you are looking mighty incompetent. For the short-term change goal, you may be more inclined to give in ("here eat the candy or open the toy or whatever"), really assert yourself ("I am not going to tell you again to get up off the floor or else…one…two…") or drop everything and leave – your dinner plans now down the drain.

If on the other hand, you are invested in cultivating a good long-term relationship with your child, teaching them a set of acceptable coping skills for (hopefully) a healthy, well-adjusted adulthood (as in way down the road), the strategies you employ may be very different. Disapproving audience be damned, this was a bad time to come grocery shopping anyway, a recipe for disaster, but now we're already in the line-up, it's time to deal. "Please get up off the floor and stop screaming (with assistance as needed). Take a breath (while wiping snot and tears with tissue). It's hard to wait in a long line up isn't it? I bet you can't find something red/ the number 3, sing row your boat/whisper something, touch your toes, clap your hands…whatever…faster than/before me."  My son (thank someone, somewhere) was not prone to regular temper tantrums, but he can be sticky in other ways. When patience or calming down was called for and he was just old enough (maybe even 2?) I'd say "It's hard to wait for our turn isn't it ? I know you can do this, I know you're gonna find a way to help me wait." Then quickly start some kind of game. 

Of course, for both of these questions, your answers are going to depend somewhat upon the particular instance or transgression. But even so, revisiting these questions from time to time, sometimes in the heat of battle, really helped keep me focused on what really mattered.

Penny for your thoughts.

—Tracy

Back to the basics (research): Some data and thoughts on young children’s defiance

Have I told you guys what my actual area of expertise is? I don't think I've gone into any detail. I did my PhD in developmental psychology, with an emphasis on "developmental psychopathology." Which simply means that I mostly studied the factors that contribute to children developing different forms of emotional and behavioural problems (mostly problems with anger and aggression, but also with anxiety and depression). My dissertation was on the family dynamics that are associated with oppositional and aggressive behaviour in children (and also with anxiety and depression, but we'll save that part for another week). In other words, I spent a good 6 years of my training and the subsequent 8 years (eeh gad, I hate to think of how long it's been since I started…) thinking about, reading about, running studies on and working with folks who try to prevent and treat childhood behavioural problems. There's a whole lot of areas of psychology that I will easily admit to being clueless about, but this is not one of those areas. Having said that, I find it strangely difficult (BECAUSE I am so immersed in this research) to try to filter all this information into easily digestable posts that are user-friendly but still provide you with all the empirical research that you can access yourself. In other words, this is just one big ol' caveat to say that you may have to excuse me if I'm not giving you immediately the TOOLS and the STRATEGIES that you came here looking for. I'll do that. I promise (and I'll point you to some of the better resources for further educating yourself if that's what you're looking for). But first, I think it may be important to back up a bit and talk about what we know about children's oppositional, defiant, or aggressive behaviour — where it comes from, what are some of its correlates, and the role of parents in all this. So this will be the first of two posts on those topics…

First off, as I've mentioned before, it is perfectly, absolutely NORMAL for young children to defy their parents — to scream "NO!" at every turn, to bite, scratch, push, hit, tantrum, whine, and wail in response to a request from their parents. This is especially true of children under the age of around 4. I like to lay this out clearly from the beginning because many parents believe that somehow they have an exceptionally "bad" child, or a "difficult" kid that is so much more aggressive or defiant than other kids are. Of course there are variations in how defiant children can be — due to a mysterious mixture of genetics and environmental factors, some kids really are mellow from birth and hardly ever defy their parents and others are extreme tyrants from the start. But the VAST majority of young kids DO test their parents regularly and act out aggressively early on.

One of the best researchers out there on the subject is Richard Tremblay at the University of Montreal. He's insanely prolific, but some of his best work has been on the prevalence of misbehaviour and aggression in early childhood. He's studied huFrequency of aggressionndreds of children and families and followed them for decades and one of his most clear findings is that, IN GENERAL, most normal children are at their most aggressive and defiant between the ages of 2 and 4 years old. Here's the graph to show you what I mean — this is from a National Survey in Canada (in other words, it's a representative sample of "regular" kids, not a "clinical" or otherwise selected sample; from Developmental Health and the Wealth of Nations; click to enlarge). The same results have been replicated in many other countries. The gist is that parents report that children hit, bite or kick at the highest frequency at around mid-two years old and then those frequencies drop over the course of childhood — for MOST kids.

One of the more interesting implications from these results is that Tremblay and many others have argued that it is actually NATURAL and NORMATIVE for young children to be defiant and aggressive in early childhood and it is the job of parents to SOCIALIZE this defiance and aggression OUT of the child. In other words, the argument is that most children come into the world with these defiant and aggressive tendencies and, without our help, these children will grow up to be defiant and aggressive adolescents and adults. They don't LEARN to be aggressive, they come that way, and we need to show them more appropriate, socially-acceptable ways of behaving in our social world. I won't get into all the philosophical background here except to say that this view contrasts with the approach of Rousseau and others who thought that children come into the world as "pure" beings, fundamentally "good" and untainted by the "badness" of the world we live in.

This all may seem too abstract, at least this last part but, for me, thinking about how we understand and interpret our children's misbehaviour can have an impact on how we RESPOND to it. If you think that children come into the world as essentially perfect beings, with "natural" ways of behaving, and natural impulses that shouldn't be quashed, you may be less likely to respond to angry outbursts, mean words or tantrums (or you might not respond by attempting to stop them; rather, you may allow your child the freedom to express himself). But if you think that kids are basically primitive little beings who are naturally going to act out, defy you and other authority figures, and lash out verbally and physically if provided the opportunity, you may consider it your job, your DUTY, to socialize these little beings so that they can function in our society as productively (and peacefully) as possible.

OF COURSE I'm presenting the sides as a tad too extreme. And most of us may agree that we want to let our children feel free to express emotions, to some degree, and perhaps curb other expressions (or behaviours). What do you think of these data? Do you have implicit or explicit beliefs about children's "natural" tendencies? Do you see any part of your job as a parent expressed in this post?

 

Best discipline strategy EVER

Before we get into the many different approaches we might take to curbing one sort of misbehaviour or another, I thought I'd give you one of the best pieces of advice I've ever been given. I learned this little trick from all sorts of places, including brilliant moms, intervention and prevention programs that I've reviewed professionally, how-to books on parenting and so on (too many to link to for this specific point). It's not rocket science, but it's a lesson that I CONSTANTLY have to keep reminding myself about. It seems like every 2 months or so, when I get stuck in some bad place with the boys and I can't seem to get them to change something or other that I'd like them to change, I have to smack myself with this lesson once again. It almost ALWAYS helps me work out something more effective.

Best discipline strategy EVER: ANTICIPATE and structure the child's environment to AVOID the conflict / battle of wills / oppositional behaviour to begin with. That's it. When you start noticing a pattern of "No!"s to the same
thing, a pattern of tantrums to the same triggers, a pattern of timing
when your child refuses your wishes consistently (overtired? just before or after transitions? etc.), try to anticipate
those triggers and change the context so as to avoid the conflict to
begin with. I know, it's not as easy as it sounds. Let's think about this more.

First off, after our child has thrown the 10th sweet potato on the floor, lunged at his baby brother's throat yet again, refused to put on her boots AGAIN, blatantly ignored being called to dinner, and so on, we may sometimes forget that we don't have the devil's spawn on our hands; instead we have a very normal child acting perfectly age-appropriately. I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that at almost any age under around 6 or so, most often, the battle of wills is not worth fighting. At so many developmental stages in a young child's life — especially (but not limited to) 8 – 11 months, 18 – 22 months, 2.5 – 3 years and 3.5 to 4  years –  one of the main developmental challenges for your child is to assert her independence and forge a little more autonomy from you. It's their JOB to figure out how far they can push the boundaries, how hard they can push before they get a push back, how absolute the rules really are, and so on. This pushing gives them a sense of power as well as a sense of their role in the family. Being defiant teaches them about their own efficacy in the world, how crucial it is to compromise at times, how often they will hit upon obstacles to their wishes, and if we respond by setting appropriate boundaries at critical times, these oppositional outbursts also provide them with a sense of security: although their world may be frustrating at times, it's also safe, predictable, and mommy WILL prevail and take care of me in the end.

So, once we accept that our kids will and NEED TO defy us at many, many turns, we can move on to what we do about it. And I think one of the best sanity-savers for parents is to minimize the frequency and severity of this defiance in the first place by THINKING AHEAD. We can try to anticipate those times in the day that are most likely to trigger conflicts and try to change things around enough that they simply won't happen. In that way, we avoid the battle of wills. Which means we avoid having to either force our kids to do something they insist they don't want to do or backing down eventually and worrying that we're creating a "spoiled brat" who gets whatever he wants if he wails loud enough.

Of course, this strategy won't work all the time. And even if it DOES work for one thing, because at the root of these conflicts is a desire for power and autonomy, another issue will invariably pop up. But you'll be surprised at how often it actually does work and how pleased you'll be with yourself when you finally are done pleading with the child to JUST. GET. YOUR. SHOES. ON. NOW. (Now you can move on to the hats!) There are so many examples we could talk about here and I'd love to hear from parents who effectively avoid conflicts with their kids. Here are just a few examples, from my own and blog readers' experiences:

  • As I've mentioned before, I used to yell almost daily at my kids in the morning to get their shoes on. We'd be late for school every day as a result of this silly battle. It baffled me for a good 2 weeks. I'd say get them on, it's late, they'd say no or lay about basically ignoring me. It was 2 against 1 and guess who was "winning?" So… I made it into a game — changed the context entirely. They had two types of shoes each and we gave them animal characters (the doggy shoes, the monkey shoes, etc.). Then each morning I would make a big deal about who was going to be the monkey, the doggy, etc. I would close my eyes and tell them as soon as they had their animal shoes on they should make those animal noises and I would guess which boy had what shoes on. Worked like a charm. After 2 weeks, they were bored with the game, but I can now say put the monkey shoes on and there is NO CONFLICT AT ALL about it. (We will not speak of the hats…)
  • In the comments of the last post, @Paola mentioned (and @Cloud responded the way that I would have), that her girl refuses to go to bed before her request for water is granted… AFTER it's already bedtime (beforehand, she says she doesn't want any). Pure power issues, as Paola nailed. Of course, after lots of wailing (and a brother to consider), any mother would just finally acquiesce to the demand. Here's a few things that might help to change the context: "Give in" right away, immediately after she asks the first time. Just accept that you will go back in to the room once. That may stop the power struggle right there — she feels like she's won and you know that you actually have saved yourself 30 min of a harrowing battle. Or, as @Cloud suggested, provide her with a sippy cup of water by her bed. Or give her a choice of water or a story (before she's hit her "real" bedtime) so she feels she's got a little more of you than usual.
  • Judy recently emailed us this question: "we haven't been able to come up with a good way to stop him [19 month old] from
    throwing toys.  A behavior we'd like to limit to outdoor play.  It
    seems that when he does get frustrated he'll wind up, hold the toy by
    his ear, say "no" and proceed to huck it across the room.  We've tried
    ignoring the behavior, telling him he can only throw certain safe
    balls, saying no etc…. If we try to get eye-level and explain, he'll
    ignore us and just point at something else across the room- as if to
    change the subject :)." SO typical of this stage… A couple of ideas of how to change the context: Take away all dangerous toys that can't be thrown — leave him only with soft, plushy things that won't do damage. Or, while he's in this phase (and it IS only a phase, believe me), play with him mostly in the kitchen or another room that won't be damaged by his throwing. The other part of this is ANTICIPATE: When you see he's about to get frustrated, try removing the toy and giving him another attractive one immediately, one that isn't as frustrating, preferably. But good luck with that… 18 – 21 months is ALL ABOUT FRUSTRATION and much of this is about soldiering on and waiting it out. And maybe drinking some good wine (I shudder when I remember that stage — it was my hardest with my boys).

Of course, I could go on and on with examples. The last point I wanted to make is that what we're REALLY doing when we use this ANTICIPATE and AVOID strategy is changing OUR behaviour, more than our child's. This is really about changing our own minds about how we perceive a conflict, power struggle, undesirable behaviour. Our tendency is to ascribe harsh intentionality to our kids: "He just wants to get his way." or "She just wants to piss me off." or "He's trying to push my buttons." or "She's testing whether I'll be the one who'll back down." Or some other variant. Although there may be some truth to all of these things, the key here is that kids are doing what they're developmentally supposed to be doing and they're learning a whole lot from the process. OUR challenge is to keep our own sanity, bring up reasonably healthy, peaceful and happy children, and keep them (and those around them) safe. We often can't change THEIR minds in the heat of a battle, but we CAN change our own. For me, it helps enormously to think about these battle of wills as MY OWN failure to be flexible and smart (rather than my children are just little sh&%s).

(By the way, these are not my own original ideas of course. Many of the points I've made are from well-known, fabulous books that I plan to list in a separate post, but they may resonate with many of you out there.)

So, tell me, have any of you come up with ways to avoid particular battles with your children? Are there stories out there about anticipating conflicts that may help out other parents who are reading? What are YOUR most challenging moments with your kids and how do you deal best and worst with them?

Happy, Happy! Let’s get back to those posts…

Ahem… Sorry about the missing-in-action thing. Apparently, a blog does NOT write itself and apparently I cannot maintain one without childcare and WITH a more than full-time job (and the holidays, which really sucker-punched me this year, in terms of chaos and crazies). So, we're back to business as usual this week. Thanks for your patience!

This post will be a short one, to give you a  heads up about what's coming (and give me a day to recover from the backlog of a month without childcare… did I mention that I NEED childcare?!). As the holiday period comes to a close, a lot of kids have been going through lots of transitions, changes in bedtimes, changes in schedules in general, difficulties perhaps adjusting to extended family members' expectations, the fun but also the conflict that comes with being around cousins, lots of friends and family, and so on. Although the holidays can be an amazing time with children, they can also be the most stressful. So, I thought discipline would be a great topic to cover right about now.

In the next week, possibly two (depending on your interests and response), I'd like to focus the posts on behavioural challenges and how to deal with them effectively. There are SO MANY directions to take these discipline posts. First off, there are different approaches. In my usual style, you'll see that I'm all for mixing up all sorts of effective, non-abusive, constructive approaches to discipline and there are boatloads of books out there that I'll suggest might be useful places to start or enhance our thinking about discipline strategies. But, no surprise, I also think that different developmental stages call for unique approaches to discipline. Not surprisingly, the same methods that may have worked at one age will invariably fail at later ages. So, I'll try to cover different ages and stages as well as the different strategies that people use. And, as usual, the temperament of your child will have a HUGE impact on the effectiveness of any one particular discipline approach. No one method will suit all children, so the aim here will be to mix it up and call for your experiences, both negative and positive, to flesh out any data and reports provided. We'll cover issues like the types of parenting practices that can amplify or dampen poor behaviours, the challenges of implementing most discipline strategies, tantrums and the whole ball-of-wax that makes them different from just pure acting-out behaviours, time-outs and the pros and cons, and, if I have the chutzpah, I'll even open up the discussion about spanking.

We've received several emails about displine issues, but for those of you who haven't written and want a particular topic covered in this general area, please shoot us an email: scienceandparenting@gmail.com

Hope you all had a fabulous holiday period and I wish everyone the best in the new year!

More Tidbits on Memory…and a Clip You Can Watch WITH Your Kids

Finger w-1.string 
 So many fantastic thoughts and comments lately. What a great readership! Some really interesting questions asked/points raised about memory. They jogged my own noggin' (noticeably on the decline in recent years) of a few related studies. Here are the nutshell versions:

1. One of the ways researchers get memory in people of all ages is to compare how easy it is to learn something for the first time, compared to when we have to learn it again. For example, in lots of traditional memory studies with adults, the researchers gave their participants lists of words or word pairs (sock-orange) and looked at how long it took to learn them. Then after some substantial delay, when the participants no longer consciously remembered the list, they brought them back and looked at how long it took them to learn the same list to perfect recall again. The difference in the time it took at time 1 and time 2 is termed "savings" which basically shows that you unconsciously retained or REMEMBERED some of the list. For more on this idea and the guy behind it try here

Of course, we're not going to give a baby a list of words to learn, but just think of the task in terms of something that babies CAN do. For example, in one study infants of just a few months were put in a crib and their leg was connected to a string (such as by a a loop around their ankle). The point was to see how long it took the baby to figure out that if they kicked that leg vigorously, something fun would happen (e.g. a clown doll would appear, or they'd hear a funny sound, the lights would flash etc.). Then after a delay, they brought the babies back and put them in the same crib, same set-up etc. If they got the "leg kick = funny event" link more quickly, the researchers would conclude that the babies REMEMBERED what they needed to do. Oh there's always a way to get inside that amazing baby head…

2.  The stuff you have to remember to do in future – take your medicine at 2pm, TAKE A HOLIDAY GIFT IN FOR YOUR CHILD'S TEACHER BEFORE THE LAST DAY OF SCHOOL (I'm just sayin'…) – is called prospective memory (as opposed to retrospective memory, for things in the past). It's one of the first things to go when you get older. That's your head's up. 

3.  Yes, there is such a thing as photographic memory – when you can picture in your mind the actual material you want to remember, in the place where you first learned it. That's as in, you are writing an exam and you can picture in your head the page in the text book where you read it AND YOU CAN SCAN THAT PAGE TO FIND WHAT YOU ARE AFTER. It's not exactly common. Usually fades by later childhood (11 or so). Any takers?  Did any of you do this?  I definitely relied on this in school, even later on, but it got way, way harder as the years went by. I'm not sure how good a measure of photographic memory this is…but if you have a few minutes on your hands (ha ha ha…) or insomnia, Try this

4.  Another favourite line of research (honestly, can I really call it a fave when there are so many?) specifically targets childhood amnesia. Here's a link to the primary researcher's homepage if you want to have a browse. I cannot help but highlight one of her coolest recent findings. Ya know how excited I get about these things…

The researchers visited young children (about 2-3 years of age) in their homes and taught them a novel event. A machine would actually "shrink" a toy you put inside it. Read: Child puts a big toy in the front opening of the machine, then closes the door. Some flashing lights and machine like sounds go off, then they open door and find a miniature version of the toy inside. Yes, of course, it's been replaced with the mini one by way of the back door and another researcher or something, but boy do they go for it!  It's amazing!!!. This all happens at an age when language is fairly limited but then develops amazingly quickly. They know because they actually measure the children's language skills. 

Then after 6 months or 1 year, they go back to visit the same children and basically probe to see if they remember what happened on that first visit, now "ages" ago as far as they are concerned. The probing includes asking them to talk about it (verbal measure), asking them to pick out pictures of e.g. some of the toys they shrunk (visual recognition) and asking them if they remember how to work the machine (behavioural re-enactment). And oh yes, they measure their language skills again. Get this: Even though children remember what happened (as shown by their performance on the visual recognition and behavioural measures – both non-verbal), their memories are limited to the vocabulary they had AT THE TIME the shrinking machine thing took place. That is, even though they now had WAY better vocabularies, they described the event only in terms of the language they had AT THE TIME THEY EXPERIENCED IT!  This suggests of course that our so-called infantile amnesia is linked to our limited capacity to code or store our experiences in words when our vocabularies are so very limited. Note that as the children had good non-verbal memory of the event, they clearly registered it. It's just that they were limited in their ability to access those memories verbally. So perhaps this helps to explain why we later can no longer access those early memories and integrate them into our autobiographical memories when we are older and rely more on storing and accessing memories verbally. Hmmm…

6. Finally, to help keep your internet-using guilt at bay and to end the week on a lighter note, here's a fun clip on memory that you can actually watch WITH your kids! 

Now just remember to watch it. Good weekend.

—Tracy

“When I was younger I could remember anything, whether it happened or not” — M.Twain

After the last post and your comments, I'm completely into thinking about memory processes and talking more with you about them. Have you guys seen this? I saw this video a while back but it came back to me as I was thinking more about memory and how odd and awesome it is. If you haven't seen it, prepare to be blown away.

And here's an episode of Radiolab on Memory and Forgetting. It is so, so good. You guys know how much I love Radiolab. This episode does such a nice job of explaining how memory in the brain works — they have a knack for providing just the right metaphors. They also elaborate on LeDoux's work that I referenced in the last post on emotional memories. Many of the comments on the last post made some allusion to how amazing it was that we (or our children) DON'T remember things that seem so… memorable. In this Radiolab episode, you'll here more about how common it is to "lose" memories, how biased the memories we DO retain really are, and how easily we can create "false" memories. Fascinating stuff…

– Isabela