[blparent] behavior problems with our 4 year old

Judy Jones sonshines59 at gmail.com
Sun Mar 27 22:17:16 UTC 2016


I had forgotten about Kevin's books, they are fantastic.

Judy


-----Original Message----- 
From: Jessica Bartenbach via BlParent
Sent: Sunday, March 27, 2016 3:09 PM
To: blparent at nfbnet.org
Cc: Jessica Bartenbach
Subject: Re: [blparent] behavior problems with our 4 year old

Hi Chris,
I have not gone through behavior problems as severe as what you are 
describing, but I have read some very helpful books by Dr. Kevin Leman. One 
is called “Making Children Mind Without Losing Yours” and the other is 
“Parenthood Without Hassles (Well, Almost).” He was a guest speaker on Focus 
on the Family, so he is a Christian-based counselor.

My 3-year-old went through a picky eating phase several months ago. We tried 
everything to get him to eat. If he was not given a choice of what to eat 
for a meal, he would cry and throw a tantrum. Putting him in time out was 
not effective, nor was keeping him at the table until he ate his food. Dr. 
Leman made some suggestions in his book which I decided to implement, and 
after a few days we saw an improvement.

What I did is I gave a warning time before dinner so he could have a 
transition. Then I called him to the table and put food in front of him. If 
he started to cry, I calmly picked him up and carried him to his room. I 
told him he could come out when he was ready to eat. The point Dr. Leman 
made was that he has a right to his feelings, but he does not have a right 
to make the rest of the family suffer while he works those feelings out. By 
doing this, I let him know that he was still loved and respected, but that I 
found his behavior unacceptable and would not tolerate it at the table. If 
he came out of his room and was still crying or refusing to eat, I carried 
him back to his room and repeated that he could come out when he was ready 
to eat. Usually I had to only do this a couple of times before he got lonely 
and decided it was more fun to be with the family.

He decided once or twice that he did not want to eat what was served, and I 
allowed him to make this decision, but I let him know there would be no 
snacks until he finished his dinner. This meant one time he had his dinner 
for breakfast the next day. If he asked for food, I would offer him his 
dinner. In this way I did not feel like I was depriving him of food. Rather 
he was depriving himself of food because he was choosing not to eat.

I’m happy to say we don’t have an eating problem with him anymore. Maybe 
once every couple of months I will have to pick him up and take him to his 
room to calm down, but he comes out on his own within a minute or two and 
decides to eat at that time.

I hope this helps.

Jessica
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