One Day

For more than 12 months, Zachary threw stuff when he was tired, or angry, or couldn't find the words to communicate how he felt or what he wanted.  Toys, food, china and silverware; it all flew across the house.  And then one day, it stopped.  Limits helped.  Consistency helped.  But what was the magic bullet?  Time.

I practiced elimination communication with Zachary.  By the time he was one, he was diaper-free all day.  By two, he was diaper-free at night.  Then, when he was 3 1/2, his sister was born  and he had an insensitive teacher, and it all went into the crapper. (Figuratively, of course, because actually NOTHING was making it into the crapper.)  He had the mother of all toileting regressions.  For almost a year we struggled, first with wetting and then with soiling.  And then one day, it stopped.  Limits helped. Consistency helped.  But what was the magic bullet?  Time.

For a long time, Zachary has been singularly uninterested in being helpful around the house.  Pick up his toys?  Nope.  Clear the table?  Never.  Put away his laundry?  Unthinkable.  And then one day, it all changed.  "Mommy, how can I help?"  and "Mommy, am I being helpful?" are now the most uttered phrases in our home.  Limits helped.  Consistency helped.  But what was the magic bullet?  Time.

So, whatever you're going through with your child right now, put it into perspective.  Limits help.  Consistency helps.  But what's the magic bullet?  Time.

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3 comments

soleron
 

... sorry to be thick ... ... can you elaborate? Time? What do you mean. "Keep trying and don't get frustrated, cuz it will come"?
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withkidsandcoffee
 

So true!
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The Full Montessori
 

Yup. Time, as in "eventually, they'll grow out of it". :)
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