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Where is the three year old in this photo? Outside the frame, bawling because someone took her favorite fill_in_the_blank.
Having a three year old girl, and this SweetPea with her particular temperament, feels so different than having had a three year old boy who is coming up on five in just a few days here (stop the sands of time!!!). His personality presented its own challenges, as does hers.
I wrote about his challenges:
Three steps to taming your tantruming toddler;
Three & a half year old habits & mama bad habits;
how I keep my kids from killing each other;
and more in the archives under “kid.”
In a way, I was prepared for the prefrontal cortex burgeoning and developing at a rapid, can’t-keep-up-with-the-spasm-de-jour pace. In many ways, I was not prepared for how sensitive to me and my moods she would be. Girl thing or her thing? Either way, I’ve learned the hard way about how to lovingly parent a sensitive three year old.
So naturally, I thought I would foist my experience on to you!
1) Hear her out.
When she starts freaking out, I try to take her aside and hear exactly what it is that’s bothering her, being sure to repeat it to her so she knows I get it//got it//good. Many times, this simple act of acknowledgment is a calming force. It may take 3-4 minutes to get it all out of her and restate it, but that could mean the difference between a relatively peaceful morning or a tornado. It’s worth it.
I think we all want to be heard and understood, toddlers notwithstanding.
2) Observe her triggers.
It’s just about everything. Her brothers looking or touching or thinking about something she wanted, could want, had wanted, or specifically did not want but did not want them to have.
Specifically, she seems most ignited by sharing, feeling helpless, and hunger // teeth hurting (may be a red herring for hunger or fatigue). I intercept when I can, which is maybe a little more than half the time. I just know better than to bring her with me to the bank’s waiting area at 5pm. Ahem. Maybe I tried this the other day. Waiting in small spaces, not her forte.
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3) Say yes to (almost) everything even when it’s followed up by a not-right-now.
Life has enough no’s for a three year old middle child. She hears that word frequently. I try to respond with a “yes” as much as feasibly allowable.
Will you play with my doll house and bring up all my dollies? Yes. I’d love to. I can’t do it right now because I’m nursing and changing a poopy diaper and making dinner but I certainly will when I am done. Do you want to start without me and I’ll catch up?
I want you to hold me. I would love to hold you. I’m going to finish clearing the dishes and wiping the blueberries off every reachable surface in the dynamic radius of your high-chaired brother. And then I’ll head right to you. Why don’t you sit on the cosy couch and snuggle in a blanket while I’m finishing up?
Sometimes {oftentimes} I don’t actually get to her to do the requested activity, but she knows I’d like to and often will change her own course of direction before I could get there.
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4) Pick so few battles, and win them.
Her sense of urgency isn’t shared by me or the rest of the household always. When she insists I do something RIGHT NOW and it’s not safe or the best thing, I’ll repeat that I can’t do it, but I can do an appropriate substitute. Or I can’t do it and I’m sorry but that’s life.
I want you to take off my shoes in the parking lot and let me run to the door of swimming lessons. I’m sorry but you will burn your feet. WAAAAAAAAAA. I’m happy to take them off right before we get in the pool because that’s when we do it. But I can give you my keys to hold if you would be in charge of them for me? WAAAAAA. I can’t give my keys to someone who is crying. Sniffle. I’ll hold them!! Great.
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5) Be open to negotiation.
I’ve got three small kids. I don’t have a ton of energy to be constantly catering to everyone’s needs, but I do offer negotiation on about 50% of the decisions in our lives. She can carry the box of buttons, but only if she dumps them on my bed and not the floor. She can eat dozens of grape with her lunch, but only if she finishes a big bite of her almond butter sandwich first. She feels like she won. I feel like I didn’t completely lose. Win-win?
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6) Lots of snuggles.
She quakes when I lose my temper and her face crumples. She’s very resilient though and a quick tickle snuggle after I apologize can mend her little heart fairly quickly. She’s an on-the-go girl so I try to sneak snuggles in anytime she’s willing.
Connecting and reconnecting through physical touch, which is one of her love languages, is far more important than the dishes, my iPhone, or ensuring no one is eating dirt. If possible, I try to response with a resounding YES when the opportunities arise to s n u g g l e!
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The kids enjoyed a visit from their cousins so much, they couldn’t resist pouring sand in his hair. So kind of them!!