When
my son, Oliver, was a baby and I talked about gentle discipline I would very
often come by people who smiled and nodded then told me I would change my tune
when my son became a toddler, insistent that all of my philosophies were great
in theory but stood no chance of actually creating a productive and harmonious
home. I very rarely argued with these nay-sayers. The reality was that I DIDN'T
really know what parenting my toddler was going to be like, and I certainly
didn't have my own experience to draw from to refute questions about the
effectiveness of gentle discipline.
But I know now. I know that parenting my high-energy adventurous
extroverted aggressively affectionate strong willed toddler is every bit as
challenging as people had warned. I also know that my philosophies and ideas
about gentle parenting are even more important to me now then they were two
years ago.
Yesterday Oliver had his first big toddler fit. I thought he'd had his
first fit months ago but yesterday's tantrum was the tantrum to end all
previous tantrums. There was screaming, there was hitting and kicking, there
was back arching and body flailing. There was a city bus full of passengers to
witness it. There was the voice in my head that was full of frustration and
even rage because didn't he understand that not running around a moving bus was
a safety issue and if he hit me one more time I was going to loose my cool!? It
was hot, we were tired, we were hungry, and confined to a small space.
It. was. awful!
As Oliver began his fit I braced myself for a battle of wills. There was
no way I was going to give Oliver what he wanted and he would just have to
accept that his only option was to stay seated in my lap. I would have to
physically hold him there and just ride it out.
From the irritated crowd came the usual side long glances, understanding
smiles, and of coarse the obligatory chorus of 'control your kid already'.
The bus driver even asked (well intentioned) if I wanted to be let off to calm
him down (Um, NO! I just want to get home as fast as possible thank you!). One
woman was looking at me with so much pity that I almost burst into tears.
"Oliver, I know you're getting restless but it is dangerous to run
around on the bus" I repeated over and over while I restrained him on my
lap taking each kick to the shin and smack to my face with as much patience as
I could possibly muster. 'Stop hitting me Oliver, I know you're frustrated but
we do not hit!' (Sounds calm on paper but my tone was getting angrier by the
minute).
From far in the back of the bus I heard someone say "If that were my
kid...' followed by a threatening gesture. And that's when I knew, I really
KNEW that as angry and frustrated and embarrassed as I was in that moment
continuing the power struggle was not working, it wasn't making me feel better or helping me cope with my emotions,
it certainly wasn't helping Oliver cope with his emotions, and at the back of my mind I
knew that I was only serving to enforce for the person at the back of the bus
the idea that children needed to be forced or coerced into submission and
compliance.
I took a deep breath and blew it out slowly to calm myself trying to
decide what to do. I still wasn't about to let Oliver run freely down the aisle
of a moving bus, but I knew that the grip I had on his wiggling form was
tighter then it should be, my nails were biting into the palms of my hands as they balled into fists, I was clenching my teeth together in a desperate attempt not
to start yelling and cursing at my toddler. Still flustered and upset I took
another breath, and another.
All of the sudden Oliver was looking at me, tears streaming down his face.
I took another breath, more exaggerated this time. Oliver took a gulp of air
and blew it out, he stopped screaming. He stopped hitting. He stopped kicking
and arching his back. We took another deep breath together and I smiled at him.
"Does that feel better? Let's take another breath" Oliver Smiled
back as we exhaled again and I loosened my arms around him. "Let's take
another one." We continued this way for a few more blocks until Oliver
started to giggle as he blew the hair around my face.
"Go home Mommy?" Oliver asked in a soft voice hoarse from
screaming.
"We are almost there sweet pea" I told him, and then I really
did cry as he lay his head down on my shoulder until we got to our stop.
So we got through the worst temper tantrum Oliver has had so far, in
public, under 20 or so watchful judging eyes. While I am not entirely proud of
the way I initially reacted, I was able to turn it around by remembering that
my relationship with my son is more important to me then 'winning' and that we
can both benefit from working through these situations together.
There is no room for threats, intimidation, or punitive action in the
relationship I want with my son, and they are certainly not necessary. I don't
need to 'control my kid' or force him into compliance. Instead I feel like
Oliver learned a valuable coping skill, one that I have reminded him of since
during frustrating moments.
If the other passengers on that bus really were watching as closely as
I felt they were and passing judgment then I am glad to say that I don't mind
being judged on that incident one bit. In my mind, even though I was close to
loosing my cool, it was a successful parenting moment, one that I can be proud
of.
6 comments:
Way to be! The thing is, no one outside of our relationship with our child can understand why we do the things we do. The person at the back of the bus saying if it was their kid? That doesn't help you because they don't know your child. Children aren't meant to be controlled, they're meant to be loved.
We also do the breathing thing :) For some tantrums it takes longer to take effect, but it always calms both of us down, which is really what it is all about. We all lose our cool, we all have those moments where we can feel our fingernails digging into our skin, but it is the way that we handle it once we realize what we are doing that counts :)
You brought me to tears with your triumph! Always a struggle to use gentle effect ways, but so important. Even harder when you have eyes upon you and you aren't in the comfort of you own home.
I have recently been staying with friends and although our parenting practices are somewhat similar my friend is more into time outs and withholding toys or treats to manage behaviour than me. After my boys aged 2 and 4 had some emotional days I was tired and felt like I was failing, me and them. I was talking to my friend about my belief in gentle disciple (yes I was justifying myself) and just them my four year old came to ask us a question, my friend gave him her attention but he said 'I want to talk to my Mum'. She was proud that he knew she would likely say no to what he wanted, which turned out to be a great idea for game that all our children could play together. It was at that moment I realised I was doing a good job. I want my children to be comfortable asking me for help and sharing their ideas, thoughts and feelings with me. Your moment brought a big smile to my face and reminded me of my small success too.
I agree - I too had tears! And when I'm on the bus I too get judged - for not being harsh enough or punitive enough ("Uh, Ms. You're son dropped his cracker, picked it up and is now eating it." Me: "Yes, that's what two year olds do. And isn't it nice? he dropped something and picked it up instead of leaving a mess." "Uh. He's going to get very sick. You should make him stop." Me: "Seriously? Make a child stop eating? He's traveled the third world and far dirtier places and didn't get sick. He's breastfed. He's fine." Them: rolled eyes. under breath, "you'll see." I can say he's never gotten sick from doing the things that two year olds do.) Believe me, bus passengers are not parentings' finest.
We too, as non punishing rewarding compassionate respectful parents have some hard moments in the toddler phase (ie when my son threw his backpack at his newborn sister in the car) and you are so right: breathing helps. (A glass of wine when it's over doesn't hurt either.)
I just keep rereading this! You are an inspiration!
Thank you for sharing this moment! I love that you chose your love for your child over the voices of other people.
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