Infants and children do annoying things, so plan to spend time and energy correcting these behaviors in your child or at least
modifying them to be less annoying. In handling any undesirable behavior in a
child, consider these general strategies:
- Track the trigger. Get inside your child's mind and figure out why
she is doing what she is doing. What sets her up for mischief? Is there a
pattern to the misconduct? Is she tired, bored, hungry, overloaded, or in the
wrong place at the wrong age and time (for example, a toddler in a department
store at suppertime)? By discovering what's behind the behavior you'll be better
able to avoid it.
- Reinforce the positive. Young children don't know a behavior is
"good" or "bad" until you tell them. When they get a positive response, they
are motivated to continue the behavior. When they repeatedly get a negative
response, they drop it (unless the negative response is seen by them as
positive, i.e., someone paid attention). This is why it's important to correct
undesirable behaviors early, as soon as the child is old enough to behave
appropriately. Otherwise, these behaviors become part of a child's way of
acting and are much more difficult to change.
- Feed flowers, pick weeds. The conduct of a growing child is full of
undesirable and desirable behaviors -- weeds and flowers. Given good nurturing,
flowers grow so well you hardly notice the weeds. But often these flowers wilt
at certain seasons and the weeds become more noticeable. If you just wait until
that season is over, the weeds subside, and the flowers bloom again -- sometimes
so beautifully that you forget the weeds are even there. Sometimes the weeds
grow more quickly than the flowers, and you have to pull them out before they
take over. So go the behaviors of a growing child. Part of disciplining a
child is to weed out those undesirables that make a child unpleasant to live
with so that the desirables flourish and make the child a joy to be around.