Parenting

Sunday, December 6, 2009

True Mom Confessions and Answers with Brett Berk: My kid pinches me...and I pinch him back!

True Mom Confession:

My almost 2 yr old son has recently started this pinching thing. He pinches me, my mother, sister everybody but my husband! I politely pinch him back and tell him no thats hurts. He cries sometimes but i don't feel bad its the only way he will learn to STOP!




Uncle Brett:

I think you have your response about half-right. Telling your child that pinching hurts is a good idea, as it will clarify for him the effects of his action. But eye-for-an-eye (pinch-for-a-pinch?) justice doesn't really make sense to a kid that age. In fact, it might actually reinforce the negative behavior. Kids learn what is and isn't appropriate more by our examples than anything else.

So when you pinch back (however "politely"), it might stop him momentarily--and give you the satisfaction of seeing him in pain and tears--but the underlying message is that this is an acceptable way of dealing with the situation. In addition, when you tell a young kid to stop doing something without providing them with some alternate routes, you strand them in a difficult-to-negotiate abstract thought pattern, where what they're doing (and often enjoying) has been ruled off-limits, but hasn't been replaced with some other acceptable concrete option.

Since kids are unable to process abstract thought, this fritzes out their fragile little brains. Also, kids your son's age often revert to physical solutions (pinching, biting, lying on the floor pounding their fists on the ground) when their bodies are able to respond more quickly than their minds--when they're literally at a loss for words. Perhaps your son is pinching in exactly these kinds of situations: when he wants your attention, when he's frustrated, when he needs something that's not available to him. Instead of stooping to his level--and in addition to telling him that pinching hurts and isn't appropriate--provide him with some other viable options. Let him know that he can ask for your help when he feels stuck, give him some words to use to do so, get him a pillow to punch or some paper he can rip to release his pent up energy, or find another useful outlet for his pinching: making pottery, plucking weeds out of the lawn, picking tiny crumbs off of the dining room floor. Your son is probably not evil; pinching him back definitely is.


Brett Berk is the author of The Gay Uncle's Guide to Parenting.

True Mom Confessions is the first anonynous, online confessional for moms.
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Comments 31-39 of 39
  • Myscza's Avatar
    Posted by Myscza Thu Oct 2, 2008 10:58am PDT

    Dear God. This guy gets on my nerves. My daughter bit me one time when she was 2, so I bit her back. She's 19 now and hasn't bitten anyone since. Don't break the skin but startle them enough, teach them it hurts. 2 year olds don't understand rational talking or thinking but they will understand biting and pinching hurts.

    I'm glad you can read parenting books Uncle Brett, but get over it. Until you've been bitten or pinched by a screaming 2 year old and had a bruise or bite marks left by it, quit telling us how to raise children.

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  • snow's Avatar
    Posted by snow Thu Oct 2, 2008 4:16pm PDT

    Has anyone heard of redirection? This coming from the mother of 4 children. One of whom is severely Autistic. They are all well behaved and have learned so not by being pinched back or bitten back, but by simple adult responses to their baby and childish responses to the world that they are learning. You need to redirect your child to something else that will occupy him and yes help him lessen his frustration (not ripping up paper or you will loose all your magazines and your book collection!). Try taking him to color; obviously after telling him no in a stearn voice. Or read him a book to calm him down. Let him know it hurts you without hurting you back or all he's going to learn is that when you are mad or frustrated is that you should hurt someone or something.

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  • Dana W's Avatar
    Posted by Dana W Thu Oct 2, 2008 8:02pm PDT

    i agree with jcce05 Sometimes they need a spanking!! Especially in situations like crossing the street. Kids these days dont listen for sh.. and it is so frusterating when you say the same thing over and over and they are not listening. As far as my 2 yr. old goes he is a biter however his cousin but him...pretty hard i might add but it didnt stop him!! Some kids are tougher to get the point across than others

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  • www.organicpurebeauties.com's Avatar
    Posted by www.organicpurebeauties.com Thu Oct 2, 2008 8:49pm PDT

    Punching a 2-year-old child is brutality; do you have any remorse for your child feelings? You should not react in an irrational way when your child is acting irrational. To say the least the child is only 2 years old….this is a growing and learning part of the child growing up. It’s called a stage and learning faze, you have to remember that your child is at the age where he/she is observing what is going on around him/her did you care to think maybe your child saw mommy & daddy fighting? Or some TV episode of hitting behavior, I am deeply sadden to here that a mother would hit a two year old child. By, all means the best way to handle a 2 year old from hitting is to hold the child hands and look the 2 year old in the face and say, “you hurt mommy,” and it is not nice to hit. Tell the child hitting hurts then pretend to cry, it may or not work but hitting is apart of a child learning experience and maybe you as a mom should think about where the child is getting the hitting behavior. Daycare …May have had other children hitting on other children. I hope this helped with some of you parents out there with understand that using physical force on a minor is unacceptable behavior.

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  • TerraGirl's Avatar
    Posted by TerraGirl Thu Oct 2, 2008 9:05pm PDT

    I had an angel of a daughter until the age of 2 years, when she started biting. She would run between my legs when I was sitting, acted like she was "giving loves" and would proceed to bite HARD in the most tender of areas on the inner thighs. I naturally yelped at first, but what worked for me was Biting back. Never hard, but hard enough that she didn't like it. I don't always agree with "eye-for-an-eye" but in this situation I did. It worked on my girl, but doesn't work for everyone. I also had to tell her "No No! That hurts Mommy! It makes me sad!". She understood those small sentences at 2 yrs old. I believe raising a child is all about trial and error. If this isn't working, try a new method.

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  • TerraGirl's Avatar
    Posted by TerraGirl Thu Oct 2, 2008 9:09pm PDT

    On tearing up the electric bill...keep everything up as high as possible. (I know kids still get into stuff, I have a 6 and 4 year old) I did something to my son that may seem cruel, but it worked. He tore a photo album with cherished pictures in it. In response I said that was very wrong and that it made mommy sad and if he's not sorry, I'll tear up his picture he made me. He laughed in my face, so I tore it up. To this day, he DOES NOT touch my belongings without asking first. Harsh lesson, but sometimes that's the kind of discipline a child needs; no matter the age

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  • Katja C's Avatar
    Posted by Katja C Thu Oct 30, 2008 10:08pm PDT

    My 2 year old went (still has some relapses) through a hitting stage--I decided to try hitting back. I wasn't even that gentle about it--I actually slapped him pretty hard.

    And he burst out laughing, squealed, and slapped me again. He thought it was a game.

    Maybe if he'd cried, I would have found it effective--I don't judge anyone--all kids are different, and we have to do whatever works, as long as it isn't abusive. We have to be a good example, and have to teach. My child, personally, has been spanked before--it doesn't bother him. However, he's very social, so time-outs and being ignored REALLY bother him. That's what works.

    However, that stupid slap had him hitting me for a week, trying to get the game back going. Never gonna try that again!

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  • KittenKaboodle's Avatar
    Posted by KittenKaboodle Thu Nov 6, 2008 7:35pm PST

    My 4 yo niece bit me on the arm. I told her if she did it again I would throw her into a snow drift. The next day she bit me again, this time on the hand. I picked her up, walked outside and dropped her into the big snow drift beside the house. When she came running into the house snowy, wet and crying she ran right to grandma and said that I was mean. My mom turned to her and let her know that biting and hitting were also mean and then put her into time out. She never bit or hit anybody ever again. She's 11 now & still remembers it. Her dad now just has to say "snow drift" when she is acting up and she changes her attitude right quick.

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  • marlene's Avatar
    Posted by marlene Sun Nov 9, 2008 2:36pm PST

    argghh. i hate it when people i dont care about tell me how to raise my child... but hey.. if the kid doesnt listen .. i say pinch him.!!!! pinchhim and take his cookies hahahahah most parents think that just by telling them - kids will listen- ppssshhhh YOURE a wuss for letting your kid pinch you or talk back.. ect.ect... im the boss and i demand respect. some parents let their kids run their lives...

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