Are your children’s vaccines up to date?

Set a reminder

Please or to access all these features

Behaviour/development

Talk to others about child development and behaviour stages here. You can find more information on our development calendar.

Sorry needs a title: Advise on my 4 yr old's behaviour

5 replies

Xenomaniac · 16/12/2008 15:21

Apologies in advance for a long ramble but I am feeling quite stressed today.

I'm finding my little boy (4 next month) really hard work at the moment and just wondering if anyone has any advice or words of wisdom?

The problem seems to be mainly when he is around other children. He is pretty much fine at home. He can be very bossy and prone to kicking off if he doesn't get his own way, but we can usually nip it in the bud fairly quickly. At nursery they say he is 'an enthusiast' and very bright, but that he is a 'whirlwind' and quite unaware of his physical presence, so always tearing around (no matter how many times he is told not to run indoors etc) and often bumping into other children. At this stage, he does have 'friends' but they seem to be quiet children that he is able to boss around. He is terribly bossy at nursery / with other children and often aggressive - not out-and-out hitting etc, but pushing, snatching, refusing to wait his turn or listen to other children. He also doesn't listen to what the teachers say, really, and although they are understanding and kind, I can see that it is quite difficult for them. this might not sound that bad, but because he is very big and incredibly bright and verbal for his age, it seems much worse and I often feel ostracised by other parents, who often look at him with distaste and at me with pity

I just worry terribly about what will happen when he starts reception next year. Will he be able to settle down, make friends, concentrate, fit in etc?

I also find it personally very hard that we cant really go on playdates, meet friends with kids, take him anywhere with other children because he just goes into this completely mental, over excitable state and cannot play nicely with them. He is just manic and quite rough from the word go, and can get very silly and OTT and end up tantrumming for no real reason. It means I am always frazzled and not many people invite us out anymore .

Is this all normal? Is it my fault? . I think me and Dh are good parents - we're both hands on, gentle, patient and loving but firm when necessary. We don't let bad behaviour go - we take away privileges but also use lots of positive praise etc. It just seems like nothing works and DS never ;earns any lesson from us or at nursery - it's like he just doesn't take on board an ything we can say.

There is a side to him that is lovely - sensitive, funny, amazingly intelligent and very perceptive - but it seems buried under this really frenetic, aggressive behaviour so ,much of the time, and it is really starting to take it's toll on all of us...

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
VersdeSociete · 16/12/2008 15:30

This may not be the issue here but I found bothe DSes had a very difficult patch at 4 / rising 4. I think there is a sort of testosterone surge at that age. My rather fuzzy recollection is that things gradually got better over a period of months but that they were very difficult and aggressive at times (to the extent that DS1 actually finished off a somewhat less than robust nanny).

VersdeSociete · 16/12/2008 15:31

Loads of sympathy by the way. It doesn't sound like anything you are doing or failing to do. My sons are now both past reception age and largely fine - no school problems, able to have playdates etc...

swanriver · 16/12/2008 19:59

Reception is meant to be play based, and they will make allowance for different characters or they should. Anyway it's a year away so don't worry about it NOW.
My little boy wasn't at all good at playdates at that age, except when I wasn't actually present - then he was fine but it had to be with just one other child not several. Could you confine meetings with parents in the park or places where his behaviour is a positive asset long walks, swimming pools playground, soft play areas?
Mine was fine at home too, and brilliant at concentrating on things that interested him (like train tracks) but went a bit haywire in new situations or lots of people. It was annoying but I knew he was lovely really...

countingto10 · 16/12/2008 20:44

Sounds like my DS4 who will be 4 in January. His nursery are managing him (he went through a phase of hitting) but he is an enthusiastic little boy and quite exhausting. And, of course, this time of year makes them 10x worse.

compo · 16/12/2008 20:46

could you arrange to meet friends in the park? at this age they need fresh air and running around as much as possible (a bit like dogs ), being in the open air and not at anyone's house might help

New posts on this thread. Refresh page