Are your children’s vaccines up to date?

Set a reminder

Please or to access all these features

Parenting

For free parenting resources please check out the Early Years Alliance's Family Corner.

Does my 2 year old have too much power?

52 replies

Bluffysummers · 22/03/2022 20:13

Talking too my mother today and she said that I’m letting my 2 year old have too much power/ too much of a say in things. I’ll admit she’s in that age where she’s very opinionated and very stubborn and will have complete meltdowns and whilst she does calm down it takes a while and it’s not particularly conducive to getting things done.

There are a few categories this falls into:

Clothes: we let her chose what she wants to wear and most of the time what we buy from the clothes shops. So by choice, they are all clean, fit and are weather appropriate. Most of the time she picks a set, we tend to buy mainly multi packs or easily swappable pieces, but then if we want to go out she doesn’t always pick a coat and hat that matches but I’ve just gone by the principle in her little world she doesn’t have a lot of control and this is just her showing her personality and style, even if she doesn’t look like a chic Insta baby. We let her chose her clothes ie we’re going to buy shorts and t shirts and there are 3 choices in the shop and she gets to pick 1. She tends to like leggings/ shorts and t shirts for summer, she doesn’t really like dresses and will usually have a melt down if you try and put her in one, except she picked one out yesterday. Sometimes she likes to choose our clothes too, she likes to make us all matching. So my mum said it’s pandering to her and she’ll think she’s more important than she actually is, and that she should get used to wearing dresses because ‘I say so’. I’m just doubting myself a bit because, as long as it’s weather appropriate , clean and fits then what’s the big deal? She loves bright colours, unicorn prints, dinosaur and animal prints anything with those on she loves, which It’s not my personal taste but does it really matter? Felt like it’s picking my battles because if you put her in something she doesn’t like she has a tantrum and gets unchanged and it drags things on if you’re getting out of the house.
Her baby brother - she loves picking out his clothes, we did that as a way of combatting jealousy and making her feel involved. She insists he sits next to her in his newborn highchair thingy. She likes to pick out the activities they too.
Food- we tend to give 2 choices for snacks and she gets to pick one (ie. would you like apple and yoghurt or cheese and crackers?) we also let her eat what she pleases at meals, keeping the pressure off. Mum thinks she should clear her plate, not doubting myself as much about this one. All her meals are home cooked unless we’re eating out (obviously) and she gets offered a wide range of food.
Out and about- she choses the directions we walk in, which park to go to etc
Days out - again choice of 2 things (go to the farm or to the library?)

Is this too much power for a 2.5 year old. Am I too lax? I guess the clothes and her brother and out and about are the ones that have made me second guess myself.

We obviously have non negotiables like brushing teeth, baths (dh and i take turns with her and the baby in the bath anyway), no juice no sweets (gummy or candy style sweets, chocolate is ok l) kind hands and appropriate bedtimes but the rest seems like not really too much or a big deal.

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
HotPenguin · 22/03/2022 22:39

I think it's fine, at this age it helps to give them some control over things that don't matter too much.

I dont think you need to worry about this causing problems in the future, she'll probably lose interest in her brothers clothes soon and in a few weeks will have forgotten she ever chose them.

MaChienEstUnDick · 23/03/2022 09:02

@Bluffysummers

I do agree *@MaChienEstUnDick* my mum is quite a controlling woman, i grew up from her with children should be seen and not heard, I wasn’t really allowed opinions. It would always be my dad that would say ‘let her talk’ or ‘I want to hear your opinion’. Don’t want her to feel like I did
Right so that tells us your mum is coming at this from a completely different point of view to yours and however you try to manage this, she is not going to agree with you because you and she want to do things differently.

That's fine. You don't have to do what she tells you. You don't even have to do what MN tells you - you are free to make your own parenting mistakes!

Your later post about sometimes she chooses, sometimes you choose etc for days out sounds perfect actually. My parenting thing was that I always worked from a basis that everyone's needs in the house were equally important (obvs apart from a baby's needs to be fed, changed etc, I mean as they grow). So my need to have a day in the house at the weekend after a horrendous day at work was equally as important as DS's desire to go to the zoo. My desire to go out and eat pizza after the same day is just as important as DH's desire to eat the pizza in front of the telly. That's how I taught mine to negotiate, from a basis that everyone was equal.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread