Hi there
DH and I have a nearly 19-month-old son. He goes to nursery three days a week which is when I work (DH works full-time, mix of at home and in the office). When I finished mat leave, I didn't want to go back full-time because I felt that these years will go so quickly and before I know it, he'll be at school, so I didn't want to miss out. So I spend the Mondays and Fridays with DS.
We don't have any help nearby - DH's parents live about 30 mins away but are quite elderly and just don't seem to want to help (we have tried to have conversations on this but to no avail). My parents live 2 hours away, and they come every couple of weeks for a day, which is great but obviously we can't drop off DS with them for an afternoon or an hour if we just need a break. They're not exactly young and I'm very grateful that they do such a lot of driving to come and see us.
Now don't get me wrong. We have a lovely house, we're lucky that our jobs are stable, we're both pretty healthy. So I feel bad 'complaining'. But DS's behaviour is driving us both up the wall, so much so that we feel we're losing our minds.
I think we're worried that we're creating a brat. We love DS so much and when he's good, my goodness those times are golden. We also know that all kids have times where they struggle - emotions are big, DS only has a few words so can't really communicate. I think his molars are coming through, too. I can see that for him, life is tough and the world is an exciting but also confusing place. So I get that he will have tantrums and most of the time, I talk to him calmly until the big storm has passed then ask if he wants a hug, and that usually helps him out.
Lately, I've noticed a step up in the difficult behaviour (difficult as in we find it difficult!) So he has started biting at nursery and he's trying to bite us sometimes too if he doesn't get his own way. Yes, he's teething but it's still an unacceptable response to the frustration he feels. He is in a constant state of being on the edge and about to throw a tantrum at any time, over genuinely nothing - I don't mean the 'nothing' to us as adults (like when you put the tea set on the wrong rug and it's just the worst thing they've ever experienced) I mean genuinely zero. For example, he's playing with his toys quite happily then suddenly he'll throw it across the room and have a huge wig out where he starts banging his head against things, screaming at the top of his voice, etc. I've watched to see what the triggers may be and I'm clueless. I know there will be stuff going on in his little brain though. I'm concerned he's going to hurt himself at some point but also don't want to rush in with "oh what's wrong??" and cuddles in case that creates learned behaviour that that's how he gets attention.
DH really feels the need for discipline whereas I'm stuck in feeling like I don't want to be cruel... but I also want to raise a human being who is a positive contribution to society, not someone who is a brat or whatever. I think DH is right that we need to think how we help DS cope with these emotions he's feeling, such as frustration, but in a more positive way. It's not about him being a happy sunny little boy all the time - he's not a robot - but there are healthier ways to deal with difficult things, like when you don't get your own way, and we want to help him learn them. Ultimately, these are skills he needs for life.
Any tips or advice you have from your own experience or ideas you have would be really really helpful and we'd really appreciate them. For example DH wondered about DS going to nursery 4 or 5 days a week instead... but I feel like I've failed then with my 2 days a week with him, and worry that I'll regret later in life that I didn't take that special time with him. We feel a bit stuck with parenting sometimes - there are millions of books out there, but each child and family is different, and I'm not sure it's an exact 'science' anyway. I'd go with my instincts but I'm honestly so tired and have such brain fog that I don't even know who I am anymore and what I think/feel about things... so I'm reaching out to the community to help! Thanks so much in advance.
I don't know if it's relevant but nursery have mentioned to us that he has incredible energy, even for a kid his age (I guess they'd know as they see a fair few) and he seems incredibly strong-willed too. These things will be great for him in later life, it's just a massive challenge for us as parents at the mo!