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Parenting

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

Is this level of aggression and impulsivity normal for a two-year-old?

84 replies

Karma1387 · 29/04/2026 18:33

Looking for a bit of advice and reassurance. We have been having increasing difficulty with my 2 year old at home. Lack of concentration, impulsivity (literally launching himself over the side of furniture), increased tantrums over nothing at all, no desire to actual play with anything just destroy, getting physical towards himself when angry (pulling his mouth with his fingers or biting his hands)

The biggest behaviour that seems to be shifting on is his interaction with other children. He was so so lovely to everyone constantly hugging other children (a bit too much to he honest). This is starting to turn and has become more aggressive. We had a few instances at soft play where we had to redirect or remove him but now he has had an incident at nursery where he purposefully walked up to another child and shoved them in the stomach into a fiece of furniture.

We did have another baby in March but besides lack of impulse control (will rock the cot super rough or will lay next to his brother lovely and then suddenly stomp on him). He has actually been lovely with him and asked to see him and hold him and brings him his favorite teddys etc so unsure if the baby is the reason for the behaviour getting worse.

Is all of this normal 2 year old behaviour? We are going to ask GP to do allergy testing as I read food allergies can cause issues with behaviour but I could use reasurrace that all his behaviour is fairly normal for a 2 year old.

Any advice or experience appreciated.

OP posts:
Rafiel · 29/04/2026 21:29

Karma1387 · 29/04/2026 21:23

Baby is attached to the breast 90% of my day so I am used to sitting a lot with him and the tv is the only thing that keeps my toddler quiet enough for the baby to have small naps on me but I know its too much!

I am trying to take him out to run around but ironically if I take him somewhere he can run around (like the forest) he doesnt want to walk 🙄 and baby rarely sleeps in pram so I end up carrying baby and trying to feed whilst pushing a pram and walking.

Only person who ends up shattered is me 🙈

Yeah I get that - been there! But would strongly recommend that you try to experiment with exhaustion as the first line of defence! Back to basics - food, exercise, one-one time.

Karma1387 · 29/04/2026 21:36

Rafiel · 29/04/2026 21:29

Yeah I get that - been there! But would strongly recommend that you try to experiment with exhaustion as the first line of defence! Back to basics - food, exercise, one-one time.

100% exhaustion would be my ideal for him but when he wont actually walk or run around its hard to exhaust him. Soft plays he wont go around on his own amd baby wont go on sling currently.

Any suggestions on how to tire him out greatly appreciated.

Conscious he already has super long 3-4 hour naps at home so a little nervous to knacker him out too much incase the naps become even longer but we could make bedtime later if that happens.

OP posts:
TheSpook · 29/04/2026 21:36

Its just odd I thought he would have more aggression towards the baby if the baby was the problem.

My eldest was just two when DS2 was born and he took his resentment out entirely on me, never the baby.
I understand your wish to give the baby attention but maybe DS1 needs you more? I know breast feeding is time consuming but the baby can't literally be feeding 90% of the day. You might find that the baby just drops off to sleep if you're playing with DS1 instead of nursing.

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Karma1387 · 29/04/2026 21:37

Rafiel · 29/04/2026 21:25

No.

She clearly says 'a film or two three or four days a week'. So sometimes two films per day!!

I do know its too much. Just currently doing what needs to be done to survive with a 7 week old and its the only way to get him to sit still and not destroy or scream so baby can feed and rest.

OP posts:
Karma1387 · 29/04/2026 21:44

TheSpook · 29/04/2026 21:36

Its just odd I thought he would have more aggression towards the baby if the baby was the problem.

My eldest was just two when DS2 was born and he took his resentment out entirely on me, never the baby.
I understand your wish to give the baby attention but maybe DS1 needs you more? I know breast feeding is time consuming but the baby can't literally be feeding 90% of the day. You might find that the baby just drops off to sleep if you're playing with DS1 instead of nursing.

90% of the day isnt an exageration unfortunately. Baby suffers really badly with spitting up/vomiting so is in a constant cycle of feeding and spitting up. He also doesn't sleep unless toddler is quiet. Every noise wakes him up ( as my toddler is a destroyer not a player he doesnt really play with stuff)

Its not so much about wanting to give baby attention. I would kill for some time not holding and feeding a baby. But for example my toddler went to bed at 6 (skipped his nap today at nursery) and baby has been on my boob on and off constantly since and has only just finally gone into a deep enough sleep to let go but if I move away from him he will wake back up and it will start all over again.

I would love to give my toddler more 1-1 time he is my baby boy but at the moment I don't know how. I am hoping baby will get easier soon so I can at least put him in a sling.

OP posts:
creamandblue · 29/04/2026 21:47

Sometimes it is about survival rather than thriving (bad rhyme but you get the gist!) Do you go to toddler groups or stay and plays? They break the day up and there’s other mums who can help!

My ds was two years seven months when dd was born. I thought DDs arrival affected him and it probably did but tbh looking at dd now I think two is just a VERY challenging age. There’s no reasoning with them, they have huge emotions, aren’t independent yet (dd is potty trained but needs help with her underwear and trousers etc; she proudly went to the potty alone before but she’d wee’d THROUGH her pants!) still need a lot of you. Then babies of course are completely dependent on you.

My go to is reading and while I know it won’t fill a whole day it’s great for connecting with them. It doesn’t have to be perfect; I often don’t ’read’ to DD but she’ll enjoy looking at the pictures and talk about the book; where is mouse going, what colour is that boat, those sorts of things.

creamandblue · 29/04/2026 21:49

I promise one day it will just be a bad memory.

Seven weeks is peak fussy time too from memory. I vividly remember it with dd as she was born mid July 2023 and in early September we had a very hot heatwave and she was so unsettled and cranky. (And so was I!)

Karma1387 · 29/04/2026 22:00

creamandblue · 29/04/2026 21:47

Sometimes it is about survival rather than thriving (bad rhyme but you get the gist!) Do you go to toddler groups or stay and plays? They break the day up and there’s other mums who can help!

My ds was two years seven months when dd was born. I thought DDs arrival affected him and it probably did but tbh looking at dd now I think two is just a VERY challenging age. There’s no reasoning with them, they have huge emotions, aren’t independent yet (dd is potty trained but needs help with her underwear and trousers etc; she proudly went to the potty alone before but she’d wee’d THROUGH her pants!) still need a lot of you. Then babies of course are completely dependent on you.

My go to is reading and while I know it won’t fill a whole day it’s great for connecting with them. It doesn’t have to be perfect; I often don’t ’read’ to DD but she’ll enjoy looking at the pictures and talk about the book; where is mouse going, what colour is that boat, those sorts of things.

Most of the days I am struggling are a weekend so no groups. And on the 1 weekday we have no groups near us and honestly if there was I would be scared to take him. He doesnt play with toys only throws and destroys and with his behaviour with other kids I have no idea how I would keep control of him whilst holding and feeding the baby. I tend to stick to open outdoor spaces he cant cause damage.

He used to love sitting and reading books but I think because I am holding baby and he wants to sit in my lap and read but cant as i cant hold them both and turn the pages of the book 🙈 it will get easier soon I hope!

OP posts:
Karma1387 · 29/04/2026 22:01

creamandblue · 29/04/2026 21:49

I promise one day it will just be a bad memory.

Seven weeks is peak fussy time too from memory. I vividly remember it with dd as she was born mid July 2023 and in early September we had a very hot heatwave and she was so unsettled and cranky. (And so was I!)

This is how I stay calm! I know its just a season of real hard times. Thank you for the positivity!

OP posts:
Ashleigh1969 · 29/04/2026 22:04

We had this for a whole year when we had our second.
She settled down after this. Sorry, hope things get better xx

Limbaw · 29/04/2026 22:52

Hi OP,

I hope you’re ok, this sounds really tough. I just thought I would jump on cause I’m a Psychologist and specialise in working with children and I also do ND assessments and have a very high energy toddler and baby.

I know you’ve not given loads of info here and that’s fine, but I can tell you roughly what the advice would be with what you’ve said so far. In terms of allergies, if you worry he has allergies it’s good to get that ruled out generally but it sounds very unlikely that is the root of the problem to me.

Was your son always high energy but more manageable before having the baby, or has it always been this tricky? It’s just that the posts read that this seems to have become harder and behaviour has got more difficult since the baby was born, which does make sense and is very common. Changed in attunement and caregiving plus it takes up to a year to adjust, obviously we can’t tell you what is happening based on your info but I can suggest some things to think about.

I think it sounds like you need a bit more help if you’re looking after both by yourself all day, it’s no wonder this is happening. Is there any way of having some more help so your son can do more activities or get more 1:1 time with you. That would be the first and most important thing.

Secondly, with regards to direct behaviour, how are you responding at times where it is difficult? What is he trying to communicate or what need is he trying to get met in those moments? Once you work out when it is usually happening (eg always during breastfeeding) the reason becomes obvious (having to share mummy and doesn’t want to/ is confused/ wants to play) and then you work on the thing that is causing it (increased 1:1 time, write stories to explain how your heart has room for 2, find ways he is included in feeding (special reading time during feeds). Are you always responding the same if he’s not safe with the baby or are you trying different things? Consistency is very important and with safety around a newborn we always just suggest that as soon as anything happens you need to gently but firmly say - ‘I have to keep everybody safe and we cannot hit baby, I need to move away now’ and then leave the area to somewhere safer. Not a big deal, just a calm sentence, don’t mention it or turn it into a big thing afterwards. Obviously he needs to be safe then too so this is where you actually do need another person too if you can’t keep them away from each other,

It doesn’t really sound like this is happening but just be mindful about how often your asking him to wait a minute or putting the tv on to placate him whilst you do something because sometimes behaviour can be learned as a way to get access to something- like the tv.

It’s common also for children who have a lower vocabulary to express feelings through behaviour - because how else is he supposed to tell anyone. We consistently see children who are slower with language development have more challenging behaviours. The other behaviours you’ve described (impulsivity/concentration) is also normal for his age range everything you’ve described, it would become more of a difficulty as he grows older if he doesn’t grow out of these things. For his age you would expect him to concentrate for no more than 2 minutes on a task- that is the normal range. On some occasions we do see children who need further assessment at this young age, but it’s usually very obvious that they have autism (and the parents are clear about it before coming to an assessment). We can’t assess a child for adhd before the age of 5/6 because we would expect every child younger than that to score as meeting the criteria (in line with what we expect for normal development).

I think as another poster said it might be good to look at his routine- I think I read you said he slept up to 4 hrs a day (I may have misinterpreted). For a 2 year old 4 hours is really quite a lot, is he up a lot in the night? Do you wake him after a set amount of time? Developmentally 1-2 hours at that age is appropriate. If this is the case he’lll be like a Jack in the box when he’s awake and will be very undertired. Similarly if he’s sleeping in the day cause he’s not at night that will also be causing problems with behaviour.

And I know how hard it is with the tv, I use it a lot myself for my kids. It does , however, genuinely impact on behaviour- so if you’re trying to manage his behaviour you are going to need to reduce it somehow- which is almost impossible with a newborn (and also why I suggested maybe a bit more help if it’s at all possible- you with a newborn and high energy toddler is more than a one person job.

if there is a combination of a lot of tv plus more sleep than he needs he will very likely be hyperactive and have difficulty with behaviour when awake.

When he’s playing or doing things, are the activities structured and set up for him or is he just wondering around between things- cause the other thing at this age is that little ones can find it hard to initiate an develop their play themselves so can end up getting bored and destructive quite quickly. If you can, getting him with you doing an activity for 10 mins may allow you some wiggle room to then move away for another 10 minutes before he starts looking for you again (although, like I say 2 minutes would actually be quite good for his age).

anyway, ask any questions you like, I’ll check in tomorrow :)

Limbaw · 29/04/2026 22:54

Limbaw · 29/04/2026 22:52

Hi OP,

I hope you’re ok, this sounds really tough. I just thought I would jump on cause I’m a Psychologist and specialise in working with children and I also do ND assessments and have a very high energy toddler and baby.

I know you’ve not given loads of info here and that’s fine, but I can tell you roughly what the advice would be with what you’ve said so far. In terms of allergies, if you worry he has allergies it’s good to get that ruled out generally but it sounds very unlikely that is the root of the problem to me.

Was your son always high energy but more manageable before having the baby, or has it always been this tricky? It’s just that the posts read that this seems to have become harder and behaviour has got more difficult since the baby was born, which does make sense and is very common. Changed in attunement and caregiving plus it takes up to a year to adjust, obviously we can’t tell you what is happening based on your info but I can suggest some things to think about.

I think it sounds like you need a bit more help if you’re looking after both by yourself all day, it’s no wonder this is happening. Is there any way of having some more help so your son can do more activities or get more 1:1 time with you. That would be the first and most important thing.

Secondly, with regards to direct behaviour, how are you responding at times where it is difficult? What is he trying to communicate or what need is he trying to get met in those moments? Once you work out when it is usually happening (eg always during breastfeeding) the reason becomes obvious (having to share mummy and doesn’t want to/ is confused/ wants to play) and then you work on the thing that is causing it (increased 1:1 time, write stories to explain how your heart has room for 2, find ways he is included in feeding (special reading time during feeds). Are you always responding the same if he’s not safe with the baby or are you trying different things? Consistency is very important and with safety around a newborn we always just suggest that as soon as anything happens you need to gently but firmly say - ‘I have to keep everybody safe and we cannot hit baby, I need to move away now’ and then leave the area to somewhere safer. Not a big deal, just a calm sentence, don’t mention it or turn it into a big thing afterwards. Obviously he needs to be safe then too so this is where you actually do need another person too if you can’t keep them away from each other,

It doesn’t really sound like this is happening but just be mindful about how often your asking him to wait a minute or putting the tv on to placate him whilst you do something because sometimes behaviour can be learned as a way to get access to something- like the tv.

It’s common also for children who have a lower vocabulary to express feelings through behaviour - because how else is he supposed to tell anyone. We consistently see children who are slower with language development have more challenging behaviours. The other behaviours you’ve described (impulsivity/concentration) is also normal for his age range everything you’ve described, it would become more of a difficulty as he grows older if he doesn’t grow out of these things. For his age you would expect him to concentrate for no more than 2 minutes on a task- that is the normal range. On some occasions we do see children who need further assessment at this young age, but it’s usually very obvious that they have autism (and the parents are clear about it before coming to an assessment). We can’t assess a child for adhd before the age of 5/6 because we would expect every child younger than that to score as meeting the criteria (in line with what we expect for normal development).

I think as another poster said it might be good to look at his routine- I think I read you said he slept up to 4 hrs a day (I may have misinterpreted). For a 2 year old 4 hours is really quite a lot, is he up a lot in the night? Do you wake him after a set amount of time? Developmentally 1-2 hours at that age is appropriate. If this is the case he’lll be like a Jack in the box when he’s awake and will be very undertired. Similarly if he’s sleeping in the day cause he’s not at night that will also be causing problems with behaviour.

And I know how hard it is with the tv, I use it a lot myself for my kids. It does , however, genuinely impact on behaviour- so if you’re trying to manage his behaviour you are going to need to reduce it somehow- which is almost impossible with a newborn (and also why I suggested maybe a bit more help if it’s at all possible- you with a newborn and high energy toddler is more than a one person job.

if there is a combination of a lot of tv plus more sleep than he needs he will very likely be hyperactive and have difficulty with behaviour when awake.

When he’s playing or doing things, are the activities structured and set up for him or is he just wondering around between things- cause the other thing at this age is that little ones can find it hard to initiate an develop their play themselves so can end up getting bored and destructive quite quickly. If you can, getting him with you doing an activity for 10 mins may allow you some wiggle room to then move away for another 10 minutes before he starts looking for you again (although, like I say 2 minutes would actually be quite good for his age).

anyway, ask any questions you like, I’ll check in tomorrow :)

Also just to add OP- you’re literally in the hardest part and there may not be much you can actually do realistically right now - but it will change soon whatever happens :)

MeetMeOnTheCorner · 29/04/2026 23:14

@Karma1387 Why does your baby feed for that length of time? Surely the baby sleeps? You are giving so much attention to the baby it’s very unbalanced. Many dc act up when a new baby arrives but most babies will sleep and don’t have to be fed all the time. I’d really reduce that and try and get baby to sleep otherwise it’s two difficult dc to manage. Also tell your toddler NO and mean it. Eventually a teacher will. Stop most tv and “screens”. It’s addictive. Children have to deal with boredom and learn how to play. They don’t have to be entertained for hours. Definitely ask your HV but I’m not really agreeing this is normal. Maybe for 2026 but 30 years ago it would not be considered normal by other parents. They would not be keen on play dates for example.

Karma1387 · 29/04/2026 23:39

Limbaw · 29/04/2026 22:52

Hi OP,

I hope you’re ok, this sounds really tough. I just thought I would jump on cause I’m a Psychologist and specialise in working with children and I also do ND assessments and have a very high energy toddler and baby.

I know you’ve not given loads of info here and that’s fine, but I can tell you roughly what the advice would be with what you’ve said so far. In terms of allergies, if you worry he has allergies it’s good to get that ruled out generally but it sounds very unlikely that is the root of the problem to me.

Was your son always high energy but more manageable before having the baby, or has it always been this tricky? It’s just that the posts read that this seems to have become harder and behaviour has got more difficult since the baby was born, which does make sense and is very common. Changed in attunement and caregiving plus it takes up to a year to adjust, obviously we can’t tell you what is happening based on your info but I can suggest some things to think about.

I think it sounds like you need a bit more help if you’re looking after both by yourself all day, it’s no wonder this is happening. Is there any way of having some more help so your son can do more activities or get more 1:1 time with you. That would be the first and most important thing.

Secondly, with regards to direct behaviour, how are you responding at times where it is difficult? What is he trying to communicate or what need is he trying to get met in those moments? Once you work out when it is usually happening (eg always during breastfeeding) the reason becomes obvious (having to share mummy and doesn’t want to/ is confused/ wants to play) and then you work on the thing that is causing it (increased 1:1 time, write stories to explain how your heart has room for 2, find ways he is included in feeding (special reading time during feeds). Are you always responding the same if he’s not safe with the baby or are you trying different things? Consistency is very important and with safety around a newborn we always just suggest that as soon as anything happens you need to gently but firmly say - ‘I have to keep everybody safe and we cannot hit baby, I need to move away now’ and then leave the area to somewhere safer. Not a big deal, just a calm sentence, don’t mention it or turn it into a big thing afterwards. Obviously he needs to be safe then too so this is where you actually do need another person too if you can’t keep them away from each other,

It doesn’t really sound like this is happening but just be mindful about how often your asking him to wait a minute or putting the tv on to placate him whilst you do something because sometimes behaviour can be learned as a way to get access to something- like the tv.

It’s common also for children who have a lower vocabulary to express feelings through behaviour - because how else is he supposed to tell anyone. We consistently see children who are slower with language development have more challenging behaviours. The other behaviours you’ve described (impulsivity/concentration) is also normal for his age range everything you’ve described, it would become more of a difficulty as he grows older if he doesn’t grow out of these things. For his age you would expect him to concentrate for no more than 2 minutes on a task- that is the normal range. On some occasions we do see children who need further assessment at this young age, but it’s usually very obvious that they have autism (and the parents are clear about it before coming to an assessment). We can’t assess a child for adhd before the age of 5/6 because we would expect every child younger than that to score as meeting the criteria (in line with what we expect for normal development).

I think as another poster said it might be good to look at his routine- I think I read you said he slept up to 4 hrs a day (I may have misinterpreted). For a 2 year old 4 hours is really quite a lot, is he up a lot in the night? Do you wake him after a set amount of time? Developmentally 1-2 hours at that age is appropriate. If this is the case he’lll be like a Jack in the box when he’s awake and will be very undertired. Similarly if he’s sleeping in the day cause he’s not at night that will also be causing problems with behaviour.

And I know how hard it is with the tv, I use it a lot myself for my kids. It does , however, genuinely impact on behaviour- so if you’re trying to manage his behaviour you are going to need to reduce it somehow- which is almost impossible with a newborn (and also why I suggested maybe a bit more help if it’s at all possible- you with a newborn and high energy toddler is more than a one person job.

if there is a combination of a lot of tv plus more sleep than he needs he will very likely be hyperactive and have difficulty with behaviour when awake.

When he’s playing or doing things, are the activities structured and set up for him or is he just wondering around between things- cause the other thing at this age is that little ones can find it hard to initiate an develop their play themselves so can end up getting bored and destructive quite quickly. If you can, getting him with you doing an activity for 10 mins may allow you some wiggle room to then move away for another 10 minutes before he starts looking for you again (although, like I say 2 minutes would actually be quite good for his age).

anyway, ask any questions you like, I’ll check in tomorrow :)

Wow thank you so so much for such a long reply!

He has always been high energy in the sense that he has always been one to be like a tornado as I call him. Over the furniture with not much regard for what might happen and just destroying everything but it has 100% got worse since the baby or perhaps I am just noticing it more now that it causes more issues due to me not having as much focus on him and being able to save his falls. He has also obviously become more and more mobile and agile which I think has increased his energy but the issue is he doesnt want to stop when he is at home but if you take him to a forest or try to get him to walk anywhere he refuses or in the case of trying to get him to walk to the park he wont walk with you (he will either refuse to move or bolt) so it results in a huge meltdown.

He goes to nursery 3 days a week which helps and I usually have his dad at home once a week. The rest is generally me on my own due to my partner sleeping for his shifts.

Any tantrum which I know is directly related to a need I will help him the best I can. One of his biggest meltdowns is being hungry (he is always hungry) but sometimes I have to say no due to how much he has. But if hes tired or needs a hug or I know he is melting down because he needs something I will help. If he is having a tantrum because he just wants to do something or have something he can't I sit with him but ignore him until he stops and then I engage with him. The hardest ones are the meltdowns he has for no reason which seems to be most of them. For example when he came home from nursery today it was meltdown after meltdown wanting food which we gave him and then he wanted the garden but then wants inside and then he wants his shoes off but doesnt want his shoes off and then he wants sleep but doesn't want sleep. He wants his nappy changed because hes had a poo but doesn't want us to change his nappy. These meltdowns I really struggle with as hes asking for something but then doesn't want it and I just don't even know how to respond. I would assume coming home after a day at nursery he would be tired and happy to chill a bit but he just wont stop for a second.

If I am holding the baby he is lovely with him 99% of the time. Its rare he hurts the baby if I am holding him. He will usually ask to cuddle with us or to hold the baby (which I let him do with help) if the baby is laying on me he brings him blankets and even shares his special teddys with him. We have the issue when we try to put the baby in the cot downstairs (to enable me to play 1-1 with toddler) but he thinks its hilarious to rock it really fast or try to climb in it. The other time is when I put baby on his play matt for tummy time my toddler will lay there with him and do tummy time with him and then suddenly he will just swing his foot to stomp on his head! If he ever trys to hurt the baby I pick baby up and go sit and feed baby and just say 'you can't hurt baby and now I have to feed him because hes sad'. I'm not sure if this is right or wrong but I don't have a separate space to go and I don't really like leaving him alone incase he hurts himself.

We can't get him to concentrate on any task at home but perhaps i'm not being structured enough. He just wants to destroy everything and doesn't really 'play' with stuff.

His naps are crazy long! I don't wake him from his naps for 2 reasons 1 he gets super super cranky if he doesn't wake naturally and 2 he gets quite tired inbetween his 'crazy' energy. He sleeps quite well through the night although he does cry on and off so I am unsure if he perhaps isnt getting 'good sleep' and thats why he is napping so much during the day. He only does 2 5 hours wake windows at home as he gets tired if awake more than that.

I don't really find he is necessarily looking for me its more how much carnage can I cause although perhaps you are right and he has learnt if he drives me crazy I will put the tv on.

Thank you so much again for the help!

OP posts:
Karma1387 · 29/04/2026 23:49

MeetMeOnTheCorner · 29/04/2026 23:14

@Karma1387 Why does your baby feed for that length of time? Surely the baby sleeps? You are giving so much attention to the baby it’s very unbalanced. Many dc act up when a new baby arrives but most babies will sleep and don’t have to be fed all the time. I’d really reduce that and try and get baby to sleep otherwise it’s two difficult dc to manage. Also tell your toddler NO and mean it. Eventually a teacher will. Stop most tv and “screens”. It’s addictive. Children have to deal with boredom and learn how to play. They don’t have to be entertained for hours. Definitely ask your HV but I’m not really agreeing this is normal. Maybe for 2026 but 30 years ago it would not be considered normal by other parents. They would not be keen on play dates for example.

Baby sleeps on me but rarely if my toddler is at home. My toddler is very loud and baby wakes as soon as he drift off. He also suffers with very bad spit up/vomiting so feeds very frequently. Even when my toddler is at nursery the baby in on me all day and night.

I do say no and I mean it. However he doesnt care. He laughs. You pull him away from something you don't want him doing and its hysterical and becomes a game. I have made good progress when he has something and is for example throwing it or putting it in his mouth when he shouldnt as I say no and take it away so he has a little meltdown and then gets over it. But when it comes to behaviours like rocking the cot downstairs or climbing on things its much harder as I can say no and mean it but with the exception of keep pulling him away which he thinks is fun I don't have a lot else I can do (I have no separate space I can remove him to)

Tv is the only thing we use I don't allow up close screens but it is my aim to reduce/stop them. I love the sentiment of kids have to learn to be bored but if a child doesnt play and just pulls everything out what then?

I wouldn't blame someone not wanting playdates to be honest. I'm scared to take him to anyones house except my dads as I worry he would just attempt to destroy their house (I obviously wouldn't let him).

I'm now worried he could get kicked out of nursery if he starts to frequently hurt other kids and I sent him there so he could socialise!

OP posts:
canuckup · Yesterday 00:26

Normal

It'll pass

Ghht · Yesterday 00:39

@Karma1387

All seems like normal toddler behaviour to me as my DS was exactly the same. He’s now 7 and a very nice and fairly well behaved boy (who still has boundless energy). Try not to pathologise his behaviour too soon but do keep an eye on it if you’re concerned he’s behind in other milestones.

If it’s any consolation I think you’re doing a fantastic job considering you have a velcro breastfeeding baby right now. I think people forget how hard it is. My youngest is nearly a year old now but she was the same at 7 weeks with feeding constantly, it was almost impossible to get anything else done. Be kind to yourself op xx

CaffeinatedMum · Yesterday 02:42

All seems very normal. You are going to have to starting putting the baby down at times, even if they whinge, to give your son the 1:1 attention he’s clearly craving. Have you got a Moses basket downstairs you can put the baby in? If they are fed, winded, clean nappy, and warm then I’d put them in the basket and leave them even just for a bit while you play with the toddler, the baby won’t be harmed by having to cry for a bit.

MayDaySunshinePlease · Yesterday 02:51

Karma1387 · 29/04/2026 19:05

You have my sympathies! Its really hard. What are his other behaviours like? Is he like mine with the lack of concentration, impulsivity etc?

He's 2. How much concentration do you edict him to have??

it's all 'common' behaviour in some 2 year olds, very common in 2 year olds with a new sibling. They don't hate the new baby they just want more of your attention !!

Enviurage him to cuddle up to you when feeding the baby, get him to be The Big Boy & hold a book so you can read to him. Try not to stop doing things with him when the baby needs a feed, take him with you when you do happy changes & include him, give him 'a job'.

mathanxiety · Yesterday 03:06

MeetMeOnTheCorner · 29/04/2026 23:14

@Karma1387 Why does your baby feed for that length of time? Surely the baby sleeps? You are giving so much attention to the baby it’s very unbalanced. Many dc act up when a new baby arrives but most babies will sleep and don’t have to be fed all the time. I’d really reduce that and try and get baby to sleep otherwise it’s two difficult dc to manage. Also tell your toddler NO and mean it. Eventually a teacher will. Stop most tv and “screens”. It’s addictive. Children have to deal with boredom and learn how to play. They don’t have to be entertained for hours. Definitely ask your HV but I’m not really agreeing this is normal. Maybe for 2026 but 30 years ago it would not be considered normal by other parents. They would not be keen on play dates for example.

The myth that babies sleep and don't need to be fed all the time results in despair for the many, many women whose babies do not sleep and will raise the roof with ear splitting and heart rending screeching the second they feel the cot sheet.

My fourth DC was one such baby. I did nothing with that baby that I didn't do with the older three who had slept pretty well and were fairly chilled most of the time. It took until.age 2.5 before DC4 slept through the night.

I still think the level of hyperness displayed by the OP's DS is not really normal. I'd be looking into food allergies. I'd also ask the nursery how behaviour is going there, and how the other children behave. If he is in a toddler or 2yo room it's highly likely that most days include a fair amount of mayhem, which the DS may be acting out at home.

I'd look closely at the content of TV that is being shown when he watches TV. There is positive programming that extols kindness, gentleness, curiosity, cooperation, and creativity, and then there is Nickelodeon and its ilk, which features pure, unadulterated dreck. Look up Mister Roger's Neighborhood and other PBS Kids programming from the US on YouTube.

AlwaysLookOnTheBrightSideOfLife · Yesterday 03:14

Normal for a toddler who feels (rightly or wrongly) under-stimulated and lacking attention.

user1492757084 · Yesterday 04:24

Your son is of an age where outside play and gross motor skills need exercising. Make sure he gets two sessions each day outside running in a park, swimming in a pool, swinging in the playground, kicking balls etc. etc.
One to one is very important too.
I pretended to almost ignore my new baby when I had a two year old who was super miffed. Usually a two year old will alert you that the baby is crying and needing food etc. Then you become the helper of DS2 in settling the baby.

Involve your boy in as many aspects of baby care as possible.

Consider having Granny to walk the pram around the block while you build lego with DS2. Also outings with grandparents could be very entertaining for the young lad.
Resist the urge to give in to too much screen time.
Your child needs to spend energy and interactive play.
It will get easier as the baby settles down to a routine.

Could be time for Dad to start taking DS2 to swimming lessons, making and flying kites or riding bikes and scooters at the Skate Park.

Delphiniumandlupins · Yesterday 05:19

Some thoughts. Can he hold the book so you can read together even when feeding the baby? Or try turning baby so they're under your arm rather than across your lap, leaving lap available for toddler. Is your baby actually upset when not attached or just not asleep? Could your parents come to yours and take baby out in the pram for half an hour or so? Would your DS walk better with a ball to kick, a scooter or trike you could pull, even around your garden. Marching to a song or running to the next big tree. It will get easier eventually.

Karma1387 · Yesterday 06:55

user1492757084 · Yesterday 04:24

Your son is of an age where outside play and gross motor skills need exercising. Make sure he gets two sessions each day outside running in a park, swimming in a pool, swinging in the playground, kicking balls etc. etc.
One to one is very important too.
I pretended to almost ignore my new baby when I had a two year old who was super miffed. Usually a two year old will alert you that the baby is crying and needing food etc. Then you become the helper of DS2 in settling the baby.

Involve your boy in as many aspects of baby care as possible.

Consider having Granny to walk the pram around the block while you build lego with DS2. Also outings with grandparents could be very entertaining for the young lad.
Resist the urge to give in to too much screen time.
Your child needs to spend energy and interactive play.
It will get easier as the baby settles down to a routine.

Could be time for Dad to start taking DS2 to swimming lessons, making and flying kites or riding bikes and scooters at the Skate Park.

I think once my toddler has more gross motor skills it will help. He doesn't swim (hates it) and I cant take him on my own and he doesnt have any interest in kicking a ball yet. I have the garden accessable all day when at home but he is just in and out and doesnt really know what to do with himself.

I do try get him to help with nappies but he has no interest. If he wants to be involved he just trys to lay ontop of the baby so now I have to do babies nappies up on a surface. My toddler still fights having his nappy done so he isn't keen on being involved in anything nappy related. The issue with the crying from baby is the second I put him down he will full blown scream and scream so I can't just leave him (obviously for certain things I have to like doing my toddler nappy etc).

He does go out with his grandmother once every 2 weeks but there nobody on a general basis to just push my baby around so I can play with my toddler.

His dad is going to take him to a 30 min rugby class on a saturday morning before he goes to bed.

OP posts:
Karma1387 · Yesterday 07:02

Delphiniumandlupins · Yesterday 05:19

Some thoughts. Can he hold the book so you can read together even when feeding the baby? Or try turning baby so they're under your arm rather than across your lap, leaving lap available for toddler. Is your baby actually upset when not attached or just not asleep? Could your parents come to yours and take baby out in the pram for half an hour or so? Would your DS walk better with a ball to kick, a scooter or trike you could pull, even around your garden. Marching to a song or running to the next big tree. It will get easier eventually.

My toddler wont hold the book for us to read together. If he has to hold it he will go off on his own to read it. He can fit in my lap if I am holding the baby I just cant hold the book and turn pages at the same time.

I haven't got anyone who can just come over and take the baby out for 30 mins unfortunately. If I take his trike he refused to walk (he cant actually cycle himself yet to move it) and he is onky just learning to kick the ball but has no real interest in it. I haven't got him a scooter but I don't think he would have the motor skills for it yet.

Singing he makes me stop 🙈 and so far he isnt interested in racing. As I said getting him to actually engage with stuff is super hard. But if everyone says its normal 2 year old behaviour it should improve and get easier.

OP posts: