6 Steps To Get Your Child To Stop Whining
Whining can be a common behavior problem in children of almost any age. It can be extremely annoying. Without appropriate intervention, it can actually get worse. Take steps to curb whining and prevent it from becoming a bad habit for your child.
1. Establish a Household Rule about Whining
I often have children come into my therapy office who begin to whine when I tell them we canât do something. The first thing I do is say, âIn my office, whining doesnât get you what you want.â When I make it clear that begging, pleading, and trying to annoy me into submission doesnât work, they almost always stop whining immediately.
Establish a household rule about whining. For example, create a rule that says, âAsk nicely for something and accept the answer calmly.â This helps kids understand that their attempts to change your mind wonât be effective.
Make sure other caregivers are on the same page when it comes to whining. If your spouse or a grandparent gives in to whining, it will undermine your rule.
2. Provide a Warning
Sometimes whining becomes a bad habit for kids and they donât realize theyâre doing it. Provide one warning by saying, âNo whining,â or, âRemember, we donât whine at our house.â This can help make your child more aware that begging, pleading and asking repeatedly constitute whining.
3. Remain Calm and Donât Give In
Listening to a child whine can sound worse than nails on chalkboard. However, itâs important to remain calm. Take deep breaths, leave the room, or put on some music if it will help you remain calm.
Whatever you do, donât give in. If out of frustration you end up saying, âFine, have another cookie!â youâll have taught your child that whining is an effective way to get what he wants. Avoid providing any type of positive reinforcement that may encourage your child to whine in the future.
4. Ignore Whining
Attention in any form, even if it is negative attention, can encourage a behavior continue. Ignoring attention-seeking behavior, such as whining, is an effective form of behavior modification.
If your child begins whining when you tell him to pick up his toys, and you keep talking to him while he whines, youâre reinforcing the behavior. Giving him attention encourages the whining to continue. Also, the longer he engages you in a conversation, the longer he can delay picking up the toys.
Ignoring means youâll need to pretend as if you canât hear the whining at all. Go about your normal business and try to tune out the whining. Be prepared, however, because itâs likely that your child may begin to whine louder when he sees that you arenât responding.
Continue ignoring until the behavior stops. Eventually, your child will recognize that it isnât working. Just make sure that you donât give in at any point or youâll have likely made the behavior worse.
5. Provide Positive Attention When the Behavior Stops
As soon as the whining stops, provide your child with positive attention. Praise your child by saying something such as, âI like the way you are playing quietly right now!â Give lots of positive attention to the good behavior and it will encourage your child to seek attention in positive ways.
6. Prevent Whining in the Future
Give your child the skills he needs to handle frustration, disappointment and sadness without whining to prevent him from doing it in the future. Teach your child about feelings so he can recognize how he feels and help him learn how to deal with upsetting feelings.
For example, if he is angry that you said he canât go outside to play, help him learn how to deal with those angry feelings by coloring a picture or doing jumping jacks. Teach coping skills that will help your child deal with his feelings in a positive way.
Teach your child problem-solving skills as well. If your child is sad because your trip to the beach got cancelled because it is raining, help him find an indoor activity. Teach him how to solve problems on his own so he can deal with problems without whining.
Source: discipline.about.com