Your "tigger" example has got me picturing my little Riley!
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
He is such a wiggler. He is also my always "raring to go and play" kind of kid. I finally figured out for him that he HAS to have about an hour of playtime at the beginning of his day with big brother. This seems to help him get the wiggles out. He also needs to be away from me and my telling him what to do, on a rotating basis. He LOVES to be in charge of his time. This isn't a bad quality really - I don't want to be my dc's sole source of entertainment.
So, his day rotates between a time with me, and then a time away from me to do something he has more control over. We have the bulk of his LHFHG done before lunch. Then, he also HAS to have an hour of playtime around lunch with big brother. The only thing we have for LHFHG after lunch is his read-aloud, which he loves. The other things he does after lunch are very low-key and can be skipped (you can see my schedule on the latest schedule thread). He comes skipping back in and does much better for me then.
Sometimes, it's just attitude. Riley is a little snuggle-bunny, and both my dh and I have been guilty of letting him be "the little one" for too long. (He even was sad when we had our next baby and asked if he'd be "the little one" anymore.) We allowed a lot of crying from him, mainly because he was the "baby", and also because he was just so much more emotional than our older ds and we didn't know how to deal with it. Then along came baby #3. Nothing could have woken my dh and I up more!
![Embarassed :oops:](./images/smilies/icon_redface.gif)
We realized we'd let a lot of things go with our "little one", and we needed to begin to expect him to act his age.
When attitude problems arise, we've had to have talks with him that school is his job right now, and my job is to be his teacher. I wouldn't put up with attitude in a classroom of children, and I won't put up with it at home either. One last thing that seems to help my ds is pointing out what would I be saying about him if I homeschooled the other children and not him? That he wasn't ready, that he couldn't do it, that he was only good at playing and laying around - well, none of that is true. He IS very smart and ready to learn, he's ready to do more with his day than just walk around and play, and it sure would be sad if that's all I thought he could do! I also have pointed out that he's just past crying so often when he's upset - now, he's big enough to use words. We have an 18 mo too, and I tell him that our 18 mo can only cry when he's upset because he can't use words to explain himself yet - my other son IS older than that and doesn't have to resort to crying anymore
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
He does seem to straighten those little set shoulders a bit then, and march to his task with impressive oozing masculinity then. Let me say that he LOVES school now most of the time (actually school was never the problem), and that it was mainly an issue of not enough free time he could control and not enough wiggly-recess time with big brother each day. With those changes, and with both my dh and I being united in helping him grow into his age, he's having a very happy year now.
I hope some of this helps!
In Christ,
Julie
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)