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My tricks...
I'm not an expert or anything, just another parent. But I remember that. I remember those mornings, vividly. Sometimes we still have them, and since my son is 12, I'm thinking we are going to have more coming. But, when my son was that age, there were a couple of things that helped. First, get rid of as many choices (and reasons to fight) in the morning as possible. This means advance work, but pays off in the mornings.. Have him pick out (with you) his clothes for the entire week on Sunday (you can do this every night but I never had time). You can buy one of those organizers that hang from the closet shelf that say each day of the week and put everything: shirt, shoes, socks, underwear, belt, etc into each day - Now you don't fight over clothes...at least not every day. Have him pick out his breakfast the night before and set the table - bowl, spoon, etc. (for us it was a choice of cereal, sorry, I've never been a get-up-at-the-crack-of-dawn and make breakfast kinda mom). Make sure all papers, books, backpacks, jackets, are AT THE DOOR. I bought a shoe rack from Target and put it right next to the door and that's where my son puts his stuff - so you are not screaming at him to "please find your shoe so we can go" in the morning. You have to really sit down and think about what options he has in the morning - what do you really fight about - and eliminate them ahead of time. So, #1 Eliminate as many choices as possible. (BTW, you are not taking his choices away - you are letting him choose when he is happier).
My second thing - the kitchen timer was my BEST friend. You can set it and say "ok, you have 20 mins to eat breakfast". Then, give him a 5 minute warning "The timer says you have 5 mins left for breakfast! Hurry!" You will be amazed at how much pressure that takes off you cause now he's playing 'beat the timer' instead of 'argue with mommy'. NOTE: The 5 minute warning is VERY important and my son was prone to freak if I forgot the warning....but as long as he had a heads up that he had 5 mins left, he was fine.
And third, at 6 yrs old, if you have the option of giving him some time to vent in the mornings - do it. This one is not the most effective but works sometimes (and it might sound horrible)but let him burn off some energy. When my son was little we lived in this house where there was a tree at the very back of the property, about 200 ft away...and I would tell him when he was absolutely BOUNCING - "Ok - run to that tree and back three times" LOL. IT sounds silly - but it gave him something to do that burned off some energy - and gave me a minute to grab my car keys, etc and he was MUCH easier to deal with in the car on the way to school.
I hope some of these help. This is my first post but when I saw yours - I had VIVID flashbacks and I was hoping that some of my tricks (that were passed along by wonderfully supportive friends) would help you. Remember - we are all doing this...and we can just keep doing the best we can. Good luck..and lots of (((((((((hugs)))))))))
A fellow Mom...
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