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Same problems!
My DD has been doing this for a few years now, and we are now to the point where she has basically taught her younger two brothers to do it. She is finally growing out of it, but being that her brothers are still at it. I have not dealt with the last of it yet. I am lucky on one aspect, when DD would lie, I could tell. She is very sensitive, if she is accused of doing something she didn't do, she will burst into tears. If she is accused of doing something and she did do it, well, she would just lie. She did most of her sneaking late at night or early in the morning, when DH and I would still be asleep. We finally bought Tot Lok, a magnetic locking system that you install on your cupboards and cabinets. It has a magnetic key that you use to open them.
www.totsafe.com/proddetail.asp?prod=1502
They are very effective! Just remember where you put the key! We had gotten to the point where we were hiding it too! Luckily we owned our own fridge and installed a small pad lock on it. It was pretty bad! I had to even put one on the hall closet where we kept all the games! Not fun trying to clean up a half dozen games that are all mixed together!
We have moved into a new home about 8 months ago, and the kitchen has a door that locks. Granted the only one that sneaks into the kitchen is my youngest DS (5 now)! Although we now lock up the xbox and wii controlers in the kitchen, my middle DS (7) likes to get up really early just to play. We limit tv and video games and he doesn't like that much! We also have a pantry (not in the kitchen) that we had to keep locked. My kids like poptarts too, one of the most common things they would sneak into.
Good news! The kids were so used to the pantry being locked that they stopped trying and we haven't locked it in over two months! We do keep the door closed, so I think they just figure we locked it! They are still checking the kitchen door though.
Family and friends who came over to visit and saw that we had magnet locks, pad locks on closests and the fridge thought we were just lazy and that we weren't teaching our kids any rules. This really hurt, but after a while, I had to tell myself, that I was doing what I needed to do to keep my children safe and to keep my sanity! I am the one that has to live with the constant messes, not them. Putting a child in time out for something they did while I was sleeping was not effective. This worked for us!
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