Read What to Expect the Toddler Years Online
Authors: Heidi Murkoff
Let her tail you.
If your toddler insists on following you around the house (even into the bathroom), don’t stop her. She has enough conflicted feelings (Do I want to be independent? Dependent?) without your adding rejection.
Let her leave you.
Even the clingiest of toddlers will often decide to wander off (separation is only traumatic when it’s your parent’s idea—not when it’s your own). If the two of you have been playing together and your toddler wants to go off to do something else, let her—assuming she’s still safely in view. She needs to know that it’s okay to leave your side.
Build security by building self-esteem.
Nothing gives a young child a sense of security—and thus independence—like a positive sense of self. Help your toddler feel comfortable by herself by helping her feel good about herself (see page 292 for tips on building self-esteem).
Make sure you’re not dependent on her dependence.
Sometimes, parents secretly relish their children’s dependence (who doesn’t want to feel needed?) and unconsciously encourage it. They’ll hover when they’re not needed, barge in on a stuffed animal birthday party uninvited, anticipate clinginess before it occurs (“Don’t cry—I’m just going to wash the dishes”). Becoming aware of any part you may be playing in this dependency cycle may make it easier to break.
Be patient.
Your toddler’s fear of being without you is rooted in a normal developmental phase, and with your love and support she will eventually grow out of it.
What if your toddler continues to cling in spite of all your efforts to make her more comfortable with brief physical separations? Let her. Matter-of-factly explain that you have to peel the carrots or there won’t be any supper (or sort the laundry or there won’t be any clean clothes) and go about peeling (or sorting) with her arms fast around your legs, if need be. When she sees that her attention-getting ploys regularly fail, she’s likely to give them up.
Nevertheless, some degree of clinging may continue, possibly well into the preschool years, and even later. It’s not unusual for a kindergartner to cling to Mommy or Daddy for a while when being dropped off at school. More exposures to other adults (in play groups, in day care, in preschool, during play dates), along with continued parental attention, will help with the maturation process, which will eventually make clinging a thing of the past.
Not all toddlers are clingy, of course. Some seem to make the leap from dependence to independence with no qualms at all. They don’t cling, exhibit no separation anxiety, and love doing things on their own. For more on the independent toddler, see page 387.
“My son cries whenever I leave the house. My husband and I left him with a baby-sitter so we could go out and celebrate our anniversary, and he cried for an hour. The baby-sitter finally had to call us to come home.”
From the moment the umbilical cord is cut, life is full of separations. With each new phase of development comes a new one. Taking solid foods eventually leads to weaning from mother’s breast, crawling and walking to less need for carrying. On that long road to adulthood, countless other occasions for separation lie ahead: the first morning at nursery school, the first night of sleep-away camp, the first day of college. Helping your toddler learn how to handle separations well now will help both of you handle them better later.
A child experiencing separation anxiety exhibits pronounced distress when one or both parents leave him. This normal phase of development commonly begins in the last quarter of the first year and frequently lasts into the early months of the second year—or beyond. As with all developmental phases, though, there’s a wide range of what is normal.
Separation anxiety never touches some toddlers; others develop it closer to the second birthday and suffer the anxiety well into the third year or later. The problem may be more severe in a child who’s never been cared for by anyone but his parents and has had little exposure to other adults. It may also be more exaggerated in a child who’s experiencing other stress in his life (moving, a new child-care situation, the arrival of a new sibling), is naturally shy and reticent or temperamentally averse to change (see page 201), or has recently been left by his parents overnight for the first time.
The following tips may help both you and your toddler cope with separations better:
Take the anxiety seriously . . . React to it with understanding, patience, and confidence (“I know you don’t want me to leave, but I will be back soon. I love you.”), instead of with teasing (“Oh, you silly boy!”) or annoyance (“You make me feel so mad when you cling like that!”). Of course, there will be times when your understanding and patience will be tested to their limits—as when you’re late for an appointment, and you find yourself struggling to pry your toddler’s fingers off your legs so you can escape out the door. Do your best, but remember that you’re only human (a shortcoming you’ll have to concede to your worshipful little toddler sooner rather than later).
. . . but not too seriously. Though a toddler’s pleas for you to stay with him can be pretty heart-wrenching, don’t join in the melodrama. Instead, stay calm, matter-of-fact, and though sympathetic, unmoved by the histrionics.
Make your toddler feel secure when you’re around. Lots of love and attention when you’re together makes a child feel better about any separating. During periods of intense separation anxiety (as when upheaval in his life or routine has made him even clingier), provide lots of extra tender, loving care, and don’t leave him more often than you must. Don’t tell yourself, “He needs to learn—and he’s going to learn the hard way.” He’ll learn faster when you’re sensitive to his feelings and needs than when you take a sink-or-swim approach.
Tell him that you love him. But don’t add that you’ll miss him. If your toddler feels obliged to miss you back, he won’t be able to enjoy himself without feeling guilt of his own.
Start with short-term separations. Working on object permanence, with you as the object, will help your toddler begin to view separations as temporary (see page 19). Once he’s learned to handle your disappearance behind a door or into another room, gradually work up to leaving the house for brief periods. Follow the tips on pages 22 and 23 for leaving your toddler with a baby-sitter.
PARTING TIPS
The hardest part of leaving your toddler with a baby-sitter or a caregiver will always be saying good-bye. To make it a little easier, try the following:
Get ready in advance, when possible, so you can spend time together before you separate. If you pass the last half hour before the baby-sitter arrives getting showered and dressed, your toddler may feel neglected while you’re still home, and abandoned once you’ve left. Also try to avoid rushing around frantically at the last minute. This will not only leave you feeling frazzled but could transmit a sense of anxiety and upheaval to your toddler. At least fifteen minutes before you leave, sit down with your child and read a story, do a puzzle, or build a house with blocks. If you simply don’t have the time to get ready in advance, get ready together. Set out some toys or dress-up clothes for your toddler to play with while you dry your hair and put on your clothes.
Get your toddler busy before you get going. Set up an engaging activity which your toddler and the baby-sitter can enjoy doing together. Taking this approach may not keep your toddler from crying when you leave, but it will give them something to go back to once you’re gone.
Leave your toddler with a reminder of you. Whether it’s your pillow, your afghan, a snapshot of you in a lucite frame, or a lipstick-print kiss on the back of the hand, having a little something of yours to keep close may help your toddler deal with the separation. However, if the baby-sitter reports that the reminder seems to make your toddler miss you more, skip it.
Leave the dramatic farewell scenes to the movies. Keep your exit casual. If you’re harboring feelings of apprehension or guilt, keep them well-hidden. As briefly as possible, explain to your child that you are going out, and that you’ll be back soon—try to use the same lines you used on practice outings to the next room. Promise a favorite activity when you return, if she’ll still be awake (“When I get home, we can read a book”) or for the next morning, if she won’t be, and plan to keep that promise. Choose a light parting phrase on your way out (“See you later, alligator,” is a favorite; eventually, you can teach your toddler to respond, “After a while, crocodile”), and use it every time you leave the house.
Have your toddler wave you on your way. If there’s a window in your home that faces the street, the driveway, or the parking lot you’ll be leaving from, have the baby-sitter take your toddler to it so they can wave good-bye. Even if there’s a lot of sobbing with the waving or your child refuses to wave at all, smile convincingly, wave enthusiastically, and leave.
Arrange for your child and the baby-sitter to leave with you, when feasible. Sometimes that’s easier for a toddler. If your baby-sitter takes your toddler to the park or to a play date at a friend’s house, and they leave the house with you, your child may not feel so deserted. Be sure to make it clear that you’re going out, too. Otherwise, should they get home ahead of you, your toddler may be shocked to find that you’re not there. What’s more, she may become reluctant to leave the house without you in the future.