Today I Heard My First . . . . .
ChatterBank1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by lizwizz. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I know it's not much help just now but my little brother and sister are about a year and a half apart in age and he can have her screaming blue murder in seconds, cause he knows exactly how to wind her up. BUT you would be hard pressed to find to people who care more about each other. He would do anything for her and her him. They will be fine, honest
(like I say sorry it doesnt help just now)
agree completely with the above. There's 17mnths between my little brother and I, and we used to fight alot when we were wee. As mentioned, he just used to know how to wind me up (and vice versa). That's just what siblings do tho, isn't it? The fighting decreased a lot when we got to 2ndary school, and we decided to team up to campaign for more pocket money/gettign out later at night etc from Mum and dad. We're now both in our 30s and very close indeed.
I know it's tough, but they will get better. I'd continue to make the one in the wrong apologise, even if they appear not to mean it, as it sends the right signals to both of them regarding discipline etc.
I know how you feel I have 17 daughter (she's outgrown the fighting now) 15 twin boys (hell on earth) and 13 twin boy and girl (they bicker like an old married couple.) Boys seem to be worse, 15 twins now take each others stuff and all hell breaks out, one broke 3 bones in his hand after he punched his brother at 6 in the morning before paper round, over a jacket, I used to try and sort it out but who do you beleive, so I have now learnt to ignore it, both are as bad as each other, they used to pick on 13 son did for years, but they now leave him alone and concentrate on each other,I've been told by others it is normal and part of being in a family, but it does wear you down, I now put them out side and lock the door until they are finished.
I used to go out every day in the hols just to stop the fighting, they tend to do it when they are bored, swimming, trip to the park anywhere to keep them busy, are there any childrens clubs they could go to over the hols, our local sports centre runs ones. YOu could try that.
good luck!
This is an example of family hierarchy at work. As the youngest, it is instinctive for your son to constantly snipe away at his sister's biological superiority in the famiy group.
That said, we don;t live in caves, so order needs to be restored.
Pick a calm time, sit them both down, and explain that you know they love each other, and that the fighting has to stop.
Therefore, you are introducing a reward / punishment system - this can be tailored to what your children like - good behaviour on a daily / weekly basis earns a treat of some kind, bad behaviour earns a sanction.
These can be adjusted depending on what they appreciate, or would hate to be deprived of - TV, computer access, that kind of thing.
Be fair, be firm, be absolutely unswayed by any arguments from anyone, make your rules stick, and after the initial kick-back, things will settle down.
Never threaten anything you can't carry out, never promise anything you can't ddeliver - and once they know the boundaries, life will calm down all round. Good luck.