Getting your kids dressed and out the door each day shouldn't drive you bonkers. Except that it does, because your child wants to wear a tutu or bathing suit or Batgirl cape (or all three) to school. And you really just want to get out the door. If you need to minimise the drama, the power struggle and the full-blown assault on your sanity involved with getting your child clothed in the morning, these 15 proven tips from experts and mums can help.
Take photos of her favourite outfits and create an online "album" of greatest hits you can peruse together on your iPad or smartphone. Involving her in the process can give her some much-needed ownership over the situation. "When your child protests a certain outfit, she's probably not really saying 'I want this purple shirt and those orange pants,'" says parenting expert and bestselling author Susan Newman, Ph.D. "She just wants control over something."
This is especially effective when the photos are of past outfits she's chosen herself, adds child development specialist and author Dr. Robyn Silverman. (You can remind her of this, too: "Remember when you put this skirt with that top? That looked great!")
Try an organisational system. Investing in a days-of-the-week clothes organiser has been a lifesaver for Jenni, a mum of two girls. With a cubby system, her daughters choose a week's worth of outfits on Sunday and sort them by day. "Sometimes they change their minds and dive back into their wardrobe to choose something completely different, but even that now brings up less drama," she says. "Plus, I get a laundry bonus: About 10 fewer outfits to hang or fold, because the girls often pull their favourites right out of the dryer and into the clothing organiser!"