What do you do when your child is the one no-one wants their children to play with?
“It’s just a stage,” they said.
When my son was around eight months old, he started biting.
The first time he bit another child, I was horrified. I didn’t know what to say. I didn’t know what to do. I stood there in shock of what had just happened.
Of course, I reprimanded him, but I felt helpless.
What could I do while another child was sobbing into his mother’s arms because my child had sunk his teeth into him?
I apologised profusely but there was not much I could say. I took my son and went home, ashamed of what he had done but firmly told him no, and hoped it would never happen again.
And then it kept happening. Every time another child grabbed a toy from him, he bit. If he was angry, he bit. I read every book, every article, every blog post about managing a child that bites but I just couldn’t stop it.
I read that it was an attention thing, a frustration thing. It was because he was a boy. It was because he couldn’t communicate properly yet. I even read that I should bite him back to show him the consequences of his actions. This particularly didn’t sit well with me, and so never happened.