Why Being a Toddler is Hard
The real reason for those tantrums and meltdowns
One morning, my then one-and-a-half-year-old son unlocked the child-safety latch of our bottom bathroom drawer. Upon finding my makeup, he began breathing heavily with excitement and staggering around. What a haul! What loot! Imagine his disappointment when, just as he was about to pry the shiny cap off a red lipstick, I picked him up and carried him out of the bathroom. I didn’t congratulate him on his discovery. I didn’t point him in the direction of the hallway’s white walls and say, “My home is your canvas. Go forth and create.” Instead, I ruined everything.
Before I had children, when I’d go to the grocery store and see a little kid in the cereal aisle screaming and crying, I’d shake my head. Why was it that every time I saw a toddler, he or she was throwing some kind of fit? What could be so difficult about spending the day playing, napping, and eating? Now, after living among their kind, I should apologize. Not to you, but to them. Here’s the sad truth: for toddlers, the world is a rough place full of squelched mysteries, restrained freedoms, and nonsensical commands. I think I’d rather be fourteen again than be a toddler.
What does an old, forgotten Goldfish cracker from the bottom of a car seat taste like? What kind of pattern does yogurt make when it splatters onto the floor? What sound do cookbook pages make as they are torn in half? These and many other great discoveries are often stopped by us, the big people in our toddlers’ lives.
How frustrating! What must it be like to get stopped by a security guard time and time again? To be constantly redirected and rerouted as you tried to go about your day, without an understanding of what you had done wrong? What if you sat down to read the newspaper and drink your coffee when suddenly – out of nowhere – some giant swooped down and plopped you in front of a pile of plastic blocks? You bet you’d protest. You’d holler your tush off.
So what’s the reward for a toddler’s natural curiosity? A little freedom and encouragement? No, just the opposite. Oppression! We pin them to furniture all day long: the stroller, the car seat, the high chair. All of the straps! All of the restraints! How maddening it must be to sit, captive, in front of a tray covered with food you can’t identify or don’t remember liking. No wonder it’s so often tossed to the floor.
And does anyone like being forced to perform for strangers? “Blow a kiss. Clap your hands. Wave ‘bye bye.’ Give Aunt Lisa a high five. Touch your nose. No, not your toes : your nose. Okay, now touch your toes. Blow another kiss. Let’s turn on some music. Dance. Dance!”
Do I need to even mention the language barrier? How much can these chubby-cheeked kids actually understand? Twenty percent? Thirty percent? Two percent? They don’t really understand us. We don’t really understand them. Every day must feel like an endless, torturous game of The $100,000 Pyramid. Anyone can see how badly toddlers want to communicate with the outside world. Does a day go by without a toddler picking up some object and holding it to his or her ear like a telephone? “Lo! Lo! Lo!” my son used to yell into a toy truck. Who was he calling? Was he trying to get help?
Of course, in the end, we parents still have to be the bad cop again and again – and again. Toddlers have to eat. They have to sleep. They can’t run into the street every time they notice an open door or scribble with indelible green marker all over the sofa. But I just want the record to reflect that I feel for them. And, in about fifty or so years, I want the toddlers of today to remember my solidarity with their cause and please treat me with care.








I love this article. I need to remember this more often.
I laughed heartily! Thanks for the hilarious reminder!
I LOVE this article…I’m going through this exactly with my 18 month old and I feel so bad when I squash her newfound freedom or discovery because…well…it’s either dangerous (and she has no idea) or holds the potential for disaster. She (understandably) hollers in protest as I herd her in appropriate, pre-approved directions.
Well said! Thanks for this funny and sweet post.
The Outlaw Mom
http://www.theoutlawmom.com
Perfect. Possibly the best thing I’ve read on Babble.
Definitely the best article Babble has ever posted.
Hah hah. That’s hilarious and so true! While it’s frustrating for moms, these little ones really do need to have things seen from their perspective. Even the annoying squeals, and loud chirps and squawks they make (which drive us nuts and cause us to shush them) are just their way of figuring out how their voice works when they are learning to talk. Great article. Write some more, I love your perspective.
I need to print this and post it on our fridge for my husband and I. Very good.
Thanks so much for your comments. Two of my three kids are sick (just colds) so these made my day! If any of you have your own blogs, like The Outlaw Mom, please include a link so I can follow you back to your necks of the woods sometime.
love this! so often as parents, i think we forget to see the world from the perspective of our children. this is a good reminder to me for my own kids who are teenagers. being a teen is hard too!
What a fantastic way of looking at the perspective of a toddler! I will remember this the next time my 22 month daugher has a meltdown!
It starts with a whine or frown and quickly escalates into a full blown tantrum. We all know what that’s like… My third oldest is 2.5 years old and his tantrums started around the time he turned 18 months. He has had his fair share of tantrums (I’ll spare you the details, but suffice it to say the most recent one involved a restaurant outing, a lot of shrieking and food everywhere!)! Now with a new baby brother in the picture, his tantrums, albeit less frequent, are resurfacing… Thanks to you and your article, you reminded me to have perspective and sympathize with how he must feel no longer being the baby of the family and getting the undivided attention he deserves.
Coco
http://vidacoco.com
Awesome article! This is all so true…something to remember when I have just HAD IT with my toddlers! Thank you!
Thanks again to everyone who has commented (minus the spammers, of course; although I do see they offer “sandal,” “sunglass” and have “SAFTY GUARANTEE” so the next time I’m looking for a single shoe, I’ll be sure to check them out). To @VidaCoco, I just looked at your site and see in your bio that we went to undergrad at the same school! Anyway, congrats on your new baby. And @Jenn, yes, being a teen is hard too. I don’t have experience parenting teens (yet) — so maybe you’ll have to pen an essay giving some of the Babble parents with younger children your own tips.
Thank you this is super timely my little guy just turned 18 mos and when i’m not squishing him with hugs i’m wanting to scream right along with him.
You have absolutely made my day!!! In between dragging my toddler away from open cupboards, table edges and spilt drinks, I never thought to consider that to her I may be preventing her foray into a china metropolis to explore, a cliff edge to jump off into the carpet jungle, and a swimming pool to dip her chubby little toes into. I’ll definitely be keeping this in mind…
I may print this out a hang it up on my fridge. What a delightful and
h, how true” article. Thanks so much for this. It has truly made my day.
Thank you for this article! I loved it. I wish babble posted more articles like yours. Thanks for putting a smile on my face and a better perspective on my toddler for when she ‘throws’ herself to the ground and cries.
Excellent article! You have given me new insight into my two- and one year old children. This is the kind of reading that inspires and helps me to be a better mom.
Bravo…and thank you!
Thank you! I needed this today. Out of nowhere, my two year old slapped me hard on the eye. When I gently scolded him, he burst into tears. Generally, he is a easy guy who, like any toddler, wants, no make that, NEEDS his way. It’s definitely a trip.
I loooove this piece!
Thanks for the reminder. =)
This was so great to read. I’ve been telling my friends with kids about this article. I would love to read more stuff like this. It’s really funny but really true.
LOVE IT!! So true!!
Wow this article was so hilarious,I laughed so hard that my poor one and a half year old almost woke up
So True. We have to put ourselves in thier shoes:)
I will definitely need to re-read this before we take our 18 month-old on a 6 hour plane ride next month!!!
I have an 18-month-old, so thanks for helping me look at it through her point of view. She screams a lot. Maybe I’ll just start screaming a lot, getting it all out. Though I fear the looks I may get….
I love this-thank you!
This is great!
But what’s up with the spam….eeeekkkk
What a wonderful point of view!
@MelissaSher, haha you are probably talking to spambots but that is some grade A quality advertising advice! LOL
http://www.brittanyperry.com
@BLP, just between you and me (but let’s hope not a single other person sees this or my cover will be blown), I know it’s a Spambot. Strange coincidence but that’s the name (“Spambot”) of one of my sons…
I’m originally from Minnesota, so I named him for the canned ham from my home state. I’m going to go visit your blog! Thanks for the comment.
oh my gosh, it’s so true!!! and just when they really get into having fun someone comes and puts them into a cage and turns off the lights! poor little guys, thanks for the sensitivity check!
Isn’t this the truth!
@MelissaSher haha your comment made my day!
Ain’t that the truth! Poor little dears.
@Tara,
The cage! I forgot about putting them in a cage and turning out the lights! What a wonderful addition. Next time I write something, I might have to ask you to proof it before I send it anywhere. : )
Thanks for the laugh.
Comments are tooooo funny. Love the article. I must remember to congratulate my twins when they get into things before I redirect them!
Great point of view & nice reminder.
Janice of Mommawords.com
For the record, I feel for them, too. And as a Baby Signs® program instructor, I’d just like to note that some frustration can be reduced by teaching toddlers basic signs. (Yes I know that Melissa wrote that with tongue in cheek!) But seriously, research has shown that teaching babies basic signs can help reduce frustration, increase communication, boost self-esteem – and more!
soooooooooo cute! i’m a nanny of a toddler, and this is so her and me! i try to be nice about things and let her express herself as much as possible. me and her parents are even teaching her sign language to lessen the frustration of communication issues, as well as giving her lots of choices.
I appreciated this. I just got back from a play date at the mall and even though there were toys to play with B wanted to explore the mall and see what it was about. Come to find out their was a therapy dog that he had saw about 10 feet away he wanted to say hi too. Thank you for your incite us new moms need all the help we can get.
This was very interesting thank you for it! My 2 yr old has been doing baby sign since he was 8 months old. I just kept at it and kept at it and now he knows ALOT of signs…he still signs with us….especially when he’s sleepy…he will jsut say momma..and start signing..juice…apple..banana…eat…whatever he wants..he does it…LOVE IT! SO it has really helped with the language part..and it really really really must be tough being a toddler! My poor baby!
so cute and so true!
Love it! This is exactly the logic I use to get me through some of our more trying days. So glad there are so many other mums out there who understand also. Well done for spreading the word!
Oh My God I love this!!!!!
love this article but i want to give toddlers more credit for understanding us adults. sure, at times i dont think my year and a half old twin girls dont understand what we’re saying, but many more times than that i clearly see that they do understand. i have heard that toddlers understand 3 times more than what we think they understand. thank you for writing this. i want to put myself in my daughters shoes more than i do.
made a double negative, sorry. take away one of the don’ts please
Yeah I can relate. Thank you for making me pee my pants.
@Jane, I hope they weren’t dry-clean only.
Its tough being a mama i always thought I would let my kids some freedom but then you need boundaries and dicipline….loved your article
http://www.gifterati.com.au
I think my son understands a lot more than he lets on (especially when he ignores me as I try to get him to follow direction…) Great article!!
LOVE THIS!!! found myself laughing and choked up at the same time:) beautiful perspective for mommies to realize life is not an emergency…slow…down and love…
This was great and makes me really feel for my 1 year old. lol
the author had made some valid points but with regards to language I don’t believe its completely true that toddlers don’t understand our language. The ability of understanding is different for individual children, depending on their exposure to interaction with adults and children around them. I believe my child does understand my language to him as I take the time to talk to him and play with him. He even makes the sounds of ‘thank you’ back to me even though its not audible english when I hand him something that he wants like his juice cup!
Sounds like good reasons to get your kids into the outdoors where they can explore and play without needing the giant to come swoop down on them.
A good book is “Last child in the woods” by Richard Louv, and then there’s http://www.cotef.org
@Wendy, thanks for your thoughtful comment. To be honest, youre right. I didnt mean to short shrift the magic of receptive and expressive language development. I waaaaay oversimplified things for the sake of brevity and levity. That said, I have three little kids (six, three and five months.) Looking back, I do believe that so many of my older boys frustrations as toddlers had to do with miscommunication. One example off the top of my head? When my 6 y.o. was a toddler, he had the stomach flu. I was told not to give him milk for several days — even after he recovered. But he LOVED milk. He WANTED milk. And he was angry at me for not giving it to him. But, try as I might, I couldnt explain the connection between milk and his stomach bug. Hence, chaos ensued. (Does that makes any sense?) Again, thanks for writing.
Brilliant post, I seriously had NEVER thought about it in this light. I have a nearly 2 year old (I also have a 9 and a 5 year old) and my nearly 2 year old is visibly angry and frustrated much of the time … probably because I am passing her the milk when she actually wants a peanut butter sandwich …..
http://www.reluctantmom.wordpress.com
I sat with my partner and giggled over this article, with an almost 2yr old, things all began to make sense.
Very well written piece, but you’re right, when he squishes his vegemite toast between his fingers, smears it down his cheek and proceeds to slide it along the lounge… I’ll still say those fateful words ‘don’t touch!’
FINALLY! Someone who understands……
And people wonder why I strongly disliked my childhood.
So funny…my kiddo could talk pretty early so she didn’t need to throw tantrums, instead she’d tell everyone, “Mama takes away.” LOL And I did take stuff away…one day she scribbled all over the wall when I wasn’t looking and came to get me. She was really proud of her “ART” LOL…I ended up writing a book inspired by this from a toddler’s point of view called, Mommy Takes Away. Totally agree, it must be frustrating.
Enjoyed this article .. so true .. that’s why I don’t call it terrible twos .. I call toddler angst — just trying to express self, but so misunderstood. I think of it as a stage to help prepare parents for teenage angst, which is pretty much the same thing — just trying to express self, but so misunderstood
I think I’m going to go curl up with my sleeping toddler now and whisper I love you sweet baby girl.
I love my 3 y/o grandson’s new soul honesty. Once when told by his mother not to touch the new treadmill, he reached out a finger and said, “I touching!” And after telling her to stop talking because he didn’t want to do what she said, he turned to me and causally said, “I not listening.” I look forward to many more such statements as he is only saying what he observes, right or wrong.
This is so true! My littlest one is 14 months old, and trying like hell to talk to me and communicate to me what he wants, only for the both of us to be frustrated to tears when I can’t figure out what he wants! And my 3 year old daughter? Oh my, she’s so dang smart, I have to trouble understanding her, it’s just that she wont shut up! Lol! My house is full of constant babble! Love your post!
That is HILARIOUS!
is it not more of a brain development thing? Frontal lobe and being able to control it and all? They understand, itsus who dont get them. We can learn alot from kids and the way humans should function
HHIS I sholud have thought of that!
So true. And add in an undiagnosed hearing problem to a child who had always been difficult/curious, and it’s multiplied. We got along much better after he got tubes in his ears to equalize the pressure.
Very cute article!
I feel for them too. I feel for us, too. After reading this, I can see exactly why my 23 month old is acting the way she has been all morning. They are so sweet, even after the tantrums and kicks to the rib in mid diaper change and smack in the face (even if accidental). I still love her to pieces and wouldn’t trade her for the world.
Thanks for bringing a smile to my face on this somewhat tough and gloomy day.
Fantastic article and so opened my eyes to my little man. All i can say is thank god for grandma who gave my son the time and patience to let him do what he felt he had to do that i couldn’t/wouldn’t. I definatly thou will be taking a different approach to him and his desires from now on!
This was awesome! I started snickering at the “breathing heavily” part. Great analogies :$
I so loved this story, so many true statements were made!!! Thanks for the blog
It is always great when people remember to think about perspectives differing from their own and I’m glad this article has inspired so many to reflect on their toddler-adult relationships. Another way to stave off those tantrums is to always (or at least always TRY to) give an alternative or explain why. When mine got into my makeup, I gave her some other art supplies instead and told her they would last longer and have more colors and she was pretty pleased with that. Also, my husband is great at always saying “Don’t touch/hit/eat/throw/drop/etc. because…” and so she might give us a small pouty face but doesn’t go into full-bore tantrum mode (yay)!
My 8 month old does that breathing hard/excited thing already when he sees or finds something new like a shoe to suck on or the dogs ear. I have a LOT to look forward to haha!
I can truly relate to this. Poor little nonverbal kids. it must be awful. I remember having a boss who would consistantly interrupt whatever you were doing and make you do something else without consulting you or even explaining why. And yes, we do that to our little kids every day.
I have 2 1/2 year old twin girls and this article is making me think differently about what to do with them during the daytime while daddy is at work. Thank you so much for writing it I have really enjoyed reading it
awesome article
I remember being 2 and having tantrums because I couldn’t communicate with people. My brother was a much better talker and didn’t have the tantrums
Really appreciate this article. Thanks for speaking on behalf of my toddler who doesn’t quite have the right words to express what you did!
LOL! Loved this article!!!
An awesome article! I’ve never thought about this before. Now I understand why my baby cousins have earthquake temper tantrums; they don’t have the opportunity to explore freedom and discover. In addition, this article is seriously hilarious!!
Chubby-cheeked! LOL!!!
Heck, I remember having a temper tantrum because I wanted a pen but I didn’t know the word “pen” and my babysitter couldn’t understand what I was asking for. I got so frustrated, “why couldn’t she understand? I’m an artist darnit! I NEED A thing that does this in that color kind of like that over there so I could make something!”
Very funny article. One thing the writer didn’t get – in my opinion – is that as parents we have to teach our children right from wrong and it starts the day they are born.
To me a toddler isn’t in the “terrible” twos they are in the terrific ones. Sure they get frustrated with someone moving them from something dangerous to something that isn’t, but we, as adults, also get told what to do and what not to do. We have to go the speed limit or get a ticket; we have to meet a work deadline, or lose our jobs.
As a parent of two teenagers, I remember the toddler years with fondness. My son got into a new jar of Vaseline and gave our long haired cat a bath with it. My daughter took a box of baby powder and sprayed it into the ceiling fan in her room making it “Snow in Barbie land”. Not long ago I got the dreaded call, “Mom I had a car wreck and totaled my car.” My first sentence wasn’t how bad the car was it was, “Are you and your sister hurt, and are you in a safe place now?” Cars can be replaced, my kids can’t.
So I look fondly back to when they are toddlers while handing over the keys once again. Hopefully what I taught my children as a toddler will also help them as they continue to grow into adulthood.
Still laughing over this article when I remember what my first cousin’s little girl said when I was keeping her. All I could do was laugh at her even though I know it wasn’t right.
I slammed my finger in the door and said “Damn” – my kids were older teenagers so I occasionally let a curse word out. Well Anna said, “Damn”. I told her that it wasn’t a nice word and she couldn’t say it, then she said to me, “Damn, damn, damn. You are not supposed to say damn. My mom told me that I can’t say damn, only she can. So Aunt Mary you can’t say damn. Damn, damn, damn, you aren’t supposed to say damn.”
Still laughing over that one, so parents of toddlers cherish their inability to repeat everything you say now because your words may come back to haunt you one day soon.
What a fabulous! I feel like crying and laughing all at the same time. It really does help us to feel empathy with these little ones and understand more about where they at in their development. And a little empathy can go a long way in parenting!
What a great article! I just want to cuddle with my Aubree and tell her how much I love her.
mw35215-I think the reason she didn’t cover that is because she wasn’t actually writing an article about that. She was writing a humorous article about the “pains” of being a toddler. She probably doesn’t view them as the “terrible twos” either and she probably agrees with a lot of what you wrote, as I do. I feel that you slightly missed the point of her article though as it was meant to be more comedic and less advice giving.
this is so sweet! i feel the same way! thank you for posting this! nice to hear your own thoughts through someone else’s thoughts!
As a mom of a 4-year old I LOVED this article! When my son gets frustrated I have to try and put myself in his shoes……if I had someone tell me I couldn’t do something that looked fun I’d be mad too!
I’ve never looked at it like that before. We do spoil all their fun don’t we?
nice article. although my son is quite verbal, and understands pretty much everything i say – makes things a lot easier!
I love the take on Toddlers and what they go through daily. I will pass it along.
Love this! It’s made me an instant fan of mammalingo.com. We all need a good laugh when raising kids can be so frustrating.
I love this perspective! It’s so easy to get caught up in my own world, as an over welmed mom of 3, very very soon to be 4… it’s a good reminder to take time out to see the world from my 2yrs point of view! thanks for the reminder!
Appreciate the perspective…it is a reminder of their point of view, which all of us parents need. Don’t under estimate, though what they can understand. They understand able three times what they can verbalize.
This made me smile.
What an insight. I applaud you, mom. When your child grows up I wish I could show him/her this article. See mom is not so bad:)
I have 13 month old and I appreciate you article. It has got to be tough for him.
loved reading this article
This isn’t new at all. I read this month ago. Why change the date and pretend it’s new content? If you’re going to repost something, just say you’re reposting it.
Hi! I loved the article. It reminded me of what my 5 year old keeps saying, “Why can’t I ever do anything I want?!”
Well the two loves of my life are now resorting to calling me mean, but I know that is just part of parenthood. Here is a short blog I wrote about it:
http://ichoosehappynow.com/2011/10/21/family-relationships/my-kids-say-%e2%80%9cmom-you-are-mean%e2%80%9d%e2%80%93how-a-parent%e2%80%99s-shield-is-love/
Cheers,
Louise