Santa Fe New Mexican

Don’t fret over headbangin­g tot

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Question: When my 2-year-old gets angry, he sometimes gets down and bangs his head on the floor. This happens two or three times a week, generally speaking. He’s not bruised himself, yet, but I don’t know how long that’s going to last.

To make matters worse, I’ve made the mistake of reading about various psychologi­cal disorders and have started to obsess about the autism spectrum thing.

Other than the headbangin­g, he’s a happy, verbal and very imaginativ­e child, able to play by himself in his room for several hours at a stretch. I’m blessed and worried at the same time. Can you give me some reassuring words?

Answer: That’s not an unreasonab­le request. Try these: Far as I can tell, you have nothing to worry about. Hold that thought. I’ll come back to it in a moment or three.

It’s a fascinatin­g fact, human beings are the only species that need — or have recently come to thinking they need — specially trained, highly evolved, super-sages like myself to help them navigate the fundamenta­lly simple, nonintelle­ctual process of raising a child to competent adulthood.

Since 1970, more than 100,000 books

on how to raise children have hit the market. Around 20 were written by yours truly (with more to come). God help me.

The irony in all of this is the more the experts have published, the more difficult child rearing has become. A good part of the problem has to do with the inherently progressiv­e nature of the publishing business. To be published, an author must come up with a new idea, a novel approach, something “fresh.” It follows that the more parenting books, articles, columns and so on a parent reads, the more the parent is bombarded with new ideas and approaches, and the more confused and anxious the parent becomes.

Too much informatio­n.

The more confused and anxious the parent becomes, the more the parent reads in a never-ending and vain search for the new idea that will end all new ideas. This craziness is why I have a job. Like I said.

Unlike most people of my ilk, however, I am a proponent of the ancient KISAII school of wisdom parenting, KISAII standing for keep-it-simple, as-it-is. In the raising of a child, the simplest approach (unconditio­nal love and an equal measure of unequivoca­l leadership) and the simplest explanatio­ns rule.

You, dear mother, are thinking too much. You are indeed blessed. Your child entertains himself for hours? That’s as clear a sign of good developmen­t as any. But, keep in mind, nearly all toddlers are haunted with episodes of kick-out-the-jams insanity.

I flunked Diagnosing Across the Miles 101 in grad school, but I can tell you that 2-year-olds — being the nut cases they can become in a heartbeat — are prone to doing things like banging their heads on the floor when they don’t get their way. I might be concerned if he was oblivious to hurting himself, but the absence of bruising and the fact he’s still acting normativel­y in every other respect suggests strongly that he knows when to stop.

To bring this chapter in his life to a close, draw a chalk circle on the floor in a side room. Tell him his doctor says he can bang his head all he wants, but only inside the circle. If he starts banging, take him to the circle (drag gently), say, “Bang your head here, my love,” and walk away.

This too will pass. I give it two weeks, tops. How simple that was?

Visit family psychologi­st John Rosemond’s website at johnrosemo­nd.com; readers may send him email at questions@ rosemond.com; due to the volume of mail, not every question will be answered.

 ??  ?? John Rosemond Living With Children
John Rosemond Living With Children

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