Motherhood is not easy, and few people would probably be foolish enough to think otherwise. But while that’s no secret, some things regarding surviving parenthood—like hacks, tips and tricks—are often kept behind closed doors.
Some women on the internet recently opened the doors wide open. After a discussion was started on Threads, they shared some of their most unhinged hacks and the most feral things they do to survive motherhood. (It’s safe to assume that for some moms, that must have felt like a breath of fresh air.) So if you’re curious to learn what their tricks are, scroll down to find their comments on the list below, but keep in mind that moms have to deal with the most demanding bosses of all time on a daily basis, so cut them some slack.
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Nigerian mothers had this thing they called 'Arodan' that was done back when children were raised by the community and things were safer. Mom sends her kid to another neighbour mom and tells her kid to ask for Arodan. Kid doesn't know what it means but said neighbour knows it means 'im tired and I need some time off' and neighbour knows to keep child waiting, like 'wait and I'll prepare it, or go to so and SO's mom, for it'. child is on a wild goose chase that doesn't end until he's tired
Oh, I love this concept soooo much. ❤️🔥It could easily have happened in my community back then when I was a child if the adults had known about arodan. TIL.
So kind of like snipe hunting but you don't just leave them in a random field.
We did this with students when they just needed a break from the classroom. (Think five years old.) We would send a note, saying, “Take this to X. It’s very important. They will sign it and then you bring it back to me.” Usually the note just said, “Y needs a break. Can you have them do something small and then send them back?” All teachers in our building, including support staff like secretaries and nurses, participated. It usually helped if you could do it with the child before they reached their breaking point.
Nigerian moms, slaying parenting and cooking the most amazing food. I love whenever I meet one, they're the most baller women on the planet, no one messes with them.
I learnt a lot about Nigerian Mums from the comedian Gina Yashere. Her mum has appeared in a lot of her sets!
Load More Replies...I know teachers who used this method...they would give the problem child an envelope and tell them to take it to Mrs. So and So's classroom. Inside the envelope would be a note to just keep the kid for 10-15 minutes. The kid would think he was given a special mission, stayed out of the principal's office and gave the original teacher a much needed break.
We live in Japan and close to Ishikawa so we felt the Jan 1 2024 earthquake very strongly and the dozens of aftershocks after. To keep my son (and me) from being scared, I told him when the ground shakes, it’s Totoro jumping for joy.
When my kids can’t sleep at night I tell them they can stay up as long as they help do chores. They’re usually willing to do something without fighting. They put clean laundry away, dust, clean grout (toothbrush, cup of water and baking soda), wipe cupboards, mop, tidy..they do a couple of things, then I put send them back to bed
Yeah, I keep saying that to myself but always end up getting lost down a rabbit hole on Wikipedia or browsing videos on YouTube.
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When they're having a toddler tantrum, I would howl, which makes the dog howl, and then the kids howl. By the time it quiets down, they forget why they were upset.
Feed it lasagne? Might only work on orange cats.
Load More Replies...When my stepdaughter was little, she used to have epic meltdowns. I showed her kids having tantrums on "Nanny 911" and she was HORRIFIED that she looked like that too. Very grateful it worked, because she could go on for hours.
I created a “family reset hour” every Saturday. I told everyone: no screens, no chores, no talking to mom unless it’s an emergency. It’s for everyone’s mental health.
Reality? The kids read or play, my 13-year-old chills, and I lock myself in the bedroom with headphones, a snack stash, and an audiobook. No guilt, no pretending just boundaries disguised as self care for them. But really? It’s for me.
My grandma used to do this - every day. As a kid, I learned how to entertain myself and be independent. I didn't always like it as a kid but as an adult I am thankful my grandma did this.
My grandma had something like this, it was "Go away and play in traffic!".
It's not that crazy, but taking pictures of stuff they want at the store "so that I can send them to santa" really works. They might pose with 20 different toys before we leave, but we get out without tantrums
My daughter printed dozens and dozens of pictures of Breyer horses and made little envelopes to send all the pictures individually to Santa's North Pole addresses, HOH OHO. She only got to sending a few. The rest sat in a tin box for years.
I'd skip the Santa part and say something like let's take pics of your 3 favorite things then we can think about it and pick one.
Just take them seriously. I used to put their favourite whatever to the back of the shelf to 'hide it for next time'. I've pulled out pen and paper and written down "X really likes the dinosaur" etc. This whole "no is a whole sentence" just isn't helpful for children learning how to manage their emotions. Hear them, acknowledge how they feel, act like you both know that it isn't going to get bought, but it is a brilliant thing they've found. Toddler tantrums aren't about 'getting their own way' they're about being overwhelmed by how they feel.
I've done this for years now. Because of this we've only had 1 temper tantrum in a store. I have 3 kids aged 3-8. And we only had 1 temper tantrum. I told their grandma and aunt about this so they are OK with me sending them the pics of whatever the kids want. I show my kids that I sent the photos to grandma and say "so now she knows what you want for your birthday/Christmas". And then the kids say OK and they go on with their life and forget about the temper tantrum. Grandma and aunt then asks me about 2 weeks before the birthday/Christmas if the kid still wants the thing. :) so we avoid temper tantrums and don't need to stress about what to put on the kids' wishlists.
Just calling off work for the day and not telling anyone else in the household. Just letting them think I went to work and came back. When really I was eating breakfast at a diner alone, shopping, drinking tea at a tea house, taking nice long drives, listening to podcasts, etc.
My coworker took a day off to do Christmas stuff one year. Her whole family knew and asked her to do stuff for them, she got very little Christmas stuff done. The next year she took a day off work and didn't tell her family. She left the house at the same time as she usually did. Went to breakfast, wrote Christmas cards while eating, did some shopping, baking and wrapped some presents.
I’ve done that, and I don’t even have kids (live-in partner and a cat.) Every adult needs an occasional day off that nobody else knows about.
This was 3 months postpartum but I straight up got a hotel room. I was cracking under the pressure and I told my hubs that I just need ONE night of full sleep, good sleep, and some room service. It did me a world of good.
I made our GoogleHome (like Alexa) the bad guy on schedules & chores. We all agreed at family meeting that X things/chores needed to happen every week, & scheduled them out in the app. Google calls the kids out by name & what they need to be handling & I’m no longer the recipient of their whining or things just not getting done cause I don’t have the bandwidth for pushback.
My mom was Alexa. "Okay, don't go away. I need you to do this thing now. Then come back." It felt never ending. I need to see a list or go about it at my own pace, so I know when the end is.
Hmmm, I wonder if my mum could use this to 'remind' my stepdad to do things he has promised to do...
I told my adolescent daughter that everything will feel better if you sit on the couch and eat some cheesecake while wearing a tiara and a prom dress. We had very few meltdowns and we still do it.
That would have worked for me, I loved wearing a tiara (still do but don't think to do it).
I need a tiara then. And ice cream instead of cheesecake. I don’t have the fridge space for a cheesecake.
Divorce their father who did nothing to help me.
True. I begged my mom to divorce my dad when I was around 11, but she never did.
Load More Replies...If youre gonna have to do it alone, might as well get rid of the extra
My mum did this, but it took what seemed to me like a long time. They separated on and off in my first 16 years (most of the time I didn't know they were separated as they were still living together). It was better for my youngest two siblings, they were only 6/7 so had more time with divorced parents than not. It really was better for us and both of them. I went from parents who yelled a lot or ignored each other to much happier parents most of the time. It was hard for my dad, as he still loved her, but he rarely let it show to us. I wasn't so much that he didn't help mum (though he refused to take on the care of my brothers with disabilities because he was scared he would do something wrong and hurt them) but that he didn't want to do much with her. Like socialising and stuff. They are just too different. My stepdad isn't perfect, but at least he is more willing to go out to things with mum.
When my daughter was 3 months old I formed a punk band. That way I had to leave the house at least twice a week for practice, and I sure as heck couldn’t take the baby with me. Hubs had to do his share, and I got to scream my guts out.
Hubs ought to have stepped up without being forced but aside from that everyone needs selfish time, time to be you, not to be husband or wife, not to be Mum or Dad, just time to explore what YOU want, who YOU want be. It’s normal and natural to have time to be you.
Good plan. Hope he got chance to have a couple of nights to himself too for a few hours.
With some hubs, the wife gets to scream her guts out without even leaving home.
When my kids aren’t listening and I feel like I’m going to start yelling, I sing instructions at them in an opera voice instead.
Oh, I like this! It gets their attention without the negative impact of yelling.
When I’m by myself and trying to get out of the house and the baby is begging to be held I throw cheerios onto the floor and let her crawl around to get them like a chicken
Oh, I don’t know. Pretty sure we all eat dog hair every day because that s**t gets all over everything!
Load More Replies...Wait... when you're by yourself and trying to leave the house... while the baby is picking up cheerios off the floor... what is happening here?
They mean when they're trying to get things together in preparation for leaving (diaper bag, snack, etc.) but the baby wants to be held, they basically redirect the baby's attention so the parent can do what they need to do.
Load More Replies...I have a friend who had twins and to keep them from pouring the cheerios on the floor, she put them in bowls and then wipe the bottom of two chair legs, place the leg into the bowl and it would hold the bowl down.
Hahahahaha! They are Lways eating whatever they find on the floor anyway!
Order my groceries online for pick up but not tell hubby, then tell him I'm off to do the groceries, so that buys me 2 hours to do whatever I want and just pick up the already done groceries on the way home.
I think I understand why I'm single...I'm too direct: "I need 2hrs of not seeing your face. Love you, bye."
I don't have kids, but you are my hero! I think that's why my mom is gone for hours too. Except I'm 45 and do my own groceries. She just wants time to herself.
I was honest. I mean, I had a child with the man, why not be honest?
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When I can tell my kids aren't listening, I shift the conversation to alien abduction until they notice. Sometimes I talk about alien abduction to myself for a solid 5 minutes, but the creativity of trying to keep the same cadence of giving them directions while talking about something completely ridiculous has given my own brain moments of levity and fun when I'm otherwise exasperated.
Joined a gym that had a daycare with a cheap hourly rate. The nicest staff of young girls who loved kids. Just to sit and drink coffee and read. Never worked out.
One time I was in a museum with my daughter when she was maybe 4. I was super into it but she wasn't. So to keep her occupied I told her to count all the naked butts she could see in each room. This game ended up keeping her entertained through the great museums of the world and taught her math
A lot of museums have a little 'passport' or activity to do while you walk through. They have to find certain things in each section and at the end often get stickers or something. When I went to the National Gallery in Canberra my sister was a little too old for the children's activity (I think she was 12) and just wanted me to read the title and meaning of each piece to her to begin with. Then even that was too much for her ADHD brain so we hurried through the last few things. We also went to the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation museum on that trip and it was pretty much all interactive, but some things still below her age group. I have a hilarious video of her 'putting a puzzle together' where she is intentionally doing it wrong (it was like 4-5 pieces to make a dinosaur) but talking it up like she really didn't understand it. I played it during her 21st birthday party!
I still get any of the dinosaur or Egypt exhibit activities and I’m 37. They are really fun 😂
Load More Replies...That is a genius idea. Little kids think butts are the funniest thing in the world.
My local water company has an interactive museum that shows the process of purifying water. Each step has a short video with a small activity and a stamp to collect at the station. If you get all the stamps you can exchange for a small prize. Let me tell you it was amazing as a school kid lol
I don’t want gifts for holidays focused on me. I want a hotel night alone in a room. That’s it. Been going strong 4 years now. Eff them flowers and chocolates. Keep your hallmark. King size me and send me room service.
I've done this, for a weekend. While I was gone, my sweet Hubby painted the kitchen as I'd asked him to do a dozen times. It was a lovely rest and a lovely surprise when I got home. Both of us managed a reset.
When the floor is covered in toys I tell my toddler I’m thinking of one toy in my head and she has to pick up all her toys and put them away and when she picks up the one I’m thinking of she wins a prize. It’s always the last toy
I do this at work too. You still get one or two who won't pick things up but most will be desperate to find the magic one. At the most recent school holiday program I was working at, the kids weren't really listening enough for me to tell the whole group, so I started going to one or two kids at a time and telling them there was a 'secret mission' and they had to find a specific thing. When they found it they had to put it away. By the end they were all wanting more secret missions but there was nothing left to put away!
2 things:
In the summer, I always took my kids to the evening swim (6-8) at our community pool. Before leaving, each kid takes a quick (swimsuit on) shower with shampoo. Arriving home, we’d dry off, put on PJs, have a snack, relax a bit then go to bed. They were clean (enough), tired and ready for bed.
2nd, a crying toddler will stop crying if offered a drink. You can’t cry and swallow at the same time. A little water or juice, the action of swallowing equals a calmer child.
If the mini dino is upset handing her anything, including drinks, will result in the thing getting violently thrown.
I don't really understand the first one, seems like a perfectly normal thing, what am I missing?
You are missing nothing. It’s an idea for those who haven’t thought of it or didn’t do it as children.
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Not unhinged (at least I don’t think so), but totally works in desperate moments— I pull the dining room chairs back a bit from the table, drape blankets over the table & chairbacks, and voila: instant fort. Give them flashlights, and they’re suddenly interested in all the quiet activities — books, puzzles, and whatnot — that can be done inside.
Sometimes the kids at my after school care don't do any of the activities I had planned, because all they want to do is build a fort. Gives me more time to do the tedious cleaning or paperwork I don't have time to do in my admin hours! I do have to make sure they clean the up before they go home though or I just ed up with more cleaning :)
I'm 62 & my husband is 67 - we still do this, especially on really dark & rainy days.
I have days where I just CANNOT hear the word mom one more time. When that happens, we start the 'call her anything but' game. At which point, I will respond to "Brandy" (my actual name), "bruh" or "dude" from my teen and 10 yo old, or my all time fave: "your highness"... Which my 7 yr old loves!
But then they are still asking non-stop questions, just without the "mom"
When my kids aged into adult sized socks. I bought 50 pairs of the same socks. No more matching! Just pick 2 socks people.
Same here, when there are only a few left (after years) buy another mountain of new, identical socks...
Load More Replies...One good thing about having uniforms at most schools in Australia is that they usually include socks. Either girls all wear white socks and boys wear grey, or everyone wears the same colour, usually black. Makes getting them ready in the morning easier when they have only one type of sock to wear, and it also means you can give them the job of rolling socks together to put away because they don't struggle to match them.
I don't pair my socks.... Every time I need new ones i'll just throw out all the old ones and buy 10x pairs of black/blue/white/yellow/whatever colour socks and then throw them all into the top draw then wear whichever 2 I grab first each day.
I do this for my husband, except it's two different socks - about 20 black socks made by the same maker and about 20 sports socks also made by the same maker.
We have “leave me alone” nights where my kids go to their room early and aren’t allowed to leave. They get screentime, I bring them their dinner/snacks, and we all enjoy alone time that makes us excited to spend time together the next day. We spend most of our evenings hanging out so the occasional “leave me alone” night is much needed.
When I was a single mother, I sometimes told my kids that I was going off duty at 8 PM. Only call me if someone is bleeding. I could hear if they were throwing up.
Sometimes I give my kids a meal in the shower when I’ve had a long day, my husband is at work, and I just can’t find it in me to actually cook. We call it shower-cuterie. It’s just random finger foods that can get a little wet and still be basically fine- cheese, salamie, fruit & veggies, etc. They love it and afterwards I just scoop the pieces they dropped out and hose down the rest with the hand shower. There’s no dishes, and they end up clean too. Is this unsanitary? Probably. Do I care? No.
Just the same as when adults eat their salads or pasta or whatever while taking a bath. It's very practical and the only problem is if you spill your entire meal into the water.
I'll bet you don't have it in the shower, though.
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I’m submitting not mine, but my own mother’s: when we were kids she would send us outside with buckets of water and paintbrushes and tell us to “paint” the driveway. We spent hours out there
This has been something kids have done for decades at preschools in Australia!
A favorite pool activity here. I always attached the brush to the bucket with a string.
We were always asked, " How fast can you run around the house? Are you sure, I bet you can do the next one faster!"
I’m not a mom, but I was a nanny and I’ve shared this with people.
You know that really fun toddler age when they still need a nap but refuse to take one? I tell them I’ll set a timer for 5-10 minutes and if it goes off and they’re still awake they don’t have to take a nap. But while the timer is going they have to lay really still with their eyes closed. I start the timer, let it run for a little bit then pause it and if they ask I tell them they still have X more minutes.
I seem to remember being told to lie down with my eyes closed, even if I wasn't tired, when I was a preschooler, and it was naptime
We had to do it when I started Primary School, even though I didn't take naps by then. I hated it and just whispered to my friends during it. I think they did it during our first term only, because we were getting used to school hours, but now schools near me usually have Wednesdays off for the first half of the first term to get kids acclimatised instead.
Load More Replies...My mom set a clock beside my bed and told me where the hands had to be before I could get up. I fell asleep every time before the hands got to the wake up time.
A bit sorta off topic, but what i******e decides fairy string lights are a good idea hanging in the crib? I know it's a staged photo, but who in their right mind thinks that looks at all like a cute idea?
My mom did "quiet time" instead of nap time. We could read or color or play with a quiet toy, but we couldn't interact with each other or her for about an hour. I did something similar with my kids, but we would watch a quiet show together without talking. Usually it was either Mr. Rogers or Bob Ross, but occasionally it would be a nature show like an episode of Planet Earth or something.
Role reversal. When I'm fed up, I make my oldest "be the mom" and I act absolutely unhinged - just like her. She loves correcting me and I get to blow off some steam.
Agreed. My son told me that I was being annoying when I did his role. 'Understood?' Yes... And he stopped (at least for a while).
Leave my kid in the tub as long as they want and just chill while they’re in there lol. I can get myself an 1-1.5hr like this. Kid has to be old enough that this is ok, and water level low enough. Keep the door open so I can hear everything. Only works if they’re able to bathe independently
Not to be a Debbie Downer, but anyone can still drown in 3 inches of water. Sadly, I know someone who died that way.
When my sister was about 2, my mum used to let me take her with me in the shower a few times a week. I liked playing with her in there, and it distracted her enough for me to be able to do her shampoo etc using the handheld shower nozzle. When she was a bit older she would often have a bath at the same time as my little brother, who had carers there to do his bathing. They had a blast, putting on the bubble mat and playing together.
My 3-year-old nephew refused to hold an adult's hand when crossing the street. I told him I was terrified to cross by myself and could he please help me? He waited for me at every street corner!
When I was in uni, I found an old gas mask bag (without gas mask) that I used as a purse. For some reason, there was a 6 foot cord attached to the pocket. I would give the end of it to my nephew and he would wrap it around me, one way then the other. Kept him quiet in the stores, and I didn't have to look for him.
I would allow him to “steal” chopped up vegetables and fruit while I was cooking dinner. He loved it ! He thought he was getting away with something sneaky. He’d grab, stuff them in his mouth and run off giggling.
This is kind of how I learned I preferred raw vegetables instead of cooked ones. When my mom finally figured it out, instead of giving me my quarter cup of cooked peas at dinner, I got a quarter cup of frozen ones. Happy little me!
Younger daughter had half a cup of frozen corn as an after school snack.
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Spray bottle walks. I give him an entirely full spray bottle of water and he has free rein to spray anything on our walk. I bring a back up bottle. Easiest way to kill 45 minutes, get outside, walk around. Sometimes to make it interesting, I bring one of the continuous mist spray bottles. Bonus, this is great for fine motor skills!!
Put toddler in giant cardboard box with a bunch of crayons and let them go to town. They are occupied and can’t get out, so you can get stuff done.
My favorite one was telling my kids the tooth fairy pays on a sliding scale depending on how clean they are. This means they brush extra well when a tooth is loose and I don't have to explain why the amount paid varries. Because I don't carry cash and it's usually a scramble to find enough when it happens.
When the dog is crazy and the kid is crazy, I give the kid a piece of cheese and tell her to run away. The dog'll chase her and they'll have fun for 20 minutes, tiring each other out.
Have you ever met a dog that isn’t food driven?
Load More Replies...My best friend and her husband live on about 2.5 acres outside town. We go out there when the kids need to blow off steam. My 6yo LOVES to feed the animals (meaning the elk and birds, not livestock) with Dr. Bob (he's a retired veterinarian) and my 12yo just runs around like a maniac playing with the dog.
My mom, aunt, and grandma all had a small spray bottle of “monster spray” (water) for my cousin to spray under his bed and in his closet so he would go to sleep at night.
I'ver heard of doing that with a drop or two of lavender oil, so the kid knows it is working.
Or a couple of drops of mom's fav scent and water.
Load More Replies...There were some weeks in 2020 where I inflated our air mattress, leaned it up on the couch, and it became a slippery climbing wall for my then 2.5 year old. Hourrrrrs of climbing entertainment
My kids go to bed in their school clothes for the next day. One less fight in the mornings.
My schoolfriend who was chronically late would go to sleep in her school uniform to try and save time in the morning.
One of the kids I nannied for did this himself when he started school because he hated getting up so early. Later his ADHD went into overdrive and he was waking up at 4-5am most days so he got himself dressed then and then read/played until his mum got up. I went from struggling to get him up and ready for school, to him being all ready when I got there at 7am so all I had to do was check he had done his homework and then he watched tv. By that stage his siblings were teenagers though, so I struggled to get them up for school instead.
Why? Have a bath, put on clean clothes, go to bed. No muss, no fuss. They're clean and their clothes are clean.
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When they make you want to clench your jaw and fists and scream in rage…. Car wash! Everybody in the tub, and then spray the kids with the shower head. It starts out feeling violent, so it quells the rage. Then it’s fun because they can’t quit laughing.
And then they don’t need a bath later. All I do is win.
This is BRILLIANT. Add a little bodywash, and you've washed their clothes, too! Just hang them up to dry.
I've had bad days and I've broken down crying on the floor in front of my toddler. Every time, she's gives me her water bottle and says "mama, have some water to calm your body down. Let's take deep breaths" and then she demonstrates deep breaths. She reminds me that I must be getting something right and I can pull myself together
Not a parent so dont know, but can toddlers say this many things?
They really can repeat that kind of things (some of them at least speak very well). My 3 yo son tells me to blow my nose if i'm coughing a lot, and 'there, take a tissue mom. Good, you blew your nose, are you feeling better ?'. They're amazing mini-humans.
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We leave our kids’ kindles outside their doors with a snack on weekend mornings so we can sleep a little longer. Works like a charm most days.
When they were old enough, my stepsister put the cereal and bowls etc within my nephew's reach so they could make their own breakfast without waking her and then they had to spend the rest of the time until she got up playing in their room. Helped her sleep an hour or two extra sleep each weekend.
We have ‘sleep medicine’. I was horrified one morning when I picked my kids up from my mums after a sleepover and they told me they’d had medicine to help them go to sleep. Turns out my mum gave them a spoonful of juice concentrate and told them it was ‘sleep medicine’. Went straight to sleep after taking it . I’ve used the trick several times too. It’s all in their heads!
My mum was told by the doctor to do this for me, using vitamin C tablets. My insomnia was legitimate and it didn't work. It did work a few years later with my sister though.
Put a bunch of his dinosaurs in a huge bowl with water, freeze over night, the next day take it out. Give him warm water with droppers, spray bottle and paint brushes to rescue them. Takes 30 min to an hour to get them all out.
You can also change it up and use coloured water in the droppers and they learn about mixing colours. I have done it by filling balloons with water and one or two toys in each ballon too. You can make 'fossils' by putting toys in plaster that they use tools to break open too.
We do "book dinner" collectively eating dinner while reading our books because sometimes I need 30mins with no one bothering me.
I was not allowed to read at the table when I was a kid. (Because I would ignore my family and it was "rude") I was and still am a book worm. As an adult I read at every single meal now. :)
My mum tried that with me too but it ended the same way :) She also realised that it was better for me to be eating quietly than yelling over each other like my brother and sister!
Load More Replies...I have an emergency cheese stash. Is everyone cranky? Bust out the cheddar slices. Am I a weepy mess? That’s a brie situation. Need a reset? Small parmesean hunk. My children will now request cheese to regulate. Weirdest mental health fix.
I saw a vid from someone about pretending like you time travelled to this moment as a way to appreciate all the small things as fond memories. It really helps. Act nostalgic about anything they’re doing. “Oh that yelling. I miss when they lived at home.” It sounds insane but it absolutely works
I used to tell them that I had a direct contact line with Santa. Any time they were a bully to each other, all I had to say to them was, " Hello Santa,". It worked every time.
My mom did something similar to me when I was little. She picked up the phone and dialed a few numbers (yes, dial phone; I’m old) and pretended she was talking to Santa Claus.
My friend used to phone me when her daughter was acting up… Is that the naughty girls’ school…?
My youngest likes medicine so she’s always telling me she’s sick at bedtime. I have her wait in the living room while I bring her a spoonful of pickle juice. She takes it and goes right to bed.
My mother gave us medicine in fancy tiny glasses. Now I know they were designed for liqueurs.
My dad did this with me and I’ve been waiting for my moment to shine and be unhinged and I got it! You know that toddler tantrum in the shops where they just think “screw this I’m throwing myself on the floor till I get what I want” little did bossy baby know mam threw herself on the floor too and pretended to throw a tantrum just like him, the speed that he got up and ran to his dad because of embarrassment will forever live rent free in my head, worked with me and him 20 years later
The car wash!!!
I swear by it, they can be locked in their seats so they are safe and you can spray the s**t out of the vehicle and chill for a minute while being able to see them.
The downstairs TV remote gets “lost” (hidden in my wine cabinet) fairly often, when I’m overstimulated and can’t handle extra noise downstairs.
My toddler was throwing a 15 minute screaming fit. I decided “can’t beat him, join him” so I just plopped down on the ground next to him. He was confused, then concerned, then proceeded to wrestle around with me until he forgot I wouldn’t let him eat dog food
In the middle of a screaming tantrum i just started vacuuming. I mean everything. The sound of the vacuum drowned out the whining/ crying and I ended up with a clean house. Toddler was quiet about halfway through when I was no longer responding
I went to the YMCA and checked the babies into childcare just so I could sleep in the sauna
I got a gym membership to a fancy gym. They have a cafe, massage rooms, outside pools, etc. My kids would go to the kid rooms to play and do crafts. I would sit in the cafe and enjoy lunch by myself and read. I never worked out.
IKEA free childcare . Drop the kids. Hand in the IKEA cafe for an hour and have coffee and cinnamon rolls.
To get them to go to sleep I change the language on the tv and tell them they’re too tired to understand it
Give them a pair of kid’ scissors, and tell them their job is to “cut the grass” while I sit in a deck chair in peace.
Just make sure they know this is the only thing other than paper they are allowed to cut!
Fudge. Like- don’t watch, yes it’s all mine, copious, obscene, outrageous amounts of chocolate fudge.
Or a hot fudge sundae with nuts, eaten verrrry slowly. Made me feel better every time.
Sometimes I pretend they're not mine. It's way easier to not care about the mess or nutrition or schedules, if you're just the fun aunty who's watching them for an afternoon.
I don’t listen to kids music in the car even when they are in the car. My four year old knows the f word but it’s self care for me.
This should be higher. Teach your kids good music. Go straight to Metallica without stopping at Raffi on the way!
Once I told my kid that eating vegetables makes you taste gross to monsters. It worked for that night.
Lie face down on the sofa and close eyes. Tell kid to set toys on your butt so you can guess which one it is. Child is amused, I get to lie down with my eyes closed playing “what’s on my butt!?”
Tell my daughter to meet me downstairs to deep clean her room. She disappears. Get an hour of uninterrupted time.
My toddler liked ripping paper so one time when I needed time out I gave her a pack of toilet paper and left her to it. She shredded about 3 rolls before she got bored.
My daughter like those tissue paper boxes we never use at home (she's seen it at daycare). As an extra special treat , on one of those endless not-yet-snowing days of November I let her have a go with a box of the cheapest tissue box I could find. She threw them around "I make snow", painted on it, soaked some, tried to fold little ships, glued balls together for snowman. In the end we had a huge "snowball fight" indoors (not with the soggy ones).... I had a fully happy and occupied child. The scraps we used as a starter for our fires.
I handed my 6yr old and 2yr old a jar of peanut butter & jelly, a loaf of bread and a pitcher of juice, sent them outside to the fenced in backyard and told them that this was now their house because they disrespected the one with their bedrooms in it. I locked the door, then watched them through the living room window, as they went from thoughts of independence and freedom to desperation to be let back into the house. That 42 min lesson lasted all summer
I keep a crate of old pottery and dishes to smash against the back shed when I'm feeling ragey. I scream profanities and rage laced insults at them while hurl them against the shed.
Sometimes we play hide and seek and I simply do not seek. I always know exactly where she is and she thinks she’s winning, but I’m the real winner
I placed a pick up order, left the house and sat in the target parking lot listening to my audiobook, scrolled through socials, and caught up on some things for about an hour or so while my toddler napped. Picked up my order as soon as it was ready and drove home just as he woke up.
Let him touch the glitter. Postpartum with a 2.5 year old and 6 month old.
My brain said- just let it sparkle.
I had a colicky baby and she just kept crying dad was at work I had a toddler and a 5 yr old. I called 911 and told them I was going to snap. They came put the baby to sleep fed the big ones and told me laid down too.
Which agency? Just asking because this incident is now on file with them. Telling 911 "I'm going to snap," can have severe consequences. A report to CPS is fair game at that point.
And I'm sure you're a kind soul that believes that children are just sooo precious and to be protected and that 'it takes a village...." I'd just as soon MY taxes went to help moms and kids instead of buying drones to k**l people.
Load More Replies...I told my child that after she turned 3, if she pooped in her diaper then the friendly poopy monster would want to try to get it out of her diaper to take back to his poop castle. But if she did it in the potty then it would be sent right to him and he wouldn’t come to find it. She was immediately potty trained with zero effort on my part.
Serve lunch on the open dishwasher front as if it is a tiny table. Kids sit around it on the floor and eat. Then put the dishes in and the whole "table" washes itself.
Or have a picnic on the floor, using a sheet and paper plates. Dump the plates in the trash (or, in our case, the woodstove), shake the sheet outside -- then put it in the wash. Works great.
When my son turned five I informed him about The Utensil Police. If you didn't use a fork, he would be arrested.
I turn on the roomba and let my 1 year old run from it for a while, usually until she starts crying then I swoop in and save her and she plays quietly with her toys for at least twice as long as normal.
Some of these were a bit f****d up. Biting your kid, pouring ice cold water over your kid, locking your kid outside, using your kids phobia to get them to comply....
I don't need a time off my kiddos.. but a time off all other people specially going out of my home. I wish I just could avoid going out at all. If I had domiciliary detention I would be completely happy
It's not unhinged, but for me it's routine routine routine. The closer we stick to it, even on weekends and vacations, the less likely it is my kids will get grumpy.
Okay, the post gathered Mom-tricks... but a lot of them also terribly sounded like the Mom just needed a breather. So I'm asking me: where are all the Dads??? Coming to the unfortunate conclusion that all the emotional work and all the extras still weight heavy on women's shoulders.
Once my kids were teens, I started a Fend For Yourself night. It means I'm not cooking, so feed yourselves. 14m has become quite the adventurous cook. right next he's making homemade French fries while they're cooking he using the panini press to make hash browns.
We used to play Sleeping Beauty. I would lie on the couch relaxing and he’d be the prince slaying the dragon etc. Then he’d wake me with a kiss! So sweet and I got a mini nap.
Some of these were a bit f****d up. Biting your kid, pouring ice cold water over your kid, locking your kid outside, using your kids phobia to get them to comply....
I don't need a time off my kiddos.. but a time off all other people specially going out of my home. I wish I just could avoid going out at all. If I had domiciliary detention I would be completely happy
It's not unhinged, but for me it's routine routine routine. The closer we stick to it, even on weekends and vacations, the less likely it is my kids will get grumpy.
Okay, the post gathered Mom-tricks... but a lot of them also terribly sounded like the Mom just needed a breather. So I'm asking me: where are all the Dads??? Coming to the unfortunate conclusion that all the emotional work and all the extras still weight heavy on women's shoulders.
Once my kids were teens, I started a Fend For Yourself night. It means I'm not cooking, so feed yourselves. 14m has become quite the adventurous cook. right next he's making homemade French fries while they're cooking he using the panini press to make hash browns.
We used to play Sleeping Beauty. I would lie on the couch relaxing and he’d be the prince slaying the dragon etc. Then he’d wake me with a kiss! So sweet and I got a mini nap.
