Help... Toddler Constantly Taking Clothes & Diapers Off

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  • Heidi
    Daycare.com Member
    • Sep 2011
    • 7121

    #16
    I guess I was thinking like Daycare. I know you can't spend every minute with eyes on one child, but I'd be hyper-focused for a week or so, and every time she even STARTED to take her clothes off, I'd say firmly "Clothes stay ON!"

    For naps, I'd remind her before nap. Then, I'd put on a diaper, a onsie, AND the footed, backward pajamas. "remember, clothes stay ON". I have a video monitor, so I'd point that camera right at her pnp, and when she started trying to strip, a voice would come from somewhere in the room "CLOTHES STAY ON".
    ::

    I have an almost 2 who sleeps on a mat, but tries to get off at the beginning of nap EVERY DAY. Cracks me up, because she doesn't know I can see her through the monitor. Then, I say quietly into the monitor "B...get back on your mat". She RUNS back, lays down, and that's all. EVERY DAY for two or three weeks now. She's just gotta try....

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    • TheGoodLife
      Home Daycare Provider
      • Feb 2012
      • 1372

      #17
      Originally posted by Heidi
      I guess I was thinking like Daycare. I know you can't spend every minute with eyes on one child, but I'd be hyper-focused for a week or so, and every time she even STARTED to take her clothes off, I'd say firmly "Clothes stay ON!"

      For naps, I'd remind her before nap. Then, I'd put on a diaper, a onsie, AND the footed, backward pajamas. "remember, clothes stay ON". I have a video monitor, so I'd point that camera right at her pnp, and when she started trying to strip, a voice would come from somewhere in the room "CLOTHES STAY ON".
      ::

      I have an almost 2 who sleeps on a mat, but tries to get off at the beginning of nap EVERY DAY. Cracks me up, because she doesn't know I can see her through the monitor. Then, I say quietly into the monitor "B...get back on your mat". She RUNS back, lays down, and that's all. EVERY DAY for two or three weeks now. She's just gotta try....
      LOL, I can picture that, I have a pretty determined little one that was getting off her mat during nap as well. Love the video monitors

      I do agree, there shouldn't be a way to spend that much time trying to wriggle out of clothes up to 10 times a day- I'd be sure to keep a closer eye on her and stop her in the process. If she's squeezing out the necks of tighter clothes, and also getting out of duct-taped diapers, it has to take some time and she should be observed in the act. She shouldn't have that much time to do it so often during the day. Keep her in your "shadow" and stop it from the get-go! Maybe being consistent with that will take the fun out of it.

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      • LysesKids
        Daycare.com Member
        • May 2014
        • 2836

        #18
        Originally posted by ColorfulSunburst
        when some child tries don't let me to do what MUST be done I always say "I don't ask your permission I tell you what must be done."
        I have done that but then she takes it right off... and I put it on again. We have also had issues of her trying to eat non food items; Im talking dirt, powder and the like - that started about the same time as stripping so I am wondering if it's connected somehow

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        • LysesKids
          Daycare.com Member
          • May 2014
          • 2836

          #19
          Originally posted by TheGoodLife
          LOL, I can picture that, I have a pretty determined little one that was getting off her mat during nap as well. Love the video monitors

          I do agree, there shouldn't be a way to spend that much time trying to wriggle out of clothes up to 10 times a day- I'd be sure to keep a closer eye on her and stop her in the process. If she's squeezing out the necks of tighter clothes, and also getting out of duct-taped diapers, it has to take some time and she should be observed in the act. She shouldn't have that much time to do it so often during the day. Keep her in your "shadow" and stop it from the get-go! Maybe being consistent with that will take the fun out of it.
          Its not so easy to shadow her 100% because I have the 2 youngest (both under 4 months) and a special needs baby (like he sees 6 different Dr's - Foster baby ).... this kid is about to age out of my program and has always played independently with no issues until recently. The playroom is off the living/kitchen area so sometimes if I am feeding littles she goes to get her toys... She strips in front of people standing right next to her and we all stop her right then, but she just tries again regardless ( 3 adults watched her shed her leggings in seconds last night and we put them right back on - one was her mom)

          Comment

          • Kabob
            Daycare.com Member
            • Jun 2013
            • 1106

            #20
            I have her twin! Only now she doesn't do it anymore and it has been a year.

            She could strip off a piece of clothing in seconds. If I even so much as turned my head she would pop an arm out of the top of her shirt.

            I got her to stop after a week of constantly keeping her with me and redirecting. I'd say firmly "No. Leave it." And then "no" any time she repeated directly after that. I'd move her hands away from her clothes and onto a toy or something else to distract her. When making lunch or changing a diaper or anything else, she had to come with me or else she would start stripping. Apparently she too was allowed to run naked at home for early potty training reasons so that may have started it in her case. Mom also gave her a lot of attention for stripping of clothes and when she started replicating what I was doing here, she stopped entirely. She also had to quit allowing her naked time at home for a while too as I told dcm that I simply couldn't have a naked child here.

            Hope this is a simple issue that can be outgrown quickly and not one that is more deeply rooted in something else...

            Comment

            • Laurel
              Daycare.com Member
              • Mar 2013
              • 3218

              #21
              Maybe give her some dolls with clothes she can take off. Possibly she just likes taking off the clothes? I used to just put out naked dolls after a while because they'd constantly remove the clothes anyway.

              Maybe give her a basket of various kinds of socks, shoes, mittens, and make an activity of just letting her put them on and take them off. A box of dress up clothes and a mirror? Show her that the dress up clothes go over her clothes otherwise she can't have them. If they are tempting enough like sparkly crowns or cute purses or tutu's like I found at the dollar store, that might satisfy her put on and take off urge. Does she know how to put them back on? If not, I'd make sure she practiced. The theory being if she takes them off then she has to put them back on.

              All I can come up with as most suggestions have already been made.

              That said, we used to call my youngest "Teenie Houdini" but he was only an expert at getting out of his car seat and I'd look in my rear view mirror and see him walking along the back seat. I used shoe strings to tie his car seat straps together and that worked.

              Comment

              • LysesKids
                Daycare.com Member
                • May 2014
                • 2836

                #22
                Originally posted by Laurel
                Maybe give her some dolls with clothes she can take off. Possibly she just likes taking off the clothes? I used to just put out naked dolls after a while because they'd constantly remove the clothes anyway.

                Maybe give her a basket of various kinds of socks, shoes, mittens, and make an activity of just letting her put them on and take them off. A box of dress up clothes and a mirror? Show her that the dress up clothes go over her clothes otherwise she can't have them. If they are tempting enough like sparkly crowns or cute purses or tutu's like I found at the dollar store, that might satisfy her put on and take off urge. Does she know how to put them back on? If not, I'd make sure she practiced. The theory being if she takes them off then she has to put them back on.

                All I can come up with as most suggestions have already been made.

                That said, we used to call my youngest "Teenie Houdini" but he was only an expert at getting out of his car seat and I'd look in my rear view mirror and see him walking along the back seat. I used shoe strings to tie his car seat straps together and that worked.
                I got the dolls last night so she could strip them... of course it's a stressful day because I have the other Foster baby in care instead of her friend; this one has a restraining order against mom and this kid has never been here so the day is already upside down -

                Comment

                • Laurel
                  Daycare.com Member
                  • Mar 2013
                  • 3218

                  #23
                  Originally posted by LysesKids
                  I got the dolls last night so she could strip them... of course it's a stressful day because I have the other Foster baby in care instead of her friend; this one has a restraining order against mom and this kid has never been here so the day is already upside down -
                  This occupation is not for sissies! :: Hope your day gets better.

                  Laurel

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                  • Heidi
                    Daycare.com Member
                    • Sep 2011
                    • 7121

                    #24
                    Originally posted by LysesKids
                    I have done that but then she takes it right off... and I put it on again. We have also had issues of her trying to eat non food items; Im talking dirt, powder and the like - that started about the same time as stripping so I am wondering if it's connected somehow
                    Keep an eye on that Pica. My BFF's daughter had pica (no paper was safe!), plus some other unusual behaviors. At 2 1/2 or so, she talked in the 3rd person a lot (would refer to herself as "she"), and had a lot of temper tantrums over little things she couldn't control (like she HAD to walk up the stairs first, or every doorway first). Just a lot of "odd" little things. Turns out, she has OCD, and at 16, has been on medication for about 6 years. Mom caved on the meds when it got so bad with "poison" and "germs" in her food that the child lost 20 pounds. Oddly enough, she would eat dirt and paper at 8, but wouldn't eat FOOD at 10.

                    Just wondering if it's a tactile thing with your LO. I'd treat it like a behavior, but be mindful of what could come up later...

                    Comment

                    • LysesKids
                      Daycare.com Member
                      • May 2014
                      • 2836

                      #25
                      Mom is talking to the DR about the Pica issue because it started at home then came here... same with the stripping; today could have been much worse, but because of the new baby & a doll AND the backwards blanket sleeper (yep she slid one arm out just as she was dropped off - daddy caught her this time); she only managed to get down to the diaper 2 times today. I work 6:30-6:30 daily due to parents schedules so I am beat by end of the day... Next Thur we have the new Foster baby again & FRIDAY, THE OTHER ONE. (special needs out the ying yang).. I fit them in on days 2 sets of parents aren't scheduled to have their chid in care (one is here one day but not the next & vice versa for the other).

                      I've been doing this 14 years, but the PICA and stripping have never happened before, so I was at a loss

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