How to Get Your Kids to Pick Up Their Toys
I didn’t understand it. They would have their room picked up, but a few hours later, it would be messy again. Toys all over the floor, blankets on the floor. Toys in the hallway; toys downstairs.
I definitely was getting tired of looking at the mess, tired of stepping on Legos, but it was XXL Kuscheltierethan that. I was aggravated that they didn’t appreciate what they had!
When I was growing up, we had only a few toys. I took good care of those toys – I still have my Tinker Toys in the original metal can with the included instruction book – and I’m 37!
My parents didn’t have to nag me all the time – I don’t think – to pick up my toys. I know that I appreciated them because they were so few and far between.
My kids have been less fortunate in that respect – tons of toys from Grandparents and relatives for Christmas.
Toys that move, make noises, and you name it.
They definitely don’t appreciate the abundance of toys that they have. So, I figured that I’d teach them what it’s like to appreciate them or they wouldn’t get to have any!
One day I told them that every time I stepped on a toy, or had to pick up pieces of a set, or had to pick up something that was left out, it was going in the trash.
And that’s what I did. But it didn’t work.
You see, they ended up having ALL their toys in the trash. It was annoying because there wasn’t anything left to play with when other kids came over.
And it still didn’t solve the problem of not appreciating what they had.
They didn’t even have time to miss the toys – they didn’t have to. It was only a short while before the next birthday or holiday brought in a new batch of them.
So, with my thinking cap on, I came up with my next plan of attack – a sticker and reward chart system.
They were excited, thrilled, and motivated. When they got up in the morning, they’d do all the things on their chart, anxious to have the boxes filled up with stickers.
But, stickers and reward charts only work once a day! When the “my toys are picked up” box has a sticker, the rest of the day went down the tube.
And, it didn’t work to just give stickers at bedtime. They had no motivation to pick up during the day, and it became a nightmare divvying out all the stickers when bedtime already dragged on longer than it should!
So, I gave up for awhile. The lecture method didn’t work, the “tossing toys” method didn’t work, and the reward chart didn’t work the way I wanted it too.
My kids were messy and unappreciative, and I needed to do something about it – fast.
My friend Judi didn’t have that problem. Her kids got out one toy at a time – even when company was over – and put up that toy before getting out the next. When it was time to leave their house, it was a snap to clean up with just one toy per child.
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