Hi S.,
Some advice that I received from an “older mom” (probably more than 10 yrs ago at this point) still rings very true in our home. It seemed oversimplified when I received it but is likely the best parenting advice I’ve gotten. It was this—“understand that you are the parent and he is the child.” What this has meant in our home is that certain behavior isn’t tolerated. We have three children, ages 14, 4, and 2 and I can honestly say that we’ve experienced only one tantrum in our 14+ years of raising kids. The first one tried it once in a store (maybe 11 or 12 yrs ago) and it didn’t work out too well for her. It hasn’t been an issue since. Respecting our parental authority isn’t optional either. You know your children better than anyone else and are in the best position to determine what the consequence is for your child not staying within his boundaries; however, I suggest that you establish that you’re not one of his friends or even his brother. You are his mother and he needs to understand, respect, and abide by the rules for a number of reasons. Children are first taught boundaries and to respect authority in their homes. If they ignore these teachings in the home, they will likely have problems transitioning to a classroom setting. More importantly, if they do not get this foundation early, it will be hard to break the pattern later. I would also ask if you and your husband are on the same page in terms of what is appropriate behavior. Do your discipline styles reinforce each other or undermine each other. Children are brilliant and will pick up on any cracks in the armor of a united front.
Another consideration is that he may feel like the middle child as you care for your nephew full time. He may be “acting out” in an attempt to get your attention. Is there in correlation between when you started caring for your nephew and when his behavior changed? I find that we spend a lot of time reinforcing for our 4 year old her place in our family. We call it MCS—middle child syndrome :-). However, we don’t reward bad behavior by giving her attention because she acts act. We let her know that if you need attention, extra hugs and kisses, someone to play with you etc., the most effective way to accomplish that is use your words. Crying, whining, etc are not acceptable forms of communication and will only cause you to be sent to your room.
The bottom line is that our children have the options we create for them. Respecting your authority and responding in obedience shouldn’t be optional. I’ve told my kids (and sometimes my husband… lol) for years that we can do things the easy way or the hard way but the outcome will be the same. More often than not they opt for the easy way! I’ve found that once I understood the relationship between me and my children, I gained incredible peace because it was not longer a battle of wills. Respect and obedience simply aren’t optional in our home.
Lastly, it sounds like you spend the majority of your time with the kids. A change of scenery every once in a while is good. Treat yourself and schedule some time by yourself or at least without the kids on occasion. Give them a chance to miss you; they’ll likely appreciate you even more. I hope you’ll find something helpful in what I’ve shared and know that they don’t stay this age long. In a few short years you’ll look back and miss this time despite the challenges :-)!