I love the principle of love and logic of giving your kids choices and allowing for natural consiquences in life. Giving them freedom to have independence appropriate for each age. I started when my dd was a baby, when she went on solids I would give her choices of which food to eat at her meals. Two choices, both I could live with. Some of my friends laughed at me, but at that point I think it was more about me getting into the habit of giving her the choices than if she understood what she was choosing. Same with her clothes, two choices in the morning of what to wear, both already preselected by me. She is 2.5 now. She is a strong independent little girl, but she is also well behaved and responds well to choices. Tonight for example she tried to throw a tantrum at bedtime. Her daddy just changed shifts and is working swings now. He is normally her bath giver, story teller at night then I join for songs and snuggle time. She isn't enjoying the change. So she started this half whine half scream chant about sleeping in mommy's bed over and over so I said quietly you have a choice you can stop screaming and enjoy some time with mommy in your room and I can leave your door open, OR if you need to keep crying right now I can leave and shut your door while you have your cry out it is your decision. she kept going and I said since you have chosen to keep crying I will close your door until you are done and I turned to walk out as I stepped through the door and turned to shut it she turned off just like that and quietly said mommy, please leave the door open. I asked OH! are you done crying. Yes. Then you may have the door open. I love you. and that was the end of it. I know it was that simple because we have been consistent. I still get frustrated sometimes and slip up, that is natural part of mommying BUT knowing how to use the love and logic principles gets me back on track it is easy to go to her and say I am sorry I raised my voice or got frustrated with her and talk about it and move forward. My dad teaches love and logic classes, so that is where I have learned about it. I haven't actually ever read the book! *eek I know!!** lol but I really like how the process works. One more story for you if you don't mind...(if you do just quit reading haha) I had a foreign exchange daugther come live with me this past school year. One day she and a friend left me waiting for them at the mall for 2.5 hours. I was steamed, LIVID. ready to take away every priviledge she had. I had to drive home to get her cell phone which she had lost the priviledge of the week before for breaking curfew (we maintained the cell phone so that we could have parent power) so I could call her friend because I didn't have the friends cell number in my phone. She had been living with us for 5 months and had NEVER done anything like this. I didn't raise her so there was no precidence...I called my dad as I drove home for the cell phone. He let me vent and then he gave me love and logic advice. He told me that when I picked her up to tell her that I did not want to talk about it tonight and to cheerfully say Try not to worry. We'll talk about it tomorrow when I am calm. I said I WANT her to worry, and he said that is the point, if you say Try not to worry she will. He said even if you calm down, if she approaches you about talking about it today say, we'll talk about it tomorrow. Try not to worry, but you might want to think about what you think a fair consiquence will be. When we sat down I asked her why she thought I was upset. She told me--and then she apologized and was crying and said she thought that not having her cell phone for the rest of the month was a good punishment. Next phase my dad told me it doesn't matter if what they choose is rediculously easy, mostly kids will be too hard and you have to talk them back to something more fair, but even if they choose the easiest consiquence you ask, will that fix the situation so it won't happen again? and if the answer is yes, then say and if it happens again what do you think should happen? they give a consiquence you agree on. and you rejoice that they failed. That they learned about consiquences for negative behavior when it doesn't really matter that much. amazingly I was really calm by time we talked the next day. and we never fought. We had a great bonding moment that shaped the rest of our relationship. which was wonderful (in fact we are going to Korea to stay with her for a couple of weeks, and her brother is coming to live with us next year) I don't know all the ins and outs of love and logic but my dad has really helped me navigate the principles of it and it has really worked for us, so yeah, I recommend that you learn more about it and find the balance of it that will work for you and your family. For the time out situation, stating, I'm sorry you think this is funny, I'm disappointed in your behavior. When you are ready to talk about it come and get me. I always talk to my dd after time out and I don't say how long she has to stay. I put her in time out and tell her what behavior I she is there for and when she is ready to talk about it to come get me. sometimes it is right then and sometimes she takes a bit to think about it--but we never end time out without a talk about why she was there. the change over to the love and logic will throw him probably and he will probably rebel at first but consistency is really what they are looking for and to know what power they have, which is why the choices are so awesome, it teaches them that they do have control in their world. And since we give the choices, they are always ones we can live with which helps provide safe boundaries for them to explore how to be little people.