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Tantrums & behaviour

Toddler Whining: How to Handle It Without Snapping

Whining is engineered by nature to be impossible to ignore. It usually means a need (tired, hungry, disconnected) dressed up in an irritating voice.

Check the need first

Most whining spikes when a toddler is tired, hungry, or craving attention. Meet the need and the whine often dissolves.

Calmly name the voice

'I can't understand the whiny voice. Tell me in your strong voice.' Said warmly, not as a put-down.

Respond fast to the strong voice

The moment they ask normally, respond quickly and warmly so the normal voice clearly works better.

Don't reward the whine

Giving in mid-whine teaches that whining is the magic key. Wait for the reset, then say yes if you can.

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Frequently asked questions

Why does my toddler whine so much?

Whining is a low-energy bid for connection or help, usually when they're depleted. It's developmentally normal and peaks in the toddler and preschool years.

How do I get my toddler to stop whining?

Meet the underlying need, calmly ask for a normal voice, respond quickly when they use it, and avoid rewarding the whine itself. Consistency is what shifts it.

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