Mitchell, my seven-year old son, has what I consider to be a nasty habit. He chews on the collars of his shirts. Yesterday before he went to school, I had the following conversation with him:
Me: "Mitchell, I'm giving you this shirt to wear today. Do you notice that the collar is completely free of chew marks?"
Mitchell: "Yes."
Me: "Will it still be like this when you get home from school today?"
Mitchell: "Yes."
Me: "Okay, buddy. I'm counting on you to leave your collar alone today, okay? I love you."
End of conversation.
Well, when Mitchell got off the bus after school and walked into the house, the first thing I noticed was his shirt collar. Not that I was purposely checking that out the minute he walked through the door, but it was kind of hard not to notice. The collar had a piece chewed out of it about 2 inches by 4 inches in size. This is the biggest "hole" he's ever made in his shirt! I was flabbergasted. When I asked him about it, he smiled and said, "I couldn't help it." He said sorry and that was about it.
Later that evening I informed Mitchell that if he continued to chew on his shirts, he would have privileges taken away, namely, the ability to drive the new kid's quad 4x4 which we bought on EBay recently. We are expecting it to arrive this week, and I know that he will be very upset if he's not allowed to drive it.
Today Mitchell's shirt for the day began free of chew damage. He himself told me that he was not going to chew his shirt at school today, because he doesn't want his quad privileges taken away from him. When he got home from school . . . no chewing! I didn't think it would be possible, but apparently he's more aware of this chewing habit than I thought. I was thinking he was doing it without thinking, which he probably was to some degree, but he managed to make it through the day without destroying his collar! I am so proud of him!
This morning I researched this topic on the Internet, and confirmed my suspicions about what the underlying cause of this behavior is: stress, anxiety, fear. What he's doing is considered a "tensional outlet" (other examples of this include hair-chewing, nail-biting, sucking on clothing). Even though Mitchell appears to be confident and secure, I suspect that deep down inside, he isn't. He just started at his new school in January, and I think, despite how well we've been led to believe he's adjusting, internally it's not going as well as it appears. The advice from the child psychologist on one of the sites I visited said to ignore the behavior and it will eventually self-remedy. My talking to him about it and nagging him apparently will make it worse. However, she did suggest, for an older child, to use a rewards system as incentive to quit. I think my consequences for him chewing on his shirt sort of fits that suggestion; I'm not going to make a sticker chart or anything like that . . . I'm just going to keep praising him on the days he makes it without chewing, and reward him with riding the quad or with whatever else seems appropriate at the time.
So, anyone else out there have a similar struggle with their kids chewing or sucking on their clothing? Do you think what I've got set up as incentive to quit is appropriate for a seven-year old? What would you do in this situation? Ignore it? Take him to the doctor? Implement another plan? I'd love feedback.