- Avoid taking a child on a shopping trip that
will last longer than 30 minutes.
Shopping in crowds is hard on everyone.
There are alternatives.
- Trade off with a friend
- Shop when a spouse can babysit
- Hire a sitter.
- Avoid shopping with a child prior to nap
time.
No one is on their best behavior when
tired and sleepy. If you have hopes that the
child will sleep in the stroller, give it up
now. Children never sleep when you need them
to.
- Shop with a friend.
Someone can always keep an eye on the
little ones. Never let a child out of your
sight.
- If your toddler is an adventurer, don't be
embarrassed to use a harness or wrist bands.
Holiday crowds make it difficult to keep
up with quick toddlers. Anyone who stares at
you never had a child like yours and
couldn't possibly understand. Keeping your
child safe is all that matters.
- Never take a hungry child anywhere.
Plan stops for snacks or take snacks with
you. Two year olds fall apart when they get
hungry. They have no sense of time and
"in a minute" is the same as maybe
never. If they get hungry, feed them NOW.
- Children can shop for longer periods of time
if the pace is quick.
They do not browse well. If you know what
you want, get it, and move on. If you don't
know, wait till you do before you come back.
- Keep something special for the checkout
counter.
Give the special toy or treat to the
child for those few minutes of your
attention that the child must share.
- Act like the adult. If your child falls
apart, stay calm. One temper tantrum does
not deserve another.
Realize that the shopping expedition is
over and leave the store. A tired, hungry,
bored child can not listen to reason.
- With preschoolers, plan the shopping trip
and ask for their cooperation.
Let them help make decisions when
appropriate and promise them anything
realistic when the trip is successful.
Preschoolers can muster all kinds of
patience for an ice cream cone.
- Make the trip to visit Santa a solo event.
Children cannot wait until the shopping
is over. All you will hear is, "When do
we get to see Santa?" every three
minutes. If you visit Santa first, they will
be finished and ready to go home. No
shopping now, thank you.
- Take one child at a time for a special
shopping trip.
Children are so delighted with this
singular attention that they will be on
their best behavior. This is a wonderful
time to find special gifts for the other
parent and other siblings. Include lunch and
it will become a favorite Christmas
tradition.
- Apply the same principles to spouses and
other adults.
Parenting takes patience and kindness.
Shopping with children requires qualities
that border sainthood. Make certain that YOU
aren't exhausted or hungry when you start
your expedition and success is more likely.