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  1. I love this list! I receive compliments on how well my children get along practically every time we leave the house, but I didn’t know what, specifically, I was doing “right”… I guess (THANKFULLY) guiding sibling harmony comes naturally for me. Anyway, this list is fantastic and I agree. I especially like the point about “communal toys”. That is a policy we have too, but I never thought much about it. We are just a sharing family. But reading your explanation made me realize how much of a positive impact this must be having. I teach my kids to give each other personal space when it is requested, but other than that they share absolutely everything, and I regularly show them examples of Mommy and Daddy and other adults sharing and taking turns. Great list, and next time someone asks me “how do you do it?” I will send them to your blog!!

    1. Don’t you love it when that happens? I absolutely love figuring out that I did something right and then why it works. 🙂 Especially when I’m prone to feeling the other way about myself!

  2. Hi Kim,
    How do you handle the sharing rule when your child receives something for their birthday or Christmas. I try to do the sharing rule too. I always tell my boys it is for everyone to play with and my younger one is fine with this. However, my 6 year old always comes back with but it’s mine. I got it for my birthday. Is there anything you tell your children to address these types of comments?
    Thanks! Love your Bible studies by the way! Keep making them……..I purchased 3 of them and I want all of them 🙂 Perfect for my 4 and 6 year old as a family Bible study!

    1. We have the sharing rule in place as well for my 2 boys. But to answer your question, if it is a personal item; stuffed animal, special interest item, then it goes on their bed or their designated shelf. If it is a regular toy then they get to keep it for themselves for the first day and then it becomes free game. The first day rule works for us because let’s face it after one day the novelty wears off anyway.

      1. I agree with all you said except the sharing rule. I suggest to you that as Christians, we are called to be generous and to take care of one’s property. We are not called to have everything free and “share” everything unless by consent (acts 2-45) as if there isn’t any private property. We should instill in our children how God allows us to have certain things and when given to us individually, then we are to manage and care for these items as the Lord has entrusted us with them. Now we are also called to be generous and care for others and what they might feel especially our family. So we should instill the Christian character of generosity and charity. Being loving means when your brother really wants your toy truck, you can let him play with it for a little while, but brother also has to take care of the truck because it belongs to someone else. We care for our own property as well as others. I believe it is equipping them for the real world. I suggest to you that sharing as in giving means generosity, sharing as in everything belongs to everybody is pure ideology/socialism and not biblical.

  3. This list is AMAZING! I wish that I had it when my girls were younger. It makes so much sense. We will certainly implement as much of it as is possible starting today. Thanks for sharing.

  4. Thank you for the great tips. In answer to the “but it’s mine” issue, it’s worked well for me it say “Yes, this toy is your to share, you are it’s guardian and I expect you to make sure to share it with everyone”. Of course ensued issues such as “mom, he only shared it for 30seconds”. So instead i had to sit down with the child that had the special toy and reason on what would be a good length of time to share that toy, or special care rules their sibling needed to follow if they wanted to play with that special or gifted toy. So the question was not “if” they were gonna share anymore, now it was about their stewardship of the things that have been given to them. Of course I would not encourage toddlers to have unsafe things shared with them such as a snow globe or something fragile, but even then you could se up the boundaries, each the older sibling to say “ok, I’ll show it to you on the couch for 1 minute if you sit nicely with it”. Also one of the rules is that if they break someone’s special toy, they are expected to replace it or pay for a new one, cause the kids got too good at saying “oups, sorry” and walking away. So they either had to give their own, or give the money value from their savings or find a replacement from a store or online. Made them think twice about being rough with a siblings special toy.

  5. This is a well placed list. I myself practice all of the first 4 and how effective they are… Especially the one in which if the siblings have a dispute over a toy, the toy is mine, now they know that if they can’t negotiate among themselves, they both lose…
    I haven’t tried some of the consequences list, except that when I deal with a situation, it is usually never a quick punishment and forget, but rather we take time to discuss what happened, why it is hurtful and against fundamental family and Christian values and then they are asked to sit with folded hands to think and discuss what happened among themselves. Then we come back again to discuss the conclusion. So in other words, they see that issues are really serious matter that needs to be avoided…

  6. I’m glad I found your blog. It’s been the best one on sibling fighting so far … I really need to work on this because I am loosing myself and patience and it’s not becoming good. I’m praying to implement this over the week as a start. Thank you.

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