R.B.
Hi K.,
Im sure you have probably tried this allready, but have you involved your daughter in making the milk or whatever it is that she is impatient for? My daughter who is now 2 went through similar phases to this, and in our case it was also centered around food prep--though by no means limited to it. I dont think it was the actual food she was having a fit over, rather I feel her upset was due to me or her Dad being out of the room or diverting our attention from her--all to do with her emerging independence and new found ability to assert control over things coupled with a spike in separation anxiety. If I left the room to quickly refill her juice---she would have a complete fit. I started, around 10-11 months including her in simple food prep and it changed this dramatically. Not only was she more interested in whatever food I was preparing (she can be such a picky eater) but it gave her a clear sense of involvement and pride in helping Mum and Dad. She understood that it took time for, say, eggs to cook. Its not like she all of a sudden understood what 2 minutes meant, but she really got that it didnt happen instantly. I dont think that racing to meet her demands is necessarily rewarding the behaviour you dont want to encourage. I think what you are rewarding is her attempt to communicate her needs to you, even if what they are exactly gets lost in translation, she knows that you are trying and I really think thats whats important.
Good luck, I know hard and exhausting this can be, and while its going on it can feel like the behaviour will never change. My daughter just turned 2 and while we still have days like this, they are really the exception and mostly those really impatient days are days that I havent had the time to let her help me as much as she wanted. I dont mean to imply she now has the patience of a saint, on the contrary I think she is now has what I would expect is a "normal" amount of patience for a toddler.
Hope this helped,
Rose