Ahhh... toddlerdom... when kids switch from knowing what they NEED to knowing what they WANT.
My son threw terrific tantrums starting from shortly after his 1st b-day (lasted for about 6 months... and then he was a LOVE, absolute love until he was 3, and we had the terrible 3s in our house.
We too, used the crib as a timeout spot, and for us it was ideal for several reasons:
- He couldn't get out, so we weren't adding a battle of will in with him learning to cope with emotions, so the timeouts stayed specific to the problem.
- He was SAFE. I mentioned those terrific all body tantrums, yes?
- His crib became a place of comfort for him, because he calmed DOWN in it. (We didn't ever follow the 1 minute per year rule, we waited until he was calmed and we'd been able to talk and smile and hug... aka the problem was resolved... before TimeOut was over. (We didn't upgrade until he was almost too LONG for the crib... at 3.5, and he cried and cried because it was his special place.)
It took several months for kiddo to get a grasp on rules & emotions when he was 1ish. Some days it was in and out of timeout like it was a carnival ride, & I collapsed at the end of the day to sleep. Gradually though he got the drift. The single most important thing I was ever warned about was to "pick your battles, and then NEVER give in". Aka consistancy. Apparently there's a psychological truth with primates... if something happens even once, we try again and again to make it happen. So picking battles is uber important, as is not caving for any reason... unless one wants to teach that SOMETIMES we cave. That promotes allllllll kinds of experiments to see how that person can be made to cave again.
Our absolutes were "hurting someone = instant timeout" and "you throw a fit you don't get what you want, period, even after you've calmed down AND timeout". We gradually added rules over time, as he got older.
Obviously, once kids start entering the age of reason (aka not toddlers) certain rules can be relaxed or changed for certain reasons, but the child has to really understand and be able to understand the difference. As an example, our "no hitting/hurting rule" changed to "When is it okay to hurt someone? When you're protecting yourself, someone else, or you're learning how to fight."
Best of Luck and big hugs... this is a hard age.
R