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Rkz, have you found the occasion to need to use any punishments other than discussion with your son?
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I'll tell you what I learned from being spanked as a child:
I deserve to be hit. And that carried over into not one, but two, abusive marriages. Violence gets people's attention. Just as dear old mom and dad hit me when I smartmouthed them, why shouldn't I hit classmate X when they mock me? There is a very thin line between spanking and abuse and when a parent loses their temper, that line gets real blurry, real fast. The child learns to endure the hitting and starts to ignore your admonitions, so you hit harder and longer to regain that control. Children become numb to being spanked/hit, so you have to up the ante. First it's a smack on the hand, then the bottom, then a full-fledged multi-hit spanking, then you get out the belt. Slap them across the face this time, and it's a short trip to punching them in the mouth next time. Fear is NOT respect Fear as well as anger produce adreneline. It can be addictive to feel the surge of adreneline when you get angry or fearful. But this doesn't help anyone use their powers of reason or intellect to solve problems. Obeying the rules out of fear doesn't instill internal values, rather, it teaches a child to not get caught. Pain = love "I'm doing this because I love you." "If I didn't love you so much, I wouldn't care, but because I do love you, I must punish you by hurting you". After a spanking, possibly while one's buttocks are still burning, you get a hug or cuddle. So love=pain=love. But ask me what I was being spanked FOR...and I couldn't answer you. I don't remember the reasons, the transgressions that I committed, or the lessons I was being taught. Very effective, those spankings :headshake . |
Sure, time-out, taking away privileges, toys, things/activities that he likes. But, even those are always just things to get his attention when he is too wound-up so we can explain why what he did was wrong so he can understand it, the only reason to punish a child.
There is always something that you can do that is not hitting that is more important to a child than being hit. Still, those times are VERY rare, usually, he responds to discussion first and having us being disappointed in him and just the idea of doing something wrong is worse than anything else. He has morals. Yes Dana, if they hit their kid, at that moment, they are violent... that is the definition. Again, what does it teach them? I think Stormie just told us. |
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I said you are claiming opinions as facts. That is all. I am not avoiding saying anything -you are trying to put words in my mouth and then argue about it. I am expressing no opinion on the rights and wrongs of "spanking" because I'm not entirely sure what my opinion is. But I do object to half-assed amateur shrinks expounding their beliefs as "facts", no matter how logical they may be. Violence is not the only way to be a bully. I do hope this is not the way you "discuss" right and wrong with your son. |
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This article says it better than I can:
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This topic always amuses me when it comes into play. Its like the tattooed person v's a non tattooed person. How about, you parent your way and I will parent mine? Difference is, I wont try and force my way down your throat and think my opinion is a fact ;) |
"Mom Accused of Hitting Kids on Flight
DENVER (AP) -- Flight crews appropriately handled a passenger accused of repeatedly hitting her two young children on a Frontier Airlines flight, a company spokesman said. An FBI affidavit alleges that Tamera Jo Freeman, 38, hit and cursed at her 4-year-old daughter and 2-year-old son during a flight from San Francisco to Denver on Monday. It also alleges that she assaulted and intimidated a flight attendant who intervened. Freeman was arrested after the plane landed and was held for investigation of interference with a flight crew and assault on children, both federal charges. A judge said at a brief hearing Friday in U.S. District Court that she would remain in custody until another hearing next week. The flight attendant intervened in the middle or near the end of the flight, and crew members followed airline rules, Frontier spokesman Joe Hodas said. The flight crew served Freeman two drinks, he said. The children have been placed in the custody of relatives in California. Freeman's hometown wasn't released, and her court-appointed attorney, Martha Eskesen, declined to comment outside the courtroom Friday. The FBI affidavit said Freeman told an investigator she "lost it" and slapped her children during the flight because they were fighting over the window shade and because her daughter had spilled a drink. Six witnesses said Freeman hit the children on their legs, shoulders and knees, the affidavit said. Freeman appeared "drunk and violent" toward the children even before she boarded the plane, the affidavit said. Freeman faces up to 21 years in prison and fines up to $350,000 if convicted of both charges." A fitting punishment??? |
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There are road rules. No one rewards you for following them, but if you don't, you're going to either get booked, in an accident or killed. There are house rules. You might get rewarded if you follow them although I don't agree with this philosophy. I believe every individual in the household is responsible for certain things which may include jobs, but it also includes being considerate of the other members of the household. This is an every day courtesy and I don't see why anyone should be rewarded for that other than being thanked for their efforts. I don't reward my kids with lollies and treats or extra screen time. They get enough junk when I'm not watching, and they spend too much time watching tv etc already. They are rewarded by knowing they've got parents who love them and care for them, and who go out of their way to make their lives better. It's a parents moral responsibility to teach kids to realize there's more to life than just them. I don't subscribe to all this new bullshit people keep coming up with about not smacking etc. Some kids need a wack every once in a while. Others don't. There are enough selfish people in the world already. I wont have my kids growing up thinking they're the centre of the universe and if they need a smack once in a while to bring them back down to earth, that's what they're going to get. If you want my honest opinion - in case you don't get it yet - there's too much navel gazing going on these days and not enough doing. |
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spanking is fabulous! i prefer the nekkid hand or a wide, flat brush, hard enough to sting a little...
oh, wait, are we talking about spanking kids??? |
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I do not steal his toys, I only keep him from playing with them until the next day, and that is a last resort... usually we use a time-out until he is calm and our conversations are very loving. He does not wish to do wrong, we have instilled a desire to do the right thing for the right reasons... not a fear of being hit or embarrassed in public. Quote:
"It's not nice to hit people; children are people." - Pam Leo Quote:
That answers the question. |
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But you didn't answer the question. If using spanking as a punishment by definition teaches that child that hitting will solve their problems, then doesn't taking away their toys by definition teach the child that taking other people's things (even temporarily) will solve their problems? Or is it possible that both can be experienced by the child for what they are, a specific punishment, handed down from adult to child, as a consequence of a specific behavior, without any extra emotional baggage? [begin tangential rant]The most irritating thing in the world is listening to people who have only one child telling others how to parent. Those with no children are commonly railed against for offering their two cents, but to a certain degree even they know that it might be different were they really in the parents' shoes. But the parent with one child thinks they have it all figured out, that because they know how to parent their child, they have the whole of parenting mastered. The minute you have a second child, you realize that every single child is different, even ones who share both genes and environment, and nothing can be the end-all solution for every child. We have a child, for example, whom we have never spanked--because he asks for it. I mean that quite literally, when he is in trouble he requests a spanking in lieu of other punishments. This is a child who has always been stoic, even as a toddler if he fell he would blink back tears and insist that he was "fine" even though he was limping. Obviously spanking would not be an effective punishment with him, so we never have--but the fact remains that if he would prefer it, can it really be said that it would emotionally scar him more than it does when we have to take away his beloved (and I mean beloved) trucks? Meanwhile, in another thread on this topic, lookout123 shared the story of his three-year-old, whose inappropriate behavior led to the typical punishment of his favorite toy being taken away. His son calmly went into his room, and began bringing all of his toys out one by one and laying them at his parents' feet. "You can take all of these too, because I'm going to keep doing it." Each child responds to different punishments, but almost all young children require some punishment at some time. The brain goes through distinct levels of maturity with regard to morality, and a two-year-old simply does not understand the concept of empathy or right and wrong yet. Ultimately, the goal would be that by the age of 5 or so, they understand the idea of doing things simply because they are right, and for the most part no longer require punishing. But prior to that age, each child has their own completely unique way of interpreting and responding to the world around them, and being a successful parent to one doesn't mean jack squat about how well one would do with a different kid. [/end rant] |
Great "tangential rant" clod - I'll add that the third child changes the dynamic exponentially too. I think I hit my youngest son once - AFTER he hit his mother and he was plenty old enough to know what he did and how wrong it was. That message was received. We discussed, some time later, what exactly had happened and the whys so on - Its been years and there has never been another isue with it. Proper parenting is as different as we all are. There is no "one way" to do it.
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