dwayne1115 said:
Not only because i hate to see my kids in pain or sad, but then there is if you hit your child it is child abuse.
Well, today it is in the United States.
I'm torn on the subject. I have a cousin who could be grounded, have privileges taken away, or beaten to a pulp -- nothing. She is much like her parents (and my immediate family) ... God forbid you learn that screwing up means negative consequences.
My brother and I were both punished in the ways mentioned above. We're only slightly psycho, LOL. The weird thing is, we turned out 180 degrees different from my cousin. No matter where we work, we usually get the impression that we are the only ones with any fundamental ethics.
It's something I told my fourth-grade students back when I was a teacher: You have a bad childhood? Join the club. You don't have a choice for how you grow up ... but you CAN choose to be just like your moronic parents or you can choose to be BETTER. Part of the reason my bro and I got Bear and Sarah (our Lab pups) was to prove to ourselves that we could parent better. The dogs are usually described by others as well-behaved despite the fact we didn't have the money to go for formal training. We got them at 5 weeks and treated the care like a newborn baby ... toilet every two hours (I was out of school during last summer, so that made it feasible), take them outside to go, teach them "walk" and "sit" as early as possible, etc. They're a little rambunctious, but they're good kids, almost to the point of being a bit too naive, according to their day camp staff.
frogboy4 said:
A lot of bad behavior stems from a young person's lack of choices so it's helpful to compartmentalize the times when they are given options and the times they must obey.
I hesitate to agree or disagree since there are whole textbooks' worth of causes for bad behavior, ranging from bad parenting to medical conditions.
The incentive for studying for a class that a child doesn't care about is that the grade could help or hinder their non-related pursuits in the future and that there's no way of knowing how things will work out.
The problem with this is that it's psychologically inappropriate. Children (and to a lesser extent, teens) can't think that far ahead. The long-term future is a mystical dream to them. I can appreciate the newest "pay for good grades" concept. A lot of people complain that students should learn for the sake of learning -- but that's hypocritical considering adults want their paycheck for going to work. We don't work for free and we shouldn't expect our children to. It's not sending a coherent message.
Drtooth said:
Sure, raising a kid is the toughest and most expensive thing you'll ever do if you so choose. I don;t want to do it, I think I'd be terrible at it, and even if I was capable of a relationship, I'd make sure NEVER to have one.
Yeah, I don't want one either. Parenting the dogs is enough, LOL. I realize that means I'll probably die alone, but I don't like the idea of having children to ensure my comfort at the elderly stage either. I once got into a heated argument on beliefnet over parenting and whether people had kids for selfless reasons. A lot of people were mad at me for suggesting that parents want an insurance policy at least. I asked, "If your child grows up and tells you to go to you-know-where when you need care, would you be mad?" They said yes. I nodded. "Then you expected your kids to be your insurance policy. Stop being in denial." After having to deal with a class full of unparented or badly parented children, the thought of having my own kids just gives me nightmares, LOL.
I've been on this soap box forever now, and all I can say is that we have a generation of parents who can't raise their kids.
What I've always found amusing is that the Baby Boomers (my Mom's generation) griped about how awful their strict parents were ... but who really raised me and my brother with half an ounce of sense? My maternal grandparents. We learned more about how to live adult lives from them when we visited (and later had to live with after the divorce because my Mom couldn't afford her own place) than from our own parents. My father was going to just kick us out of the house at 18 regardless of how ready we were. My mother has trouble dealing with the idea that babies grow up and what worked at age 2 doesn't help when you're 32. So, yes, I'll call it ... the sixties really messed up our society (that's not to say pre-sixties were all that grand ... but I bet I can trace a lot of our current issues to the sixties ... unless of course you count that the sixties rebelled against the fifties ... ugh ... head ... hurt).
How many times do I have to calmly whisper it as a suggestion?"
See, my younger brother doesn't have this problem. Children are terrified of him, even though he's really sweet. He just gives off the air of "mess up and you'll die", LOL.