- #141
IcedEcliptic
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DaveC426913 said:This tends to be an indication of a more subtle form of dysfunction in the family.
A family whose control is through negative reinforcement will develop a child that responds to pain. A family that uses positive reinforcement
will more often have a child that does not wish to behave badly, and will more readily return to a positive state with the right encouragement. And this isn't limited to parents; it happens in classrooms as well.
Children learn what they are taught.What? Dogs do this all the time. Few dog owners will deny that their dog will misbehave to get attention, and will see what tehy can get away with.I have.
Pain is the simplest form of communication, and the crudest. There is a reason that even torture rarely relies on pain. The powerful tools are reason, emotion, and manipulation. If you're incapable of that with a child, then parenting may not be a good thing, I think. I think of the so called "Dog Whisperer" Cesar Milan, who despite a funny nickname is very good at his job! He understands that the issues, as DaveC246913 says, are systemic, not local. Consistency in discipline is the biggest factor, and setting limits you CAN enforce, yes?
So too with children, I believe. Send them to bed early, deny them a toy or restrict their activities. They do learn, barring developmental delay, which is also not good with a violent solution. Why does anyone believe that hitting children does anything, but hurt them? You get immediate cessation, but then they are testing the limits of your violence. Hitting them is not connected to their wrongdoing either, so there is only the pairing of stimuli, shorting the cognitive process. You are also striking a helpless person, much like striking a defenseless animal. Both with eventually resent that, and react to their situation by withdrawing, or acting out.
I am struck by Evo and Dave's stories, which show their children IMMEDIATE consequences of their actions, which they can ponder and learn from. "If I do bad thing Y, I will not get good thing Z!" What does hitting teach except: "If I do bad thing Y,I am struck. I will avoid Y," without a real connection of consequences. Life does not allow people to lash out physically, so it is better to realize that misbehavior leads to the loss of what you want, instead of pain. Bad pet owners and bad parents have more in common than either ever care to admit, this is what I believe.