
The Boards
Activities
Reading List
Resources
Info Alley
Mom's Lounge
The Experts
Speak
|
A parenting community concentrating on diaper, cloth diapering, breastfeeding, and baby clothes free auctions as well
as a Market with attachment parenting products.
Ten Reasons Not to Hit Your Kids
|
|
| | In Norway and Sweden, it is illegal for a parent, teacher, or anyone else to
spank a child. In some states and provinces, it is only illegal for a teacher
to spank. In all areas of North America, physical punishment by a parent,
as long as it is not severe, is still seen by many as necessary discipline,
and condoned, or even encouraged.
For the past several years, many psychiatrists,
sociological researchers, and parents have
recommended that we seriously consider banning
the physical punishment of children. The most
important reason, according to Dr. Peter Newell,
coordinator of the organization End Punishment of
Children (EPOCH)1, is that "all people have the
right to protection of their physical integrity, and
children are people too."2
-
Hitting children teaches them to become hitters themselves. Extensive
research data is now available to support a direct correlation between
corporal punishment in childhood and aggressive or violent behavior in the
teenage and adult years. Virtually all of the most dangerous criminals
were regularly threatened and punished in childhood. It is nature's plan
that children learn attitudes and behaviors through observation and
imitation of their parents' actions, for good or ill. Thus it is the
responsibility of parents to set an example of empathy and wisdom.
- In many cases of so-called "bad behavior", the child is simply
responding in the only way he can, given his age and experience, to
neglect of basic needs. Among these needs are: proper sleep and
nutrition, treatment of hidden allergy, fresh air, exercise, and sufficient
freedom to explore the world around him. But his greatest need is for his
parents' undivided attention. In these busy times, few children receive
sufficient time and attention from their parents, who are often too
distracted by their own problems and worries to treat their children with
patience and empathy. It is surely wrong and unfair to punish a child for
responding in a natural way to having important needs neglected. For this
reason, punishment is not only ineffective in the long run, it is also clearly
unjust.
- Punishment distracts the child from learning how to resolve conflict in
an effective and humane way. As the educator John Holt wrote, "When we
make a child afraid, we stop learning dead in its tracks." A punished child
becomes preoccupied with feelings of anger and fantasies of revenge,
and is thus deprived of the opportunity to learn more effective methods of
solving the problem at hand. Thus, a punished child learns little about how
to handle or prevent similar situations in the future.
- "Spare the rod and spoil the child", though much quoted, is in fact a
misinterpretation of Biblical teaching. While the "rod" is mentioned many
times in the Bible, it is only in the Book of Proverbs that this word is used
in connection with parenting. In fact, King Solomon's harsh methods of
discipline led his own son, Rehoboam, to become a tyrannical and
oppressive dictator who only narrowly escaped being stoned to death for
his cruelty. In the Bible there is no support for harsh discipline outside of
Solomon's Proverbs. Jesus saw children as being close to God, and
urged love, never punishment.3
- Punishment interferes with the bond between parent and child, as it is
not human nature to feel loving toward someone who hurts us. The true
spirit of cooperation which every parent desires can arise only through a
strong bond based on mutual feelings of love and respect. Punishment,
even when it appears to work, can produce only superficially good
behavior based on fear, which can only take place until the child is old
enough to resist. In contrast, cooperation based on respect will last
permanently, bringing many years of mutual happiness as the child and
parent grow older.
- Many parents never learned in their own childhood that there are
positive ways of relating to children. When punishment does not
accomplish the desired goals, and if the parent is unaware of alternative
methods, punishment can escalate to more frequent and dangerous
actions against the child.
- Anger and frustration which cannot be safely expressed by a child
become stored inside; angry teenagers do not fall from the sky. Anger that
has been accumulating for many years can come as a shock to parents
whose child now feels strong enough to express this rage. Punishment
may appear to produce "good behavior" in the early years, but always at a
high price, paid by parents and by society as a whole, as the child enters
adolescence and early adulthood.
- Spanking on the buttocks, an erogenous zone in childhood, can create
in the child's mind an association between pain and sexual pleasure, and
lead to difficulties in adulthood. "Spanking wanted" ads in alternative
newspapers attest to the sad consequences of this confusion of pain and
pleasure. If a child receives little parental attention except when being
punished, this will further merge the concepts of pain and pleasure in the
child's mind. A child in this situation will have little self-esteem, believing
he deserves nothing better. For more on this topic, see "The Sexual
Dangers of Spanking Children".
Even relatively moderate spanking can be physically dangerous. Blows to
the lower end of the spinal column send shock waves along the length of
the spine, and may injure the child. The prevalence of lower back pain
among adults in our society may well have its origins in childhood
punishment. Some children have become paralyzed through nerve
damage from spanking, and some have died after mild paddlings, due to
undiagnosed medical complications.
- Physical punishment gives the dangerous and unfair message that
"might makes right", that it is permissible to hurt someone else, provided
they are smaller and less powerful than you are. The child then concludes
that it is permissible to mistreat younger or smaller children. When he
becomes an adult, he can feel little compassion for those less fortunate
than he is, and fears those who are more powerful. This will hinder the
establishment of meaningful relationships so essential to an emotionally
fulfilling life.
- Because children learn through parental modeling, physical
punishment gives the message that hitting is an appropriate way to
express feelings and to solve problems. If a child does not observe a
parent solving problems in a creative and humane way, it can be difficult
for him to learn to do this himself. For this reason, unskilled parenting
often continues into the next generation.
-
Gentle instruction, supported by a strong foundation of love and respect,
is the only truly effective way to bring about commendable behavior based
on strong inner values, instead of superficially "good" behavior based only
on fear.
Footnotes
1 EPOCH Worldwide, 77 Holloway Road, London N78JZ UK
2 Personal communication.
3 End Violence Against the Next Generation (EVAN-G), 977 Keeler Avenue,
Berkeley, CA 94708, USA.
Note: An earlier version of this article appeared as Appendix D in Alice Miller's
book Breaking Down the Wall of Silence (New York: Penguin USA, new edition
1997).
|
|
© Jan Hunt
Reprinted with permission of the author. Originally published on The Natural Child Project
Jan Hunt, B.A. Psychology, M.Sc. Counseling Psychology, is the Director of the Natural Child Project, the B.C. Coordinator
for the Canadian Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. She is also a member of the
Board of Directors for Attachment Parenting International.
|
|