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8 Reasons Not to Spank Your Child

wombat68 by wombat68 Young Parent(April 2006) (rank 142nd)

1. 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.

2. 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.

3. 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. 

4. “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. The book of Proverbs is attributed to Solomon, an extremely cruel man whose 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. By contrast, the writings in the Gospels, the most important books in the Bible for Christians, contain the teachings of Jesus Christ, who urged mercy, forgiveness, humility, and non-violence. Jesus saw children as being close to God, and urged love, never punishment.3

5. 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.

6. 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.

7. 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.

8. 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. 9. 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.

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.

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.

This article is a copy of the article

Ten Reasons Not to Hit Your Kids
by Jan Hunt, M.Sc.

Wombat

Any contributed content above is the subjective opinion of that member or external author, and not of Minti.com Pty Ltd. If you are searching for health related advice we strongly suggest you seek professional medical support. View our Terms of Service for more details.
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Seraphimwolf
May 21st | Seraphimwolf
Re: 8 Reasons Not to Spank Your Child

I believe spanking is becoming out-dated. I have seen remarkable results from positive parenting in comparison to spanking. My view is that spanking is unacceptable unless the child is in immediate danger.

 



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jenndvs
May 21st | jenndvs
Re: 8 Reasons Not to Spank Your Child

HOW BOUT I GIVE YOU 1000000000 REASONS TO SPANK YOUR KIDS



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peace613
January 2009 | peace613
Re: 8 Reasons Not to Spank Your Child

Should spanking only be used for direct rebellion?

Peace613



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kristinabrooke
June 2006 | kristinabrooke
Finally!
A well written and extremely usefful list of reasons NOT to spank children. I'm so glad that you wrote this.


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mrslunar
June 2006 | mrslunar
cause and effect

I can only imagine that spanking is appropriate if your child hits someone else.......but how contridictory is that? Teaching that hitting is wrong by hitting?

Yeah, so I don't spank. I don't hit, I don't want my kids to learn that it is EVER ok to hit. EVER.



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      Izzy
June 2006 | Izzy
EVER?

I know I'm going beyond the context, but I think  it's too black & white. Of course it's OK to hit in self-defense, though I know it's better to teach 'no hitting' when the child is too young to understand this concept.



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lindterbean
5.00 (Excellent) | June 2006 | lindterbean
spanking
I feel the issue is not so much spanking vs not spanking, but not to let real fear enter into the punishments. There are quite a few over-the-line parents who never lift a finger against their kids. I know many people whose parents' non-physical punishments reverberated a lot more harshly than any spankings.

It is important for the kids to understand, even at a very young age, (and I know ours understood even as young as 2) that any reprimands are designed to teach them and not because they are loved any less. We always try to make the punishments fit the crime, so to speak, and that is why we're only spanked the kids each exactly once (and they laugh about it now); their transgressions were never related to anything it made sense to spank them about.


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mewannaboy
1.00 (Very Poor) | June 2006 | mewannaboy
re spanking

i agree with all of those issues which effect both parent and child in various reasonings. I do spank my children when the action is truely warrented. like if my 4 year old climbs up on the tv table and jumps off and when my 9 year old disobeys me and rides into the main street.when ive gone hoarse from saying"get inside its freezing" i feel words have made no difference .



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ClayCook
5.00 (Excellent) | April 2006 | ClayCook
Brave enough?
This topic is such a hot topic that I am not sure if pro-spankers will make comments and/or disclose they are pro-spanking. Is anyone completely pro-spanking?


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hrs2004
4.35 (Good) | April 2006 | hrs2004
Spanking
As a child, I clearly remember my Dad threatening us (I'm one of 4) with his slipper when we misbehaved - which we did, often! He rarely used the slipper but we did get a slap on the thighs. I remember the subsequent competition of who of us had managed to get all five finger marks showing on their leg. I don't remember any fear involved and felt at the time that we fully deserved the treatment we got. Perhaps because my Dad was generally the more loving out of my parents, and we knew we had pushed too far, that I feel this treatment did us no harm.
I have to say that although I have yet to smack my child, and don't intend to, there may be a time when I consider it necessary and have not ruled it out of my repetoire. Having said that, my daughter, now two, responds very well to the "naughty step" and badly to any form of violence. She is a biter, and in an attempt to stop her, I started to very gently tap her hand when she bit to try and teach her not to. All it taught her was to slap back and failed dismally.
If I did smack her, it would be after something I considered so serious that she really needed to remember the lesson - something like running into the road. So, I agree with your article but can't take a stance where I would state I could never smack. Hopefully the need will never arise, or perhaps I will find that when a time comes when I think I might smack, an alternative presents itself.


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      wombat68
4.29 (Good) | April 2006 | wombat68
Re: Spanking
Thanks for your comments. I just not convinced that because our parents did it, we should. I think the fact that it is illegal in all the Scandinavian countries and that the American Psychological Association discourages it strongly, suggest that there are good reasons to learn to deal with bad behaviour in other ways. The best being, prevent children behaving badly and make sure that they respect your authority that you don't need to use physical violence. FOr me, the problem with spanking is that it often covers up important problems. Parents often resort to it because it's the easiet. Please remember that small children can only communicate in simple ways. Bad behaviour may be telling you something you need to hear, rather than stifle with a smack.


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           matthew
4.07 (Good) | April 2006 | matthew
Re: Spanking
What a wonderfully hot topic you have chosen to write about again Wombat :)

Personally I was smacked very occasionally during my upbringing and thoroughly deserved it every time. I tend to agree completely with HRS2004 that whilst smacking will be avoided as much as possible I would never rule out the option in my own household - at the very least for the threat value.


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                ClayCook
3.82 (Good) | April 2006 | ClayCook
Re: Spanking
My mom used to warn me that I would get the wooden spoon... and I think I did a few times. In the end when I was about 5 yrs old I dug a hole and burried it in the garden :)


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                     rachelcook
4.67 (Excellent) | May 2006 | rachelcook
Re: Spanking
It was used as a threat. There were times I was spanked for really naughty stuff, but can never remember exactly what for...back then as I came up to the age of thirteen, I said I was too old to be threatened to be spanked and my dad had to agree.


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