Hitchin Priory Rotary Club - The Human...
Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by sonofthunder. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well Vic, first of all, in any given situation, I never have to say No, more than once (gosh! maybe it does work after all...). In fact, I rarely have to say No at all. I have never smacked my children and despite your predjudices, they are much better behaved than the majority of children I have ever met.
Not hitting a child has absolutely nothing to do with what you like to call anarchy. Just because I don't smack my children doesn't mean I don't set them rules & boundaries. In fact most people who know me tell me I am more strict than they are. Oddly enough it would appear that you can bring your children up with love and respect and still have them turn out to be happy, well behaved children. Weird huh?
You say most people over the age of 40 were smacked when they were kids and "the vast majority of these people are balanced, well adjusted human beings who do not go around attacking other people". They still think its OK to hit small children though.
Like I said, weak parenting.
I was spanked as a child, and I love my parents more than life itself! They tought me respect, love, honor, and intelligence. I wouldn't trade that for anything. We didn't mouth back to our parents or swear. We did what we were told and grew up responsible and well mannered.
I understand why people disagree with hitting, but I don't agree that because you are hit by your parents means you hit others. I never hit my friends or became aggressive in result of being spanked. It also depends strongly on the childrens personalitys.
I believe smacking & hitting are 2 different things.
I agree with dancealot13 & Oneeyedvic. I was smacked as a child ~ by my own parents admission it 'wasn't needed often' but still happened nonetheless. I don't have a problem with smacking..it hasn't harmed me.
I remember babysitting when I was about 17 & the mum saying to me ''if he gets out of bed, smack him''. That horrified me ~ to think that a child has been systematically smacked simply for getting out of bed! bit of a sticky wicket really.
Vic.
I really don't care whether you have a problem with the way I raise children up or not. I do care that you and others think it's OK to hit children. You can dress it up as "love" or "discipline" or whatever you like but I find that offensive. Has it never occurred to you that you can bring children up to not overstep the mark in the first place?
And sorry to disappoint you, but my children are happy & well behaved virtually 24 hours a day 365 days a year. Whilst I've been posting on this thread I've been racking my brains for the last time I had to even tell my children off, let alone "punish" them. And I can't really remember. The last time I remember having to tell one of them off was sometime last year for cheating in a game (and guess what? All I had to do was say "no". Didn't have to hurt them or anything. Can you imagine that?).
I can remember the last time I had to "punish" one of them. It was January 2004, for trying to trick the babysitter into allowing them to use the computer when we had said they couldn't. I told my son off, made him apologise to the baby-sitter and stopped his pocket money for one week. He took his punishment like a man, with maturity beyond his years and made me very proud of him, even though he'd been busted. Whatever you like to think, my kids are not some real life version of Ned Flanders' children - they are simply a clear cut example of what you can achieve without resorting to violence to get your own way.