34 answers

These Are Children, There Small Not Stupid....

I'm sorry but I have to get this off my chest. Am I the only 1 that wonders what is going on? I mean, I see alotnof post like, what to do, child hits me, bites me, etc. And was this punishment harsh enough? Most of the time, its not harsh enough. I mean, really, 3 and 4 year olds, they don't know how to listen? They don't know what NO means? And it's not just on here, everywhere, the mall, the grocery store... It's just really bugging me... Sorry

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Thanks for all the comments, but I must say, sorry how this comes out, but EVERYBODY'S child does not have a learning disability, and for the ones that do, understandable, I just don't think that because I'm at Walmart and a little girl is lying on the floor screaming for something, telling her parents no, we have to say, oh there must be something wrong with her.... Uh yeah. Her parents. And for the ones who thinks its none of my business, uh yeah it is. I don't like my kids to see that for one. They always make comments like, "look at that boy crying" and so on... But mostly I am concerned because.... These children are OUR future. And what a scary one it is.... And I wasn't even talking about discipline so much as I was trying to say that as parents we can't wait till the child is 3 and 4 to start trying to leach life lessons and the meaning of things. And how to act.. That has to start so much earlier than that. If your baby can walk, it's time to start, by 2 years old. No problems, of course hungry and tired crankiness will always occur, he'll I'm cranky if I'm hungry or tired. Have you ever been to somebody's house and they have everything put up, like the house is baby proofed and they only have 1 toddler... I hate that, you want to know why, because now when he comes to my house, he's gonna tear up everything. I never put stuff away, I just made it very clear that ( you, little person with big eyes, you don't touch this you understand) and that was it, now this child whosenever been told not to touch something, because instead of giving him or her the benefit of the doubt or constancy of being told not go do something, and has everything just out of reach, comes over my house.... And the whole CPS thing, I don't know what they are teaching kids in school, but I will never be in fear of disiPlining my own child. I don't beat them, so it doesn't instil fear, they hardly even get whoopins, but need be..... They already know.

Sorry in advanced for alot of typos, I'm on my ipod

Featured Answers

Please also keep in mind that when you see things at different places, you don't know the circumstances. My son is on the autism spectrum. (You might have even seen us a few years back when he was 2-5. He would have looked like "one of those kids" you are referring to.) When these kids are in public places it's very difficult for them. It's sensory overload, but parents have errands they have to do too. "No" has no meaning when a spectrum child "is in the moment".

It's best not to judge other people. You are not walking in their shoes.

7 moms found this helpful

Totally agree!! Also when I see those comments referring to a 3, 4 or 5 yr old misbehaving and some folks on here say "aw they are just babies" eh NO actually they are not.

Yeah my dd will ALWAYS be my baby BUT I do not treat her or expect her to behave like one not even when she was 3, 4 or 5.

7 moms found this helpful

Sweetie, I literally want to come through the computer lines and Gibbs slap some of these moms. Part of the reasons accidents happen, kids run off, and children are so difficult to be around is because people have no clue just how much they really do understand at a very young age.

6 moms found this helpful

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There are several reasons for this:

1. Too many parents are more worried about being their childs FRIEND rather than their parent.

2. Another issue is society in general...."we don't want to hurt little Johnny's feelings" so instead of punishing him for his rude/bad behavior - we tell him "oooh Johnny - that's not a good thing...don't do that..." or something else sugar coated so that he doesn't get the gist that what he did was wrong.

3. Many parents want to give their kids everything they DID NOT have growing up....so kids no longer have to EARN their way - they have a sense of entitlement. And parents themselves are trying to keep up with the Joneses instead of living within their means....so kids only know and see EXCESS instead of "we don't NEED that"...it's "I've GOT TO HAVE THAT"

4. Some parents fear CPS being called - as kids are being taught in school that being hit by your parent or punished by your parent is wrong and if they do that - to tell a teacher so they can help you....so when a kid doesn't get his way - he tells the teacher some elaborate story and BAM!! CPS is called...or worse - someone sees something they don't like you doing to your child and calls CPS (as happened to me with my daughter...she was crying, my hand was behind her neck (as it always was when she was young) and someone ASSUMED I was hurting her and called CPS...12 hours of medical exams and intense interrogations ruled out anything but still).

And lastly - society now wants to LABEL and NAME something - Johnnny is a BOY - boys have a tendency to be hyper - but instead of just saying - Johnny is a boy - society says - he's unruly, he's hyper - HE NEEDS MEDICATION....or he's GOT to be Autistic (this is NOT a slap to parents with Autism) because he does x, y and z....he can't just be normal - he's got to be or have SOMETHING.......

12 moms found this helpful

Amen. I get frustrated not just with the posts asking if the punishments are too harsh, (I agree, they're usually not enough or are right on) but also with the ones telling and pleading with moms not to do such and such (when someone has posted certain advice) as if the mama asking for advice can't choose what she wants to do!

I know there are instances where a child with learning challenges may have a more difficult time grasping even simple concepts, but the majority of children don't. I don't advocate punishing a child any certain way, but rather disciplines and consequences appropriate for that particular child and the situation. (My little guy, 26 months, ran into he street tonight, he didn't want to come in and stop playing. And while there were no cars out he got a spanking, which I hated to do, because his life is important to me and I want him to know the significance of what he did. I also talked to him and explained he could get hurt, as he understands "owwies" and "ouch.") If a child doesn't respond to time-outs or no dinner, find the consequence that works for him or her! Parenting requires true work on our parts, and can take time. Yet if parents allow a situation to get out of hand over months or even years, they seem to want a quick fix, which I don't get.

Even infants are aware of their environment, of causes and effects on it, and begin to manipulate (gasp!) it. If a (I'm going to hated for this, I know) 6 month old cries when anyone but mom holds her, she knows what she's doing by crying until mom, and not grandma or dad or anyone else comes. Studies, with real babies, have shown at 3 months they start to remember, and at 6 months they start putting 2 and 2 together and can become spoiled (yes, I said it) and cry to get their way not just for needs anymore, but for wants.

Because children are teachable from an age far younger than many people will acknowledge, they are often viewed in terms of "He's just a baby" or "I'm waiting until she can understand" and teachable moments are missed entirely. The independence we want our children to have often relegates responsibility and consequences for actions to the back burner, as we let them find their way and "just be kids." (Which, yes, they should be kids. They are in training for life and learning a little at a time, just as they do in school.) Yet we wonder why James is having trouble in Pre-K because he won't stop biting, or hitting, or kicking the other children and teachers, nothing can stop him and "he is normally such a sweet child." Maybe he was allowed to bite, hit and kick from the time he was a year and a half. Or when "My daughter, who's 4 1/2, is upset because all her friends know how to use the big potty. She been training for 6 months, but doesn't like the toilet and I don't want to further upset her by making her use it..." Hmmm, maybe she should have started potty training a year earlier? And we keep making excuses.

I so agree, children are not stupid, while, yes, they're small compared to us. But there is an entire person in that small package, capable of learning acceptable behaviors! They are like sponges absorbing everything around them, they can recite all the songs from their favorite TV show verbatim and perform all the dance moves, recite entire cartoon dialogs, and tell us what toys they want NOW, yet we think they can't understand "No, you may not kick your sister" or whatever they are doing that is unacceptable and allow it to continue because "I know he's not misbehaving on purpose..." And, that if we raise are voices to them and send them to time-out we're terrible parents?

I am raising my third child, and have helped raise 5 of my grandchildren. I have always respected the intelligence of all of them, and have expected them to learn and cooperate rather than insult their intelligence by setting low standards for them. We parents have been given the blessing, the privileged honor and tremendous responsibility of guiding, training and shaping our children's behaviors, and we do them a terrible disservice by not doing just that.

Sorry to go on and on, you touched a nerve, B. ; )

11 moms found this helpful

Our culture of treating children like fragile flowers leaves many new parents frightened of disciplining their children. Particularly for parents who are not naturally authoritarian, there is a real fear of doing permanent damage to their child's spirit. The truth is, kids are tough and resilient. It is fairly difficult to break a child's spirit, especially one of the more troublesome kids. It's not impossible certainly, but it takes a pretty concerted effort for a very long time. It's not the sort of thing you do by accident. I wish this was in more of the parenting books.....

I will also say that many young children have undiagnosed problems that really do impair their ability to follow directions. A child who can't sleep, or can't breathe, or is in pain, or isn't processing language well, or has a sensory processing problem, or whatever.....this kind of child will usually express their difficulties in the form of anger at their caregivers and temper tantrums. Kids (and adults) often use anger and aggression to cover up fear and frustration.

Parents of these types of kids often get blamed when disciplinary measures don't work. If a kid is screaming to manipulate their parents, certain disciplinary measures will work. If a kid is screaming because they are in pain, those same disciplinary measures are useless. It is often difficult for a parent to tell the difference. It nearly impossible for a stranger in the mall to tell the difference.

I spent a year and a half of professionals telling me that I just needed to be more clear and firm with my three year old son and he'd "behave". Now that he is eight, he has been diagnosed with asthma-related sleep deprivation, severe expressive and receptive language problems, dyspraxia, and probably severe learning disabilities as well. He's a smart, kind, brave, hard-working kid for whom *everything* is spectacularly difficult. His tantrums (which are going down) are from exhaustion and frustration, not defiance. He is truly doing the best that he can. Do I still hold him accountable for misbehavior? Of course. But I also try to have reasonable expectations for him. You don't ask a child with a sprained ankle to run a mile.

I still remember with pain those days when he was three and I punished him for refusing to go back to bed. He would scream and hit me. In truth, he desperately *wanted* to go back to bed. But he couldn't breathe well enough to sleep. He couldn't communicate well enough to tell me. The doctors all seemed to think I was just an inadequate parent. Finally, his asthma got bad enough that he was obviously wheezing. We took him to the ER. He got two steroid injections, and was given a mask with oxygen and lots of albuterol. His reaction? With relief, he curled up on my lap and fell asleep. All those nights of firm rules and sticker charts and lost privileges and time outs and spanks.... What he needed was not a harsher punishment. What he needed was oxygen.

10 moms found this helpful

I agree with you.

And I will say that I recently was one of the posters with a question, "What would your punishment be?" Surprisingly to me, most posters said, for my specific situation, no discipline - since my older child make a serious mistake and error in judgement, not intentional harm or bad behavior.

Although I was surprised, it was a good reality check for me. I tend to be extremely strict and disciplined with my kids. I expect a lot from them. However I also tend to forget that they are still kids - they are learning from their mistakes, they don't always have the same judgement capabilities that an adult would, etc.

So I am right there with you that I think too many parents let their kids act like animals. For me, the biggest annoyance is people who say, "Boys will be boys! or He's all boy!" As if that's a reason for them to run amok.

I find that I need to quietly deal with my annoyances with kids behavior or parents lack of control/discipline. Usually I am very, very outspoken. However I have been told on more than one occasion that I am too judgmental or make other parents feel badly...it's not worth losing friends over.

9 moms found this helpful

I think that the problem is really with the parents and not the children. While I don't think you need to beat kids into submission or anything like that, kids can and do meet the expectations that are put on them. The problem is, parents are failing to put any expectations on their kids when they are small, and think they'll suddenly learn manners, obedience and good behavior later on. They won't. It has to be expected of them right from the beginning. It doesn't need to be done harshly or with cruelty. Parents seem not to ever want their kids to cry and feel like a terrible parent for making them do so, and truly they are not doing their children any favors. It's easier for them to just say "yes" rather than implement discipline and let their child be unhappy for a little while, and then they wonder as the child gets older why they can never get the kid to listen, as if it's not their own fault. Kids are NOT traumatized by being expected to behave and having a consequence when they don't. I know it's hard, and I know that when you get home from work, the last thing you want is for that precious time you have with your kids to be spent in discipline mode or with them in punishment, but there were times that I had to do it. A lot of parents are not willing to.

9 moms found this helpful

Spanking is out of fashion so people focus on "not spanking" even if it means letting their kids develop outrageous behavior. This is just for the posts that say, "We've tried everything, time outs, taking things away, ignoring, redirecting, distracting, (insert any other completely mild meaningless action) and we just don't know why our child is still doing these things at age 5 and getting worse and worse".

Then there are people spanking, but they feel bad about it, so it's only randomly and rarely when they are angry and out or control because things have escalated and worn them down. Which is also not effective.

Then, since the 80s when the 50's Spock influenced theories went to the majority with the positive parenting outbreak books, there are the people totally reinventing the wheel (for decades now I know adults raised this way) deciding discipline in general isn't needed and children should "teach themselves" how to act, while you guide gently with positive reinforcement, endless repetition, and "setting a good example". Which would be fine if it worked.

I don't get it. A little calm, clear, consistent, FIRM discipline goes a long way and prevents all these things from getting out of hand. I have 3 non tantruming, non hitting, non whining, kids who listen under 5 years old, 3 different personalities, one super difficult, and they weren't "born easy". But since they KNOW what is not allowed, they focus on having fun 99% of the time instead of pushing boundaries all day. I can take them anywhere and we have a blast.

We travel a lot, and in countries where parents still use discipline, and the kids are actually good, it's a shame to look around at how people let their kids act here. We were in Tokyo recently, and saw several toddlers getting disciplined in public because there "it is a disgrace to let your child act badly". They have a fraction of our crime and almost no bad teenagers. The kids excel in school and they don't have all of our behavioral disorders. We were there for a Metallica concert, end even the heavy metal auditorium full of fans was quiet and orderly, and no lockers back stage because "no one steals". I've never seen a cleaner safer city. People are packed in like sardines, but they are gracious, orderly, and polite-INCLUDING the kids.

8 moms found this helpful

Yes, many people seem scared to discipline their own children and yes, it's frustrating to see and read about. My husband is a Student Resource Officer (a cop) in a middle school where kids just seem to be losing their minds. The parents get called in and either say,"He just won't listen to me, make him listen to me!" or "Take those cuffs of my child immediately, you a-hole, you don't have the right to put your hands on my child." Clearly, both of these scenarios are directly the fault of the parents as well as being the completely wrong way to raise a kid. I stand by my belief that there should be a test all humans must take in order to be granted the right to raise a child. It's the biggest, most important thing anyone can do

8 moms found this helpful

Please also keep in mind that when you see things at different places, you don't know the circumstances. My son is on the autism spectrum. (You might have even seen us a few years back when he was 2-5. He would have looked like "one of those kids" you are referring to.) When these kids are in public places it's very difficult for them. It's sensory overload, but parents have errands they have to do too. "No" has no meaning when a spectrum child "is in the moment".

It's best not to judge other people. You are not walking in their shoes.

7 moms found this helpful

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