Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We don’t spank. My DH was spanked and says no long term damage. But he has a weird relationship with his parent, sometimes interactions with them seem more like a Board meeting. My mom slapped me across the face once when I call her a nasty name in middle school. It was very upsetting but I never disrespected her again.
Good for your mom
You deserved to be slapped. No one should beat a child but there are times when a good swat on the bottom accomploshes immediate attention and stops bad behavior
The problem is that American children are, by and large, horrid, spoiled brats because parents think all discipline is corporal punishment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't. My dad spanked me once and he says immediately he saw a complete 180 in my personality. I basically withdrew from everyone and stopped talking to people permanently. I still have an avoidant attachment style. To this day, he'll cry if it gets brought up.
I took a TON of parenting classes and read so many books because I wanted to be an effective, kind, caring parent. I've never needed to resort to spanking (or really any kind of punishment).
I also did a lot of reflection on what I wanted out of parenting, and decided strict obedience isn't really a trait I care about. I had children to enrich my life, so I prefer happy times rather than the stress of getting another person to comply.
We live in an area that relies heavily on punishment for raising kids, and my kids are always the most well-behaved. It's actually very frustrating for me - the kids we play with that are punished the most are the ones who hurt my kids the most. My 5 yo DD has a couple friends who are ALWAYS getting spanked, and they have huge problems with hitting other kids. These same parents are always commenting on how calm my kids and me all are, and I've tried explaining better parenting techniques, but they don't listen.
So you’re still not talking to people? But in all seriousness, your attachment style didn’t arise from just one spanking. That’s just not how it works.
Actually, yes. I've always struggled with extreme distrust of people. It wasn't until my 30s (and after years of therapy) that I was able to maintain somewhat normal friendships. Up until then I just kept to myself, even though I wanted relationships with people.
And yes, there were other factors at play in creating my attachment style, but it all boils down to my parents were not safe for me to be around.
I understand that I'm an extreme case, but for me the risks far outweigh the benefits. It's not a parenting technique that is needed at all, there are far more effective ways.
I'm also not a fan of the "they'll turn out fine!" argument. Our standards for our children should be way higher than just "fine".
You are overly dramatic for being traumatized for one incident. That wasn't the issue. You got luck with easy kids (so did I) but it may or may not be your parenting.
Anonymous wrote:We don’t spank. My DH was spanked and says no long term damage. But he has a weird relationship with his parent, sometimes interactions with them seem more like a Board meeting. My mom slapped me across the face once when I call her a nasty name in middle school. It was very upsetting but I never disrespected her again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kids are smaller than you and they are dependent on you for everything. And you hit them.
Oh the drama
Did you want to dispute any of the above?
Not drama. Truth.
Your kids would tell you but they are afraid to.
Drama
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kids are smaller than you and they are dependent on you for everything. And you hit them.
Oh the drama
Did you want to dispute any of the above?
Not drama. Truth.
Your kids would tell you but they are afraid to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't. My dad spanked me once and he says immediately he saw a complete 180 in my personality. I basically withdrew from everyone and stopped talking to people permanently. I still have an avoidant attachment style. To this day, he'll cry if it gets brought up.
I took a TON of parenting classes and read so many books because I wanted to be an effective, kind, caring parent. I've never needed to resort to spanking (or really any kind of punishment).
I also did a lot of reflection on what I wanted out of parenting, and decided strict obedience isn't really a trait I care about. I had children to enrich my life, so I prefer happy times rather than the stress of getting another person to comply.
We live in an area that relies heavily on punishment for raising kids, and my kids are always the most well-behaved. It's actually very frustrating for me - the kids we play with that are punished the most are the ones who hurt my kids the most. My 5 yo DD has a couple friends who are ALWAYS getting spanked, and they have huge problems with hitting other kids. These same parents are always commenting on how calm my kids and me all are, and I've tried explaining better parenting techniques, but they don't listen.
So you’re still not talking to people? But in all seriousness, your attachment style didn’t arise from just one spanking. That’s just not how it works.
Actually, yes. I've always struggled with extreme distrust of people. It wasn't until my 30s (and after years of therapy) that I was able to maintain somewhat normal friendships. Up until then I just kept to myself, even though I wanted relationships with people.
And yes, there were other factors at play in creating my attachment style, but it all boils down to my parents were not safe for me to be around.
I understand that I'm an extreme case, but for me the risks far outweigh the benefits. It's not a parenting technique that is needed at all, there are far more effective ways.
I'm also not a fan of the "they'll turn out fine!" argument. Our standards for our children should be way higher than just "fine".
You are overly dramatic for being traumatized for one incident. That wasn't the issue. You got luck with easy kids (so did I) but it may or may not be your parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kids are smaller than you and they are dependent on you for everything. And you hit them.
Oh the drama
Anonymous wrote:I was spanked, I would never spank my own kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We spank for repeated defiance, or the kind of situation where they’re not staying in timeout, or just not listening at all. It’s not in anger, we’ll usually go their room to do it and explain why they’re going to be spanked. Then they’re turned over the lap and spanked.
+1 the willful disobedience has consequences
So you do it in cold blood? Even the law recognizes the difference between premeditated murder and manslaughter.
Lol. I’m a cold blooded spanker!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't. My dad spanked me once and he says immediately he saw a complete 180 in my personality. I basically withdrew from everyone and stopped talking to people permanently. I still have an avoidant attachment style. To this day, he'll cry if it gets brought up.
I took a TON of parenting classes and read so many books because I wanted to be an effective, kind, caring parent. I've never needed to resort to spanking (or really any kind of punishment).
I also did a lot of reflection on what I wanted out of parenting, and decided strict obedience isn't really a trait I care about. I had children to enrich my life, so I prefer happy times rather than the stress of getting another person to comply.
We live in an area that relies heavily on punishment for raising kids, and my kids are always the most well-behaved. It's actually very frustrating for me - the kids we play with that are punished the most are the ones who hurt my kids the most. My 5 yo DD has a couple friends who are ALWAYS getting spanked, and they have huge problems with hitting other kids. These same parents are always commenting on how calm my kids and me all are, and I've tried explaining better parenting techniques, but they don't listen.
So you’re still not talking to people? But in all seriousness, your attachment style didn’t arise from just one spanking. That’s just not how it works.
Actually, yes. I've always struggled with extreme distrust of people. It wasn't until my 30s (and after years of therapy) that I was able to maintain somewhat normal friendships. Up until then I just kept to myself, even though I wanted relationships with people.
And yes, there were other factors at play in creating my attachment style, but it all boils down to my parents were not safe for me to be around.
I understand that I'm an extreme case, but for me the risks far outweigh the benefits. It's not a parenting technique that is needed at all, there are far more effective ways.
I'm also not a fan of the "they'll turn out fine!" argument. Our standards for our children should be way higher than just "fine".
Anonymous wrote:It shows kids that someone who loves them and cares for them can hit them. That's not something I want to teach my kids.