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Published : August 27, 2009 |
Author : Rhonda Robinson
Category : J. Training, Correction, and Discipline | Total Views
: 183 | Rating :     
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Rhonda Robinson
Rhonda Robinson is a mother of nine, and grandmother of 16, who believes the single most powerful force in America today is a vigilant mother, unafraid to nurture and protect her children.
Still married to her high school sweetheart, Rhonda is a homeschooling mother by day, and a speaker, weekly newspaper columnist, and freelance writer by night (actually, really early morning before anyone is up—but it’s still dark out, so that counts.)
Spanning 20 years of homeschooling and childbirth, Rhonda has gained over 572 pounds and lost 500, nursed a total of 17 years, and changed at least 29, 952 diapers, and rocked over 5,000 miles of tearful terrain. She holds a Master’s degree in laundry and speaks fluent toddler.
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Creative parenting
by Rhonda Robinson
With each new generation of parents
there comes a new generation of parenting books. “Experts” and
“professionals” who purport to hold the key to successful parenting.
I can handle the onslaught of books and philosophies. But personally, I
bristle at the commercials with a young actor or actress extolling
their parental virtue, “Talk to your child…he will listen…” reading
their profound advice from a cue card. Whoever hired these people must
consider the average parent to have the intelligence of a sack of
hammers.
First of all, Hollywood is not exactly known for producing stable
adults, let alone well-adjusted children. It’s as if they’re selling
something, using their name and familiar face to persuade us to be good
parents. If we are that shallow, our children need more help than a
60-second public service announcement can produce.
Notice you never see some plump, white-haired woman on a commercial
saying with a smile, “I have raised eight children. Two are
politicians, but the rest are happy, well-adjusted, successful adults.
Here’s my advice…” Not even Dr. Phil can do that.
No, instead we get our advice from the stars. Lisa Whelchel, (she
played Blair on “Facts of Life” years ago) authored a book entitled
Creative Correction: Extraordinary Ideas for Everyday Discipline.
Parents don’t need creative correction; they need effective parenting skills and time to use them.
Unfortunately, due to the actions of a few, parents today live under a
shadow of suspicion. Corporal punishment has been deemed child abuse by
social workers and the nosy lady at the grocery store. No doubt the
conclusion of some “professional” who has only raised lab rats.
The problem with “professionals” who make these assessments is that
they rarely have the opportunity to observe healthy, normal families.
They tend to see only the families with problems and the extreme cases.
Then they draw conclusions and try to apply their theories to the rest
of society, disregarding the methods of previous generations. Parents
have used time-honored methods of discipline, not to harm their
children, but to teach them, and protect them from their own
destructive childishness.
Raising children under the current politically correct system is like
trying to raise chickens to live inside the house. When you strip
parents of their respect and authority, you tie their hands behind
their backs; and leave them with only creative manipulation and bribery
to coerce compliance.
A few years ago I read about a desperate couple in Florida who went on
strike to get their teenagers to help around the house. They pitched a
tent, set up a lawn chair, TV, and took the phone out to the driveway,
and posted signs-“Parents on Strike.” Depriving teenagers of parental
supervision--some plan.
I would be willing to bet this family lost that battle years ago when
the children were still young enough to really care what their parents
thought.
Reasoning with a young child who has not yet developed reasoning
abilities can quickly digress into manipulation. Children, who learn
manipulation at an early age rather than respect, become formidable
foes as teenagers.
One “creative discipline” Ms. Whelchel advocates is placing hot sauce
on a child’s tongue. My problem with this tactic is that it inflicts
pain and possible injury for a minor offense.
Mouthy children, or children who are trying on new words for size,
should be taught otherwise, but consequences coupled with an
explanation on a child’s level works without danger of injury or the
potential for abuse.
I prefer Grandma’s tradition. Give the small offender a chance to spit
out any “dirty” words into the sink while explaining, “Those words are
dirty, yuck. Get them out of your mouth.”
Then encouragement--“Spit! Keep spitting! Are they all out? Are you sure?” Always follow with a promise of help in the future.
“Okay, if I find anymore dirty words in there I will wash them out with
soap for you.” A slightly soapy washcloth can quickly wipe out a
budding new vocabulary.
Childishness is bound in the heart of a child, but it takes a diligent parent’s correction to drive it far from them. |
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Comments and Discussion Wall |
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Posted by Anna on September 03, 2009 |
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Thank you for posting this! I come from an "old fashioned" family, I guess you would say, where spanking was not out of the ordinary and I occasionally got my mouth washed out with soap. It drives me mad when I see a parent trying to "reason" it out with their little tot...how do you *reason* with a little one? You cannot. I honestly believe if parents *and schools* were allowed to discipline again how the Bible teaches, then maybe today's children would be better off than they are...
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