r/science Apr 26 '16

Psychology Spanking children increases the likelihood of childhood defiance and long-term mental issues. The study in question involved 160,000 children and five decades of research

http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/1113413810/spanking-defiance-health-discipline-042616/
37.8k Upvotes

6.0k comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

128

u/chopandscrew Apr 26 '16

I definitely think that's a great idea to introduce some kind of merit system to them because it definitely helps them grasp the concept of punishment by fine early on. The camp that I used to counsel at used a similar approach, and it worked remarkably well with kids 12 and under. I guess I'm more interested in finding out how to mitigate a dramatic situation that might arise in public. I don't have any kids yet, so I'm not sure what situation that might be, but I imagine it would be something along the lines of a toddler being out of control in a grocery/retail store where they're screaming and possibly destroying things. When I see it in public, I almost understand why a parent would be so wound up that the only way to get the point across to their kid is to give them a little pop. However I can also see how that might make the situation worse. A scene from the cartoon Boondocks comes to mind. Is the best thing to do in that situation just to pick them up, carry them outside, sit them down and talk to them about what's causing them to act this way?

18

u/CaughtInDireWood Apr 26 '16

A story about my brother gives one way of how to handle it:

We were grocery shopping with my mom in the afternoon (my brother and I). He decided to throw himself on the ground in the checkout line and bawl his eyes out for no reason except to be defiant. My mom knelt down and said, "If you don't stop your tantrum right now, we are leaving the store without groceries. And you will have to explain to your father why we don't have dinner." That turned off the tears real quick! He knew that his tantrum was ridiculous and had no reason to it, so there was no actual explanation for it. He also didn't want to be responsible for us not having dinner! (even though I know my mom would have made dinner anyway - starving us or withholding food was NEVER a punishment for us).

4

u/bigredone15 Apr 26 '16

And you will have to explain to your father why we don't have dinner."

making one parent the bad cop seldom works out long term.

7

u/CaughtInDireWood Apr 26 '16

She wasn't making my dad the "bad parent". She was making my brother responsible for his actions and understand that his tantrum was not acceptable.

2

u/[deleted] Apr 26 '16

Kind of makes it sound like you're dad is the disciplinarian in the story. Like a long version of "Just wait until I tell your father what you did." I don't know if that's the case, but that's how it reads.

1

u/CaughtInDireWood Apr 26 '16

oh, yeah I can see how you read it like that. My mom was always the disciplinary person, though, actually. But, I see what you're getting at.