I have a question.
Jun. 6th, 2006 10:01 pmAn honest, serious question.
Many times, the subject of corporal punishment pops up in places where you really wouldn't expect it. And on the side of the Spanking is Okay people, there'll inevitably be at least one who recounts a story about how when s/he was a young whippersnapper, a really bad spanking was given. They don't remember why, but they know they never did whatever-it-was again. And, hey, look - I grew up into a responsible, well-adjusted individual! Spanking works!
This is an issue where both sides tend to have trouble breaking down their own arguments, I know. But my question is this - if you can't even remember what you did to get that spanking, how do you know you never did it again? Can you know?
This is the *exact* same story I've seen recounted by dozens (well, tens) of different people. A key feature of the story is that they don't remember what they did. And this is said to prove everything. But how does it prove anything at all?
Edit: I'm not asking about spanking, though I welcome discussion on that matter too. So long as it stays reasonably calm, 'k? I'm asking "Is it possible to know you've never done something after being punished if you don't even remember what you were punished for in the first place?"
Many times, the subject of corporal punishment pops up in places where you really wouldn't expect it. And on the side of the Spanking is Okay people, there'll inevitably be at least one who recounts a story about how when s/he was a young whippersnapper, a really bad spanking was given. They don't remember why, but they know they never did whatever-it-was again. And, hey, look - I grew up into a responsible, well-adjusted individual! Spanking works!
This is an issue where both sides tend to have trouble breaking down their own arguments, I know. But my question is this - if you can't even remember what you did to get that spanking, how do you know you never did it again? Can you know?
This is the *exact* same story I've seen recounted by dozens (well, tens) of different people. A key feature of the story is that they don't remember what they did. And this is said to prove everything. But how does it prove anything at all?
Edit: I'm not asking about spanking, though I welcome discussion on that matter too. So long as it stays reasonably calm, 'k? I'm asking "Is it possible to know you've never done something after being punished if you don't even remember what you were punished for in the first place?"
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 02:09 am (UTC)Not that I like corporal punishment, but I don't think it's as horrendous as people make it out to be. But to each his/her own.
Although, there really are some children out there who need *some* form of discipline, AUGH. And, well, frankly, some parents too. :-P
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 02:14 am (UTC)But I love him now, so it obviously didn't work very well in the long run...
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 02:15 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 02:19 am (UTC)*shrug*
But trying to argue about the general merit of something only from personal, direct experience doesn't seem like a very strong basis for a logical argument.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 02:21 am (UTC)I stole candy from the gas station. When confronted, I lied about it. On the way to return the candy, I ate it, to destroy the evidence. I lied about that, too. Once back at the gas station, I lied again and claimed that my sister had stolen it. When made to pay back the money for the candy, I grabbed my piggy bank and hid in a tree so they couldn't take my money.
By the time I got to the end of this string of events, I was thinking "If I was Mum and Dad, I'd spank myself." *laugh*
I think I got a couple of light swats here and there, more warning shots than anything else, but on that occasion, oh BOY did I get a spanking.
And no. I sure as hell never did it again. (Except maybe the lying bit, but my parents soon came up with a far more effective remedy for that, and the lying quit pretty quickly, too. A spoonful of vinegar works wonders. o_o)
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 03:11 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 03:19 am (UTC)when i was little my brother trashed the kitchen and ran away when he heard my mom coming. she walked in, saw the mess, and kicked me into a brick wall. it was completely unfair. i think spanking or other physical punishment usually IS unfair. if the parent stops and THINKS of an appropriate punishment, it is rarely physical. spanking is the immediate urge or reaction, and often results in regrettable actions. IMO, of course.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 03:29 am (UTC)I think it depends entirely on the child. I never really cared about "getting in trouble" because my parents (or mom at least) never followed through. She still doesn't, when she says "i want you to clean up your room before you go out" or whatever...if someone believes that their parents will follow through on a punishment, they probably won't misbehave as much. if spanking is all that works, maybe that's what they need to get the message across.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 04:18 am (UTC)But I just had to say that I'm suprised that, so far, I've not seen any heavy anti-spanking comments. I know anytime it's even been hinted at in my journal some people got pretty pissy.
I was certainly spanked as a kid. I even remember what for a few times! But I definitely remember the last time I was slapped - I hadn't been spanked or slapped in years - I was in my tweens at least, and severely pushed the envelope with my mom. I know it made a difference and I never pushed that hard again.
And for the record, I'm "pro-spanking". (It has to be done right, of course, but on principle I support it).
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 09:16 am (UTC)I think I turned out pretty okay. On the other hand, I know that I got spanked for a lot of things I still do - for example, lying. I spent almost my entire school career lying (told my mom every day that my homework was done when I was really saving it for the morning bus ride).
On the other hand, I bit my sister once for stealing one of my pony toys (and I was old enough to know better). Mom took away my My Little Ponies for two weeks and forbid me to watch the TV show - no other shows, just MLP, which was my favorite one. I never bit anyone again.
She also used to flick my sisters and I on the mouth if we chewed with our mouths open/talked with food and I never ever do the first, and only do the second behind a napkin.
So does corporal punishment work? In cases where the punishment fits the crime, probably. Random spankings? I doubt it, unless it's reserved only for the worst things and not given out every time the rules are broken. Desensitization ruins any punishment.
And my mom was a totally awesome mom, aside from the mouth-flicking thing, so it helped that I wanted to listen to her, too.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 10:18 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 11:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 11:36 am (UTC)He's never lit a fire again, and it's been about ten years. I don't know if he remembers why he got that spanking. I do know that he's avoided behavior that leads up to lighting fires: he STILL brings me matches and lighters so I can put them somewhere safe, and he's thirteen (it doesn't happen frequently, but it does happen.)
So I'd guess that even though he doesn't repeat the behavior, he remembers why he's supposed to avoid doing things that could lead to that behavior. I don't honestly know.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-08 06:56 pm (UTC)For better or for worse I remember every time I was “whipped” by my mother partly because the majority of the times I was “whipped” I was just that, tied up, gagged and beaten with a belt, and partly because I received whippings well into my preteens.
Did being chastised in this manner prevent me from doing the very things that warranted being whipped? Well the fairly frequent number of whippings I received would on the surface prove quite the contrary (most being administered for the same set of reoccurring infractions). I lived with my grandmother for most of my adolescence (for economic and social reasons which aren’t necessary to explain in this post) and my mother would come to visit me every day after school, often greeted after a long day of work with an even longer list of the things I did wrong that day. So I was Chastised, some may say for good reason, I was a latchkey child at a very early age (10 years old) that had a tendency to play with fire, and on several occasions my grandmother came home to a smoke filled house after I had set the kitchen garbage can on fire. The last time I ever played with fire my mother chastised me by holding my hand over an open flame for a few seconds. I never played with fire after that. So did it work? Yes is the very, very black and white answer. Did I grow up to be well adjusted adult? Well I’ll let Conuly be the judge of that after she dries off from me soaking her with my new badass water gun. In closing tho’ I will say this - every time you strike anyone you care for, it does create a large number of conflicting feelings, usually in both parties. Is it justified, does it really solve the problem, or just seems to? Is hitting the best way to get your point across or just the easiest? This isn’t an answer really, just something I feel everyone should think about before they chastise their child, sometimes a monuments pause can make up for a lifetime of regret.
P.S. I do feel the need to say that I have indeed physically disciplined Ana but I have never whipped or beat my child.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-09 08:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-18 12:28 am (UTC)Ugh...
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 02:09 am (UTC)Not that I like corporal punishment, but I don't think it's as horrendous as people make it out to be. But to each his/her own.
Although, there really are some children out there who need *some* form of discipline, AUGH. And, well, frankly, some parents too. :-P
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 02:14 am (UTC)But I love him now, so it obviously didn't work very well in the long run...
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 02:15 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 02:19 am (UTC)*shrug*
But trying to argue about the general merit of something only from personal, direct experience doesn't seem like a very strong basis for a logical argument.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 02:21 am (UTC)I stole candy from the gas station. When confronted, I lied about it. On the way to return the candy, I ate it, to destroy the evidence. I lied about that, too. Once back at the gas station, I lied again and claimed that my sister had stolen it. When made to pay back the money for the candy, I grabbed my piggy bank and hid in a tree so they couldn't take my money.
By the time I got to the end of this string of events, I was thinking "If I was Mum and Dad, I'd spank myself." *laugh*
I think I got a couple of light swats here and there, more warning shots than anything else, but on that occasion, oh BOY did I get a spanking.
And no. I sure as hell never did it again. (Except maybe the lying bit, but my parents soon came up with a far more effective remedy for that, and the lying quit pretty quickly, too. A spoonful of vinegar works wonders. o_o)
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 03:11 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 03:19 am (UTC)when i was little my brother trashed the kitchen and ran away when he heard my mom coming. she walked in, saw the mess, and kicked me into a brick wall. it was completely unfair. i think spanking or other physical punishment usually IS unfair. if the parent stops and THINKS of an appropriate punishment, it is rarely physical. spanking is the immediate urge or reaction, and often results in regrettable actions. IMO, of course.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 03:29 am (UTC)I think it depends entirely on the child. I never really cared about "getting in trouble" because my parents (or mom at least) never followed through. She still doesn't, when she says "i want you to clean up your room before you go out" or whatever...if someone believes that their parents will follow through on a punishment, they probably won't misbehave as much. if spanking is all that works, maybe that's what they need to get the message across.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 04:18 am (UTC)But I just had to say that I'm suprised that, so far, I've not seen any heavy anti-spanking comments. I know anytime it's even been hinted at in my journal some people got pretty pissy.
I was certainly spanked as a kid. I even remember what for a few times! But I definitely remember the last time I was slapped - I hadn't been spanked or slapped in years - I was in my tweens at least, and severely pushed the envelope with my mom. I know it made a difference and I never pushed that hard again.
And for the record, I'm "pro-spanking". (It has to be done right, of course, but on principle I support it).
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 09:16 am (UTC)I think I turned out pretty okay. On the other hand, I know that I got spanked for a lot of things I still do - for example, lying. I spent almost my entire school career lying (told my mom every day that my homework was done when I was really saving it for the morning bus ride).
On the other hand, I bit my sister once for stealing one of my pony toys (and I was old enough to know better). Mom took away my My Little Ponies for two weeks and forbid me to watch the TV show - no other shows, just MLP, which was my favorite one. I never bit anyone again.
She also used to flick my sisters and I on the mouth if we chewed with our mouths open/talked with food and I never ever do the first, and only do the second behind a napkin.
So does corporal punishment work? In cases where the punishment fits the crime, probably. Random spankings? I doubt it, unless it's reserved only for the worst things and not given out every time the rules are broken. Desensitization ruins any punishment.
And my mom was a totally awesome mom, aside from the mouth-flicking thing, so it helped that I wanted to listen to her, too.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 10:18 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 11:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-07 11:36 am (UTC)He's never lit a fire again, and it's been about ten years. I don't know if he remembers why he got that spanking. I do know that he's avoided behavior that leads up to lighting fires: he STILL brings me matches and lighters so I can put them somewhere safe, and he's thirteen (it doesn't happen frequently, but it does happen.)
So I'd guess that even though he doesn't repeat the behavior, he remembers why he's supposed to avoid doing things that could lead to that behavior. I don't honestly know.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-08 06:56 pm (UTC)For better or for worse I remember every time I was “whipped” by my mother partly because the majority of the times I was “whipped” I was just that, tied up, gagged and beaten with a belt, and partly because I received whippings well into my preteens.
Did being chastised in this manner prevent me from doing the very things that warranted being whipped? Well the fairly frequent number of whippings I received would on the surface prove quite the contrary (most being administered for the same set of reoccurring infractions). I lived with my grandmother for most of my adolescence (for economic and social reasons which aren’t necessary to explain in this post) and my mother would come to visit me every day after school, often greeted after a long day of work with an even longer list of the things I did wrong that day. So I was Chastised, some may say for good reason, I was a latchkey child at a very early age (10 years old) that had a tendency to play with fire, and on several occasions my grandmother came home to a smoke filled house after I had set the kitchen garbage can on fire. The last time I ever played with fire my mother chastised me by holding my hand over an open flame for a few seconds. I never played with fire after that. So did it work? Yes is the very, very black and white answer. Did I grow up to be well adjusted adult? Well I’ll let Conuly be the judge of that after she dries off from me soaking her with my new badass water gun. In closing tho’ I will say this - every time you strike anyone you care for, it does create a large number of conflicting feelings, usually in both parties. Is it justified, does it really solve the problem, or just seems to? Is hitting the best way to get your point across or just the easiest? This isn’t an answer really, just something I feel everyone should think about before they chastise their child, sometimes a monuments pause can make up for a lifetime of regret.
P.S. I do feel the need to say that I have indeed physically disciplined Ana but I have never whipped or beat my child.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-09 08:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-18 12:28 am (UTC)Ugh...