[blparent] spanking and physical punishments

Jo Elizabeth Pinto jopinto at msn.com
Mon Mar 28 21:48:49 UTC 2016


I agree with you, Judy.  What's really too bad is that in the seventies and 
eighties, many times the local and state governments didn't intervene in 
true cases of child abuse when intervention was actually necessary. 
Sometimes intervention still doesn't happen when it should, but all too many 
times it happens when it shouldn't.

Jo Elizabeth

"The Bright Side of Darkness"
is my newly published novel,
available in Kindle, audio, and paperback formats at Amazon.com.
-----Original Message----- 
From: Judy Jones via BlParent
Sent: Monday, March 28, 2016 2:35 PM
To: Blind Parents Mailing List
Cc: Judy Jones
Subject: Re: [blparent] spanking and physical punishments

I understand where you are coming from.  We have a very confused society 
that is going to be rearing some very confused kids, but it is what it is, 
and it's too bad that the powers that be can't recognize the difference 
between child abuse and correction.  Of course, I believe spanking should be 
the very last resort.  There are numerous ways of gentle and positive 
discipline that work for more situations than not.  My kids were born in the 
80s, the rare instances of spanking worked for them, and they would tell you 
so.  The real concern is that state and/or federal government is encroaching 
more and more on the home.  In child abuse cases, this is a good thing, but 
otherwise not.  If a child has an inkling that the parent does not have the 
control they should, he will take advantage of that.  Too bad.  The climate 
we live in shuns guidelines of many kinds, and we have yet to reap the 
reward.

Judy

-----Original Message-----
From: BlParent [mailto:blparent-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Julie J. 
via BlParent
Sent: Monday, March 28, 2016 2:16 PM
To: Blind Parents Mailing List
Cc: Julie J.
Subject: [blparent] spanking and physical punishments

I’ve noticed that a lot of the recent messages are pretty pushy about 
spanking and other physical punishments.  I’m not judging, parent however 
you see fit.  The thing is though that the repercussions for spanking and 
the like these days are very, very different than from the 70’s when a lot 
of us were growing up.

Now if your kid tells his teacher his parents spank, the teacher will be 
reporting this to the powers that be.  If you spank your kid in the grocery 
store, you could very well end up explaining your action to the police.   If 
your child has a mark on him, even if it’s from a tumble off his bike, you 
are going to be answering a lot of questions from people in positions to 
make your life very, very miserable.  Add in the fact that every one of us 
is blind and like it or not there is already  some preconceived ideas at 
least by some professionals.  Start with doubt, add in your child’s 
rendition of what happened, stir in a healthy dose of societal implications 
of spanking and what you have is a recipe for misery.

I’ve been teaching parenting classes for  6 years or so now.  I’ve worked 
with parents from abusive homes, parents who left abusive spouses, parents 
with kids with diagnosed behavior problems, parents with kids in the 
criminal justice system and your regular Ozzy and Harriet type of parents. 
There are effective alternatives to spanking.  Alternatives that won’t 
create more problems for you.  Also if you want the support of teachers, 
social workers, family doctor and mental health professionals you are going 
to have to pick a strategy that doesn’t involve physical punishments because 
no professional these days is going to promote that approach.

As has been said before, spanking is considered abuse in some places.  It’s 
also common for parents who have divorced or separated because of a adult 
abuse situation to have a court order that no physical punishment can be 
used with the children.

I have no idea what the situation is with the original poster.  I do 
absolutely know that spanking, although it may very well work, is not an 
easy answer to a difficult situation.  I would hope that people would be 
supportive of all  parents no matter what their parenting approach or life 
situation.

Julie
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