Zach R.
Practically Family
- Messages
- 922
Now that, I agree with.
Who could you POSSIBLY be talking to that is so important during a meal?
Who could you POSSIBLY be talking to that is so important during a meal?
Zach R. said:I don't think the decline of good parenting wholly revolves around the lack of "whippings" or "beatings" either, if that was solely what made kids what they are today(or from times past) then who knows what it would be like.
Asked by PanamaBob -
How many are not parents? I'd bet I can guess.
Panamabob said:How many are not parents? I'd bet I can guess.
jake_fink said:Even the best behaved kids have bad days, and that day may come while they are out in public. I don't see a lot of posts about the times you were out and noticed a well-behaved child. Is that becuase it never happens? Because you don't notice children unless they're loud and rude? Because that's not something to complain and act sanctimonious about?
Some restaurants cater to a family clientele. If you don't like other people's families then go to an adult restaurant where only adults are present, quietly eating and minding their own business. Would it bother you if those adults lit up a cigarette? Isn't that as obtrusive as a child "saying AH" (It was a restaurant and not a dentist's office, wasn't it?)
If you really believe that children should be seen and not heard (except when having corporal punishment admistered), there's a nice little place called the Victorian Age you might like to visit. Just keep your table limbs covered.
Senator Jack said:On the contrary, I ALWAYS say something to parents when I see their children are well behaved. And I compliment the children too. Funny how they appreciate it as much as bad parents detest 'the eye'.
Regards,
Senator Jack
LaMedicine said:Theories are fine. Practice is another thing. Children need to be educated primarily in the home on proper behavior and manners, but you can't always instruct them with just words. Examples set by their parents are the first things they learn about the world, whether for better or for worse.
What is most effective as discipline easily differs from child to child, even in the same family. Whether a word or two, or a look is enough, whether a couple of spanks as a last resort, are in order. The only thing parents can do, is behave themlseves impeccably, and show good examples to their children, and teach them to follow that example. How the child is disciplined when he/she disobeys is very much up to the parents, but it does need to be done with a cool mind and clear focus on what the true need of the child is, not just overcome by anger for disobeying. Parents are on a learning curve along with their children as they grow up, but still, they should know enought to keep things under control until the kids are mature enough to continue on their own.
Besides, verbal violence and terrorizing can be just as damaging, or on occasions, more than, physical violence.
Neither do I find it realistic to say that day care/schools are to blame. I think the parents are still responsible here, too. It is a matter of educating the children on acceptable manners at home/outside the home, showing their interest and caring in how their children are actually behaving/ doing in these places and not relegating responsibility that should be the parents' to day care/schools. If children have not learned what acceptable behavior is at home first, how are they going to behave outside the home? How do you expect that they know how to behave outside the home, when they don't know how to behave inside the home? And I don't think a stay at home mom is a cure all, either. Whether the mother is SAHM, or works, what is most important is that she cares, and knows, and will take the necessary time out for the child to let them know that they are loved and cared about. Even if the mother was home all the time, the child can end up ingnored in the most important ways.
Oh, sure, the best behaved kids have their bad days, but even then, I think their bad days are a bit better than the allowed-to-have-the-run-of-the-place-whenever-wherever kids. Also, obviously, even at family oriented restaurants, it doesn't mean that the kids can be let loose and disturb others beyond reasonable extent.
So, I think it all comes down the the value and care parents place in the future and well being of their children, and help them acquire the skills and knowledge truly needed to become a considerate, respectable, and loving person, and to navigate through the world on their own.
Oh, that's true enough. But there has to be some starting point, and since babies are, usually, first cared for at home by the parents, I'd say that even in this time and age, it's best to start there. If the parents themselves have not had the necessary "education" in becoming one, then, they should be given the chance to learn some basic skills and values. Whether it be society in general, or the immediate community, or the family one grows up in, that actually teaches these skills and values, obviously, it isn't something that one is born with, nor is it something that comes naturally to you once you're a certain age. I have always told myself that I have to "learn" in being a parent while my children were growing up. Although single parents and working mothers may be at a disadvantage, I don't think that just being so means that they don't have the skills and knowledge in becoming a good parent. On the contrary, if there is only one parent, then that person may work hard in being a good parent because there is no partner to share the job. And I also imagine, some of the people you mentioned would be a bit peeved in being called inept victims themselves...There often are those who choose the easy way out (parenting is not an easy job), or put their own pleasure ahead of everything else, regardless of what they know/don't know/have/not have.Section10 said:There are many children out there sorely in need of guidance and many parents out there who are unfit to raise hamsters much less be a parent. .......It is wrong to fix too much blame on people who often enough are little more than inept victims themselves.