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<div class="quote-block">Originally Posted by <strong>Backroads</strong> <a href="/community/t/1387563/is-punishment-ever-necessary/80#post_17425092"><img alt="View Post" class="inlineimg" src="/community/img/forum/go_quote.gif" style=""></a><br><br><div class="quote-container"><span>Quote:</span>
<div class="quote-block">Originally Posted by <strong>Daffodil</strong> <a href="/community/t/1387563/is-punishment-ever-necessary/80#post_17425070"><img alt="View Post" class="inlineimg" src="/community/img/forum/go_quote.gif" style=""></a><br><br><p> </p>
<p>If your kid is too young to understand why hitting is not okay, isn't he probably also too young to understand why he's being punished if you give a punishment? Sure, you have to stop him from harming people and property, but that doesn't have to be done with a punishment. You just physically stop him. Showing disapproval with your voice and face can be helpful, too, and that really is a (mild) punishment. Maybe physically stopping him is unpleasant to him so it also serves as a mild punishment. But I can't see giving any punishment beyond that to a kid who's too young to get the concept of punishment. Are you envisioning a different kind of punishment - something like time-out, maybe?</p>
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<p>This is where I've seen difficulty in this thread. My ideas of punishments are vocal/facial disproval and a time-out where, yes, he doesn't get to play for a minute or two. That time-out does give an immediate consequence where even if he can't understand he did something wrong, he does see a negative result for a wrong action. Are these bad? Do they really count as punishments? Is it wrong to give a "no no!" and pull a kid away from a bad situation? Are they punishments or are they not?</p>
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<p>I'd say yes, they count as punishments. My definition of a punishment is something you do after a behavior that the child finds unpleasant, with the intention of discouraging the behavior in the future. Are these particular punishments wrong? Probably not. Is it helpful to do them? Depends on the kid and the situation, I suppose. If he's already angry and frustrated, if you scold him or pull him away and make him stop playing, it may just push him over the edge and lead to a total meltdown. And if he acted out of anger and frustration, a negative consequence may do nothing to prevent the behavior next time, because next time he'll once again be too angry and frustrated to control himself. But let's say he's not raging and hitting, but just happily doing something you disapprove of, like climbing on the table or whacking the cat. I think "no no!" is fine in situations like that. But for a toddler, I'm not sure a time-out is really helpful as a negative consequence. The moment where you pull him away from what he's doing may serve as a punishment, if it happens <em>immediately</em> after the bad behavior and if it's unpleasant for him. But if the time-out goes on for a minute or two, it's just going to become an unhappy experience that isn't connected in his mind to anything that happened before. And even if "no no!" is helpful sometimes, you don't want your whole day to be one long string of "no no!" That's going to be stressful for both of you.</p>
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<p>Originally Posted by <strong>Backroads</strong> <a href="/community/t/1387563/is-punishment-ever-necessary/80#post_17425092"><img alt="View Post" class="inlineimg" src="/community/img/forum/go_quote.gif" style=""></a></p>
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<p>But is it useful anyway, just as a way to stop a really undesirable behavior when a kid is too young to be intrinsically motivated to stop it? Maybe, sometimes. Generally, I think not.</p>
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<p>Again, just asking this in the spirit of learning: If you can't intrinsically teach a child to not do the undesirable behavior and it NEEDS to stop, is it better to just wait for better behavior or work harder on stopping the behavior? As aforementioned, is "no no!" and a removal out of the question due to potentially being too harsh? If removal is a punishment, is it too harsh? Is it better to not let the kid know the behavior is not okay until he can understand why it isn't, or find a way to let him know it's undesirable early on and teach the whys later? </p>
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<p>Whether or not it makes sense to try to stop the behavior instead of just waiting for it to get better depends a lot on what it is and how much control the kid has over it. If the kid doesn't really have much control over it, there's probably not much point letting him know it's undesirable, and in fact it may be better not to show disapproval, just as you wouldn't want to show disapproval if you had an old dog who lost bladder control and urinated in the house. If the behavior is really a big problem and punishment will work to stop it, then punishment might make sense. But punishment just doesn't work in every situation. "No no!" and removal isn't necessarily too harsh, but it isn't necessarily going to work, either. If that kind of punishment were all it took to stop problem behaviors, there wouldn't be so many hitting, biting, tantruming toddlers, or so many books about discipline.</p>
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<p>Originally Posted by <strong>Backroads</strong> <a href="/community/t/1387563/is-punishment-ever-necessary/80#post_17425092"><img alt="View Post" class="inlineimg" src="/community/img/forum/go_quote.gif" style=""></a></p>
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<div>Punishment makes kids feel bad, and feeling bad can lead to acting bad.</div>
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<p>This may be a derail, but it's something I've been thinking about. I do disagree with punishment to primarily make kids feels bad rather than to help them solve a problem or learn a lesson (as opposed to being taught a lesson).</p>
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<p>But, in and of itself, is it so wrong for kids to feel bad about things they did? Isn't this just what we want intrinsic lessons to lead to? </p>
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<p>Sure, it's appropriate for kids to feel bad about bad things they did. But I don't think punishment usually leads to the kind of feeling bad we want. The kid may feel bad that he got caught. He may end up feeling he'd better not try the same behavior again, or he may just feel he'd better try harder not to get caught. He may feel angry about the punishment. He may feel sorry for himself. If he's being punished for something he did to another kid, he may feel angry at the other kid and blame him for the whole thing. But I really don't think it's typical for a kid who's punished to feel genuinely sorry about what he did because of the negative impact it had on others. Punishment certainly didn't tend to encourage that kind of feeling in me when I was a kid.</p>