By James Kimmel, Ph.D.
Almost everyone in Western societies agrees that it is morally wrong
for people to settle arguments or impose their will on each other with
blows. When a big kid hits a little kid on the playground, we call him a
bully; five years later he punches a woman for her wallet and is called
a mugger; later still, when he slugs a fellow worker who insults him, he
is called a troublemaker, but when he becomes a father and hits his
tiresome, disobedient or disrespectful child, we call him a
disciplinarian. Why is this rung on a ladder of interpersonal violence
regarded so differently from the rest?
- Penelope Leach1
As a psychologist who specialized in working with emotionally disturbed
children, and as a person who has a special fondness for children, it is
extremely troublesome to me that punishment, both physical and otherwise,
is an intrinsic part of child rearing in the United States. None of my
three children, now adults, were ever punished. Just as people who state,
"I was spanked and punished and I turned out OK," my children
are able to say, "I was never spanked or punished and I turned out
OK." And based on the kind of people they are as adults, I would
agree that, not only did they turn out OK, but they are much more caring
of others, including their children, than most of their contemporaries.
They do not, of course, punish their children.
However, I do not wish to prove through my children or my grandchildren
that punishment is totally unnecessary in order to grow up to be a
socially appropriate and caring person. We already know this from studies
of cultures where children are never punished. I hope to show, instead,
that punishing children is a malevolent act that is harmful to children
and, ultimately, to the community and society in which it takes place. The
punishment of one human being by another is behavior in which the punisher
has, or believes he has, the right to hurt and violate a person he
perceives as his social inferior. Punishing another individual of one's
species is a human cultural invention. It is not found in all cultures nor
in the animal world. Its utilization as a child-rearing method seems to go
hand in hand with the development of civilization.
A person hurting another as a result of a temporary loss of emotional
control is not punishment. Such behavior is a different form of violence.
Punishment is a deliberate, controlled act with a conscious purpose. It
is, of course, a terrible, troublesome, and dangerous fact that, in our
society, parental loss of control, accompanied by physical and verbal
abuse of children, is tolerated. However, such behavior is not the subject
of this paper. Our society, although it may not do much to prevent it,
does not openly condone child abuse. But it does openly condone and
sanction punishing children, physically and otherwise. What bothers me so
much about punishing children is that it is a conscious effort to hurt
them physically and/or emotionally. I find it hard to understand, even
when it is explained as a way of teaching them proper behavior, why
someone would intentionally choose to hurt the life they contributed to
creating (or chose to care for through adoption.) I also find it
incredible that parents, and many authorities in the areas of mental and
physical health, child development, and human morality, cannot see that by
hurting children, we are teaching them that it is moral and right to hurt
other human beings.
The Origins Of Punishment
It is likely that punishment initially developed in our species as a
method to control and direct the behavior of animals by hurting them. It
later was applied by humans to other humans to control individual behavior
and thinking. The fact that punishment can modify behavior is
well-founded. Research studies on rats, as well as other animals, have
clearly indicated that by inflicting pain on them, we can control to a
great extent what they do or don't do (Bermant), a fact known by farmers
and animal trainers for thousands of years. Human thinking can also be
altered by punishment and has been utilized throughout civilization by
monarchs, dictators, slave owners, authoritarian states, and religious
institutions to control deviant and non-conforming individuals.
We do not know when punishment first became a method used to direct
children's development. I have never read about a hunter-gatherer society
that punishes their children as part of child care. In ancient
civilizations, and throughout the history of civilization, punishing
children was a common practice (deMause), and the practice continues today
in much of the civilized world. Punishment is and has been a commonly
accepted part of American child-rearing (deMause, Beekman). It is
perceived as a legitimate and appropriate form of discipline. Its
legitimacy in human relationships has few parallels in American life,
especially since the abolition of slavery. Other than children, only
convicted criminals are legally allowed to be punished. But children do
not even have the rights of criminals, as they are allowed to be punished
without a trial. The closest parallel to punishing children would be the
punitive ways in which we domesticate and train young animals so that they
will serve, submit to, and entertain us. When we punish our children, we
serve to perpetuate the Western civilization belief that children are,
like animals, inferior beings who need to be tamed, trained, and
controlled.
Punishment and Distrust
Obviously, the decision, felt necessity, or compulsion to punish
another person reflects a lack of trust in that person, whether it be in
the relationship of governments to citizens, tyrants to subjects, slave
owners to slaves, wardens to prisoners, teachers to students, or parents
to children. The advocates of punishing children (which include some past
and present "experts" on child development) have a condescending
and ugly view of children which is embedded in an even uglier view of the
human species. Humans are not, in their eyes, a naturally caring and
social species, but a species in which the individual is born anti-social
and governed solely by self concern and self-interest. They further
believe that children resist socialization, so it must be imposed on them
by adults.
There is no recognition, in this perception of the human individual as
selfish, alienated, and basically separate from all others, to the fact
that sociability, socialization, and the ability to trust develop
naturally through appropriate nurturing in childhood. The quality of basic
trust, as originally formulated by the psychologist Eric Erikson, is the
foundation for a healthy personality (Evans). Its meaning to Erikson and
his followers was that during the first year of life, a baby learns that
those who care for him can be trusted to satisfy his basic needs. From
this secure base the infant learns to trust himself and the world. I
prefer to describe basic trust as the experience of a baby or young child
that there is a person there for him, who affirms his life and well-being
by providing the nurturing relationship that he genetically and
biologically evolved to have after birth. Without such an experience
during the first stage of life, an infant does not develop the full trust
in others that is essential for healthy human emotional and social
development.
The need for an infant to develop basic trust in those who care for him
has become widely accepted by virtually all health-care specialists. It is
not always expressed in such terms, nor is it always achieved, but we all
seem to know that babies and children need "love". Much less
emphasis has been given to the need for parents to develop basic trust in
their children. They may love them, but do they trust them? In fact, many
American authorities on infant and child care have sent the message that
children, including infants, cannot be trusted; Babies and young children
are frequently portrayed as being manipulative and wanting to make their
parents' life miserable, as if their need and desire to be with their
parents, and to be nurtured by them, is not genuine (Spock, Turtle).
I do not believe that genuine trust can develop in a relationship
unless both parties have trust in each other. In the parent-child
relationship, the child learns to trust his parents when his need for
nurturing is regularly met. But this development of trust can only
occur if the parent's response to the child is based on the belief that
the child's expression of his need for nurturing is genuine, that the
child is not just trying to "get his own way"; and is not out to
make the parent's life difficult. Misery, unhappiness, and a struggle for
power often do become a part of the parent-child interaction, especially
in a society such as our own which does not trust and does not validate
the nurturing requirements of children. If the relationship of parent and
child does become a continual struggle, it is not because the child's
motivation is to punish the parent, but because his need for nurturing is
not being met. It is also true that a child, as he matures, may begin to
behave in ways to punish his parents, but this can only occur if his
parents have regularly punished him.
The use of punishment by parents is a clear indication that there has
been an insufficient development of trust between parent and child in the
early formative years of the child's development. Most American parents
punish their children. Most also begin punishing them, and using the
threat of punishment, at a very early age (usually in infancy). Children
grow up believing that the punishment they received was deserved, and that
they were harmful, bad, and not trustworthy. Many, as adults, who lack a
foundation of parental trust, do not trust, or even like, themselves. They
perceive their needs, especially their need for nurturing, caring,
kindness, love, and intimacy, as "bad", selfish, indulgent,
harmful, and a burden put on others. Some spend their entire lifetime
feeling guilty towards their parents. Often, they begin in adolescence to
self-destruct, punishing themselves for burdening their parents, for
having been born, for being alive.
The Most Common Methods Of Punishing Children
Corporal punishment in the form of spanking (even in infancy) is the
most common way children are punished in America. Slapping, hitting and
beating with the hand or straps and other instruments closely follow. NBC
News has reported that about 90 percent of U.S. parents spank their
children. In addition, a 1992 survey reported that 59 percent of
pediatricians support the practice ("When Spankings Are Abuse").
It is important to recognize that in our society most parents and many of
our infant and child care authorities, do not classify spanking as hitting
or physical punishment. By a magnificent denial of reality, it is often
described as a "love tap" or "pat' or "harmless
swat" or "loving reminder". Since spanking has
traditionally been administered in the United States to almost all
children for generations, it is considered a natural part of growing up,
the same as feeding.
Other more bizarre methods of corporal punishment, such as burning
children with fire and other forms of heat, having them kneel on hard
objects, or forcing them to stand for many hours, are less common than
they once were, but they are still practiced today. We do not know the
current extent of their use, nor do we know the current extent of other
kinds of physical torture. Throughout civilization, until fairly recently,
there have been various kinds of commercial items produced to punish
children; including whips, the notorious cat of nine tails, cages, and
various shackling devices (Beekman). Since these products are no longer
openly advertised and sold, one would expect, or at least hope, that they
are not used any more to punish children.
While many countries now outlaw the physical punishment of children,
only Austria and the Scandinavian countries completely ban hitting them.
However, in the United States, corporal punishment of children by parents
is legal and widely practiced. It is also legal in the educational system,
despite the fact that it is prohibited in the schools of almost all other
industrialized nations. The US, Canada and one state in Australia still
continue the practice. Twenty-seven of the states in the U.S. have banned
corporal punishment in their schools. The twenty three others continue to
allow teachers to hit and paddle their students when they deem it
necessary (Corporal Punishment Fact Sheet). As a nation, we have been slow
to understand the harmful effects that hitting has on our children, and we
continue to defend our right to continue to hit them. We do not seem to be
concerned that spanking and physically punishing our children creates a
new generation who will in turn, continue to physically hurt their
children. Based on our belief in the value of corporal punishment we are,
in fact, likely to encourage our children to use it on our grandchildren.
It is frightening that many parents, educators, and others who are
involved in child care today act out on children the cruel physical
imposition that was inflicted on them by their parents and other
care-givers while they were growing up. But even more frightening to me
than the passage of physical cruelty to children through generations, is
the passage of the belief that punishing children is a necessary part of
raising them. Even parents and child-care experts who do not believe in
corporal punishment advocate other kinds of punishment such as
"time-out" and "logical consequences". (Salk,
"When Spankings Are Abuse"). Although many of these methods,
which are designed to get children to behave, are viewed as appropriate
ways to discipline children, they are, in reality, punishments, the
purpose of which is to get children to obey their parents' rules and
regulations by imposing on them parental power and authority. The
following are some of the ways, other than physical punishment, that are
frequently used by parents to punish their children. These were not
originally or specifically created as tools to help parents to get their
children to behave properly. In general, these methods have been borrowed
from the traditional methods used to punish adults who had committed
crimes or violated laws, rules, customs, or conventional ways of behaving.
Isolation and Confinement
Isolation and confinement usually go together. A child is sent to his
room, or made to stand or sit in a corner and usually not permitted to be
with, or relate to others. The currently popular "time-out" is,
of course, confinement, and also isolation, if the child must be alone
during the "time-out" period. Less openly discussed forms of
this type of punishment are the practices of tying up or chaining
children, locking them in rooms, closets, cars, sheds or other areas of
confinement. In general, isolation and confinement are for a brief time.
However, it is not uncommon for the time period to extend into hours, and
although much less common, can extend sometimes to days, weeks, and even
months. Basically, isolation and confinement give children the message
that they are inferior and unfit to be with other humans. Many children,
if they are frequently punished in this manner will come to believe that
they are different, "crazy" and unfit when compared to other
children who do not seem to require or receive this type of banishment
from society. Often, as they mature, these children act in accordance with
what they have been made to believe about themselves.
Deprivation
Another method by which we attempt to teach children to behave is to
deprive them of things. Most children are no longer sent to bed without
supper. They are, however, denied privileges. Frequent items that are
denied include dessert, sweets, toys, allowance or spending money, TV,
music, movies, the car, the telephone, friends, or whatever the child
likes and is important to him. The length of time of the specific
deprivation varies greatly, depending upon, among other things, the
particular family, the nature of the misbehavior, and the age of the
child. But all forms of deprivation - regardless of their length - teach
children that their parents have the power to make their lives miserable
by taking away what has meaning to them. Who would trust, or even like,
someone with such power?
Grounding
Grounding is similar to and overlaps the punishments of deprivation and
confinement, but it is much worse. Here the focus is more on prohibiting
activity away from the home, rather than on denying that which is external
and material. It is being confined to the house rather than confined to a
room in the house. The child is not allowed to go and to do. He is
"grounded", like a plane or "docked," like a ship,
made to be immobile, temporarily "out of commission". He has
lost, for a time, his freedom to move about, his freedom to be fully alive
and to grow. The punishment of grounding is, ironically, a major way to
teach children to be defiant and disobedient towards their parents,
because it usually attacks life and growth in relation to one's peers. One
can tolerate, for a time, starvation and imprisonment. It is more
difficult to lose one's freedom to act and to be, especially for children.
Withdrawal of Affection
Highly recommended, as a means to control children's behavior, even by
supposed liberal and progressive child care experts (Spock, Salk), is the
punishment known as withdrawal of affection. Why it is necessary for a
parent to consciously do this, is puzzling to me because withdrawal of
affection seems to occur automatically (at least temporarily), to most
people when someone (including one's child) does something we strongly
dislike or which hurts us. Momentary loss of affectionate or tender
feelings toward another is a natural part of human relationships and
serves to communicate to a significant other what we, as an individual,
personally like or dislike. Humans are able to enhance this automatic
non-verbal communication with language. However, even without language,
the message gets across. Babies communicate their likes and dislikes quite
effectively, without a fully-developed language, all the time - that is,
if they have someone who is attentively listening and watching.
The communication of both positive and negative feelings is an
important way that our species learns to live with, accommodate to, and
collaborate with one another. It is an essential part of the human
nurturing process. Mother and child are continually accommodating to each
other: finding mutually comfortable nursing and carrying positions,
dealing with biting of the breast as the child grows teeth, accommodation
to the child's increasing development and changing capabilities, the birth
of a sibling, and, from the moment of birth, the parents' cultural values
and priorities.
Affectionate feelings, and the absence of such feelings, are
spontaneous reactions in human relationships. When affection is
consciously withdrawn as a means to control another, we are dealing with a
different kind of human interaction than the integrative one described in
the previous paragraph. Exploiting another person's emotional
vulnerability is not an integrative act but rather an act which ultimately
alienates the other person. It is a dishonest use of love. It is fake
love. The conscious withdrawal of affection by a parent in order to get
the child to behave in the manner the parent desires is simply a way of
exploiting the child's need for affection from the parent. It is
treating caring and love as commodities which can be given or taken away
whenever the parent wishes. Affection becomes a power tool, a bribe,
rather than an emotion. When withdrawal of affection and love is
consciously and regularly used as a way to punish children, their human
capacity to love, cherish, and trust another person, becomes tarnished.
The child's critical need for parental love, security, and protection has
been abused.
Some Other Ways Frequently Used To Punish Children
There are, of course, other ways that children have been, and continue
to be, punished than the ones I have already detailed. We no longer punish
adults by public whipping or by exposing them to public scorn by placing
them in a pillory or stock or ducking stool. But children are still
punished, if not by such extreme measures, then by intentionally
embarrassing and humiliating them. It is considered proper in rearing
children to make them feel ashamed about their behavior, and to humiliate
and disgrace them in front of others. Dunce caps, as well as wearing and
carrying signs about one's bad behavior, are still used by parents,
teachers and school officials, although not as much as they were in the
early part of this century. Ridicule and verbal abuse, both in the home
and in public, are common methods used by parents and other authoritarians
to make children feel badly about themselves and their behavior.
Another common way of punishing children is to frighten them. They are
told about, and threatened with, images of bogeymen, monsters, God, the
devil, animals, hell, or whatever humans can invent, to terrorize children
in order to get them to behave. This form of mental torture is preferred
by many parents because it allows the parent to let someone else do the
"dirty work". It is not the parent who will harm the child but
somebody, or something, else. This form of punishment makes children a
little "crazy", and when used extensively, very
"crazy".
One other commonly used punishment, which on the surface appears to be
benign, is the assignment of chores or additional chores as punishment for
"bad" behavior. Of course, this kind of punishment is not so
benign if the chores are extremely strenuous or so prolonged that they can
be physically harmful to the child. In addition, if the chores hinder the
child greatly from other more desirable activities, the child is then
receiving "double" punishment, which is not only unfair, but
doubly painful. The assignment of chores as punishment can lead children
to resent and hate the chores that need to be accepted as a natural part
of learning, working, and caring for oneself and others. Chore-punishment
may not hurt a child as much as other punishments, but, as do all
punishments, it teaches children that it is all right to impose your will
on another if you believe your cause is just.
Punishment And Parent-Child Alienation
It is strange to me that parents who punish their child do not seem to
recognize that, not only are they harming the child, but they are also
harming their relationship with the child. But perhaps they do recognize
this fact, and that is why the statement by parents, "This hurts me
more than it does you," has long been a part of the child punishment
ritual. Intentionally hurting another person leads the injured person to
be afraid of, and distrustful of, the person who has hurt them, especially
if the hurting person indicates that they have the right to hurt the
victim, and that they will continue to hurt the victim, whenever they deem
it necessary.
Punishment of children alienates them from their parents and increases
children's distrust of those who, biologically, are supposed to provide
them with the security of feeling and knowing that they are not separate
in the world. Children, because they are dependent on their parents for so
many essential things, usually have little choice but to accept the
reality that punishment and hurt are part of their relationship with their
parents. However, as they get older, children of punitive parents are more
likely, as compared with children who are not punished, to lie to, to not
confide in, and to conceal their behaviors from their parents. This is not
part of the normal growth pattern of becoming a person who is less
dependent on their parents, but rather a reflection of the fact that these
children do not trust their parents to be understanding, empathic, or to
treat them kindly. The punishment these children received when they were
younger has taught them that when they are involved in problematic
behavior, their personal integrity and rights as a person will be ignored,
violated and not respected by their parents. They have received the
true message of punishment, which is to banish behavior which appears to
be negative, rather than to try to understand it.
Does Punishing Children Work?
Does punishing children work? It definitely helps parents to believe
that they are in control of their child. They are able to relax for a
while until the next misdeed. Does punishment change children's behavior?
Yes, but only for a brief time. Usually children will continue to do the
same things they were punished for, if they think they can get away with
it.
One of the troubles with punishment as a way to teach children proper
social behavior, aside from the infliction of pain, is that it makes
children feel weak, impotent and incapable. Punishment teaches children to
look to external authority to decide for them how they should behave,
rather than looking to themselves. They do not learn how, in collaboration
with others, to make choices; they do not learn how to decide what is good
for them and for those who are important to them. What they learn instead
is to submit to authority and power, to obey. By being punished and
treated as inferior beings, they become inferior beings - they do not
develop the power of the human individual to love and trust. Children who
are regularly punished learn to fear their parents. They learn the
behaviors that their parents like and don't like and also, how to hide
these behaviors from their parents. They develop "proper"
behavior out of fear, not choice.
Some children openly defy their punitive parents. These children
usually end up getting into worse trouble with their parents, and with
other authorities as they mature. Most children, however, go underground.
In order to protect themselves from parental power they develop a
"good", submissive-to-authority, social pose to hide their
secret misbehaviors and improper thoughts and feelings. Their social
behavior is not genuine because it has little to do with who they really
are. Once out of the realm of authoritarian control, they adopt new ways
and new codes consistent with the values and priorities of their peers.
They go in any direction the wind blows to avoid disapproval and to gain
approval. The lack of respect their parents had for them has prevented
them from developing respect for themselves.
Why We Hurt Our Children
The question that must be asked is why we are, and have been, so
willing to hurt our children in order to get them to behave – to treat
them as criminals, slaves and animals. Of course, we are, in part,
following the traditional ways of treating children for centuries of
civilization. But there is more to it than just tradition. We have in the
past century learned a great deal more than we knew before about
children's emotional and social development and their mental health. This
information is not kept secret from the public. Most of us even seem to
recognize and accept that what happens to children in their early years
has a great deal to do with the kind of persons they become. Yet, we
continue to punish them. Do we not see the harm we do? Why do we not stop
consciously hurting our children?
For some parents, whose own punishment as children was accompanied by
rage, hatred, and sadism, punishing their own children is an opportunity
for them to legally inflict pain on another human being – a chance to
get back at someone for the pain that they suffered. But for most parents,
it is a matter of controlling behavior which they were made to control in
their own childhood. It is a matter of ignorance, of passing on malevolent
and inappropriate behavior toward children which they learned to accept as
appropriate in their own childhoods. They are acting from an attitude that
says it is just and right to hurt children in order to achieve certain
ends. They will defend their belief that their own parents were right to
punish them, that they are right to punish their children, and that their
children will be right to punish their children. "After all," so
many parents say, "how else can you get them to behave?" And
many, even when they are told "how", still punish their
children. On a deeper psychological and social level, parental punishers
of their children do so because their children make them anxious by
confronting them with behaviors and feelings which the parents themselves
have learned to hide, suppress, repress, and disown. They must condition
their children as they were conditioned.
Children threaten our identity, security, and reality. We harm them in
order to stop our perceived threat that their behavior will harm us. It is
a myth that we punish children for their own good. We punish children so
that we will be secure. Our children have the power to elicit our tender
and loving feelings. They also have the power to frighten, anger, and
embarrass us. From being punished, children learn to distrust and fear
their parents. Other than that, children and parents learn nothing. By
condoning punishment as a disciplinary tool, we perpetuate the
acceptability of the use of force and power to control others. At the same
time we perpetuate our ignorance and our fear. We use punishment in order
to stop behavior rather than having the courage to confront and understand
it. By openly dealing with the underlying causes of the child's behavior,
both parent and child have the opportunity to get a better and more
realistic view of the child's actions, and any potential danger to the
child and/or to the parent. We evolved to protect children from harm, not
to harm them.
The belief in our society that punishing children will make them into
social beings reveals our alienation from the socialization process that
is normal and natural to our species. We become genuine social beings
from developing in relation to tender, nurturing, and non-harmful others.
Alienated from our own need for tenderness, and hardened since birth by
life in a non-nurturing society, we teach our children that punishing them
is proper parenting that will help them to grow right and to be good. We
do not seem to understand that punishment does not make children social,
it merely teaches them to fit into a society which separates us from each
other – a society which is not based on the human capacity for
tenderness or on concern for another, but on the absence of these.
Punishing our children sabotages the nurturing and protective feelings
that we evolved to have towards them. It destroys the unity of parent and
child. It teaches us to violate the rights of others. As a socially
condoned practice in child rearing, it damages and insults the human
species.