Santa Fe New Mexican

Strong parental attitude can calm defiant tot

- John Rosemond Living With Children

Question: We are having no success getting our 3-year-old (her third birthday is in a couple of weeks) to do what we tell her to do. She defies us at every opportunit­y, whether it’s just ignoring us or telling us “no” or even physically fighting us.

We’ve tried timeout, but she won’t sit, and if one of us tries to hold her in her “happy chair,” she screams and kicks and arches her back and we’re afraid we’ll hurt her if we don’t let her go.

We’ve tried taking away privileges, but there really aren’t that many to take away, and she doesn’t seem to care anyway. Are there consequenc­es we haven’t thought of that might turn her around?

Answer: There are probably consequenc­es you haven’t thought of, but I’m sorry to inform you that consequenc­es are not the key to the effective discipline of a child. Rewards and punishment­s work very reliably and predictabl­y with dogs and other animals. They do not work such with human beings. When it comes to the discipline of children, behavior modificati­on has been a complete bust (along with every other psychologi­cal parenting theory).

The key to effective discipline is a proper parental attitude. Breaking it down, it’s onethird proper body language (as opposed to what the parent-babblers advise, stand up straight and tall when addressing a child), one-third proper speech (when giving instructio­ns, use the fewest words possible and preface them with authoritat­ive phrases such as “It’s now time for you to … ” and “You need to … ”), and one-third refusing to engage in nonproduct­ive arguments.

To be more specific with regards to the latter, do not explain your reason for giving a child an instructio­n. The lack of explanatio­n provokes the universal invitation to battle: “Why?” There is one proper response to that invitation: “Because I said so.” That very time-honored phrase is nothing more than an affirmatio­n of the legitimacy of the parent’s authority. After delivering that affirmatio­n, walk away. Do not hover over a child, waiting for her to begin complying. That is sure to draw resistance. If one is in a situation where walking away is impossible, then turn away and pay attention to something else.

My finding is that the proper parental attitude described above, which identifies the parent as the alpha in the relationsh­ip, minimizes discipline problems. They quickly become small potatoes. Consequenc­es may sometimes be necessary, but two facts are pertinent to this discussion:

Without an authoritat­ive attitude on the part of the parent in question, no consequenc­e will work for long.

With that authoritat­ive attitude, consequenc­es are rarely necessary.

In the life of nearly every child who is a major behavior problem in the home, there is at least one adult who has no problems with the child at all. That is proof that the problem is not located “inside” the child in the form of biochemica­l imbalances and other equally spurious fictions. It also proves that the child is not the problem.

So, to parents like yourselves, I advise: find that person and watch him or her. You’ll save yourself a lot of money that you might eventually spend on therapy.

Visit family psychologi­st John Rosemond’s website at www.johnrosemo­nd.com; readers may send him email at questions@rosemond.com; due to the volume of mail, not every question will be answered.

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