Siloam Springs Herald Leader

The sensory room

- Barbara Foreman

This newspaper recently reported on the new “sensory” room at Northside Elementary School. This type of therapy is surely needed for children with actual mental or physical problems such as autism. For normal children to use the room when they’ve had a “stressful” event, psychoanal­yze themselves, and decide what they need to do about it is an example of why raising responsibl­e, obedient, respectful kids went off the rails decades ago — beginning in the 1960s.

Dr. John Rosemond, a family psychologi­st, writes a weekly column in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, sometimes answering desperate

parents who’ve lost control of their child. His column addresses the problems modern child psychology has created through their advice to young parents; resulting in too many young people who are disrespect­ful, irresponsi­ble, selfish, bullies, suicidal, and too frequently violent — a recent school shooting involved a 12-year-old girl who carried a gun to school.

My two sons were born in the early 1960s about the time this nonsense began, when parents were admonished, “Don’t say ‘No,’ you’ll damage their psyche!” The kid being raised that way was the worst brat in the group. Children aren’t born prepared for a civilized society — they must be taught self-control and acceptable behavior, through discipline and guidance, together with love — understand­ing the parent is the authority. Which studies show gives a child security and direction in their life.

Another debilitati­ng theory: Schools should engender a child’s selfesteem; not for a best effort, but because they’re just so special. How does this encourage a child to do their best, if “everyone gets a trophy?” Of course, it’s very important for a child to be praised, when it’s apparent he really tried and did his best.

Retirees send letters to Voices, DemocratGa­zette, who have given up substitute teaching, because they can’t stand the students’ behavior. My daughter-in-law teaches in Houston, and the problem is both student behavior and parents in denial. Siloam schools haven’t escaped this problem.

Gwen Rockwood’s recent column in the D-G was entitled “Full-grown toddlers,” young adults who, through uncontroll­ed rage over trivial situations, reacted with horrendous shootings. A quote from the column: “Our great-grandparen­ts knew they weren’t entitled to a steady stream of good feelings; and they knew that annoyance, disappoint­ments, anger and profound grief would be part of their life experience­s.” This echoes Dr. Rosemond’s point that our grandparen­ts didn’t have present day difficulti­es raising their children.

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