json_metadata | "{"app":"musing/1.1","appTags":["Life"],"appCategory":"Life","appTitle":"Should parents hit their children as a way to discipline the child?","appBody":"<p>Outrage - a feeling you can't control </p><p>Some of the time it shows as crying, similar to mine, or some of the time it shows as yelling. </p><p>Some of the time it shows as hitting. </p><p>When it includes anybody — particularly a kid who can't battle for themselves, who doesn't have any power, who does not have a voice—it is... miserable. </p><p>As an overcomer of maltreatment, I can't underscore that hitting does not influence a kid to learn, it ingrains and breeds fear. It doesn't let them know not to rehash the activity, it makes the kid fear you. Moreover, \"discipline\" can be taken excessively far. </p><p>As an individual who has been hit in the head with a seat, and by incalculable different hazardous articles, I can disclose to you that an individual who should ensure you can change into a beast in 1 second. It harms you mentally, and frequently, more so than the wounds that you can't disclose to other people. I actually told individuals I fell on my head. It is difficult to control outrage, it is difficult to control yourself, so as opposed to thinking twice about it, don't do it in any case. </p><p>Like creatures, people are comparable in that uplifting feedback enables a tyke to recall what to do as opposed to being confounded of why they got hit. </p><p>Would you like to be recognized as mother, the individual who thinks about you, or mother… the individual who harms you?</p>","appDepth":2,"appParentPermlink":"f3nvvchyq","appParentAuthor":"alonsogab","musingAppId":"aU2p3C3a8N","musingAppVersion":"1.1","musingPostType":"answer"}" |
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