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THERE IS NOTHING DIFFICULT AT ALL ABOUT MAKING
A BRAT.
FOLLOW THESE SIMPLE RULES:
- Always tell your child to do something 2, 3,
4 maybe even 5 times or more. Your child will instantly know that
you are an idiot, and that what you want her to do is not important
- to you or to her.
- Get angry! Yell and scream and throw your hands
about. Especially get angry at your spouse, when yelling at your
kid. Attack your child personally. "What's the matter with
you?! " Why do you do this all the time?!" "Are
you stupid??!!" "I know you aren't stupid, Why do you
do this dumb stuff?" There are many other excellent lines
to tell your child you think of him with contempt.
- Do for your child what he should do for himself.
Drive him to school because he forgot the special club meeting.
Take his forgotten lunch to him. Help him out with the project
he forgot. Replace lost money.
- Call your spouse to discipline the child. Pick
up the phone and make Daddy come home from work. Ignore the child
until Mama does something about it. Tell Mama "Your child
is . . ."
- FEEL GUILTY! Of course, always let your child
know that you feel guilty.
- Give your child money as he asks for it. Try
as hard as you can to get him everything he wants - call it "needs".
Let your child get rewards whimsically, accidentally and as a
product of conniving or whining. Teach him that the world is a
magical place, and not a world of consequences, of cause and effect.
- ARGUE. Always argue with your child.
- Get involved in fights between or among your
children.
- Ignore your child when he is quiet and productive.
Always deprecate his achievements, "Only a B?!" "When
I was in Little League I was a Starter." "What's wrong
with you?" "Not now, I'm too busy to look at your drawing..."
"Mother!!!! Can't you keep your kid out of my hair when I'm
working???"
THESE NINE PRINCIPLES OF CHILD REARING are guaranteed
to produce a bonafide brat who will be mouthy, spoiled, and a genuine
pain in the neck.
YOU DON'T WANT A BRAT?
Try these rules:
- Tell your child clearly, firmly exactly what
it is you want done. Insist it be done NOW. There is no such thing
as a kid who won't do it the first time. 90% of the time when
a child doesn't follow directions at school, he isn't given urgent
directions at home.
- Be specific and clear in your request and guarantee
that it is done immediately. If the child doesn't act, take him
by the ear, or give him a fine - right now. Make certain that
the consequence of failure is immediate, specific, fair, and to
the point. Be businesslike in your transactions with your child.
"You didn't carry out the garbage, and I did it for you.
That costs you a quarter." Or "Take out the garbage,
George. No, do it NOW! You owe me a quarter for delaying, and
I will take it out and charge you a dollar."
- THEN DO IT RIGHT AWAY.
- You must always give an immediate response and
calmly state the consequence firmly and explicitly. No threats,
no delays. Do it NOW. Or else.
- Teach your child the meaning of consequences.
A forgotten lunch is a missed lunch. Lost money is lost. Lost
gym shoes mean bare feet. If the school won't permit bare feet,
lost gym shoes mean $27.85 charged against allowance and the record
player is held by you until the money is paid. Teach your child
the meaning of collateral. No money to pay for the shoes? You
will pawn your bike as collateral - not the bike? then you will
give me the record player to hold until you pay the money.
- Never give money up front without collateral.
Give worse than pawnshop value - ie. 1/3 or 1/4 of what it could
actually be sold for.
- Make your child plan ahead.
- Respond IMMEDIATELY to any infraction or omission.
Be your own authority. Teach the child to respect you by being
respectable. Firm. Fast. Fair. Never defer a response until mama
is there, or wait for daddy. Deal with problems as they arise
quickly and directly, even if you are wrong.
- Disappointment or hurt is sometimes needed to
learn and grow. If it hurts you to see your child's necessary
disappointment - PUT ON A MASK! Or, let the child know "I'm
sorry you can't go to the play, but it is important that you learn
to be your own boss - to be in charge of your own money....."
Sometimes these pious talks are not useful to the child and it
may be just as valuable merely to be firm. No, you cannot go to
the play, you did not do the lawn and IT MUST BE DONE NOW. You
have no reason to feel guilty unless you are guilty of using crummy
tactics - being angry and shrewish, laying a guilt trip on your
kid, calling names, telling the kid how he is driving you to an
early grave, etc.
- If you have made a mistake, admit it. There
is nothing more wholesome and growth enhancing than an adult saying
to a child or to a spouse "I'm sorry, I made a mistake, I
was wrong." In fact, you may delighted at the impact such
an unusual statement will have if you say it to your spouse.
- Around age four start giving your child a regular
allowance. It should be large enough to cover the regular expenses
for one week. Let him make mistakes. Let him buy too much candy
or junk and find out what it is like to have no money. Create
jobs to earn extra money; but these should not be ordinary household
tasks like cleaning his own room, doing dishes, carrying the garbage.
These ordinary chores should be known to be trades for you giving
him his room and meals and doing the laundry. Still, if you can't
figure out other jobs, make sure there is something he gets paid
for doing.
- Realize that no parent ever won an argument
with a child. Also look in the mirror and tell yourself that there
is no such thing as a genetically argumentative child. Arguing
is learned (guess who teaches it??). Tell the child firmly and
simply the action you wish and shut up. It is sensible to embed
a reason in any request; but much of the actions you want from
a child are reasonable on their face. Do not accept dilatory tactics.
"In a minute", "Just let me finish this, Mom",
"Aw, Dad, can't I watch the rest of this first?". Try
hard to be reasonable, but be firm.
- Fights in a family are always cause for a fine
for all participants. If you are dealing with other people's kids
who have a long habit of bully/victim, you may try to reward both
of them without any comment and blow their little minds by your
calm, and accepting attitude which signals "I am in charge,
I am paying attention and I know what is happening." But
be prepared to swat or fine. Brothers and sisters who are the
closest as adults had the least interference between them as children.
- Go to SeaWorld and look at the dolphins and
SHAMU. Meditate on the fact that there are no bratty SHAMU's or
dolphins. All their performances are made up of actions they never,
ever take in the wild ocean. They are never punished. Trainers
reward SHAMU's slightest movement toward the ultimate act the
trainer wants. Nobody starts off training SHAMU by saying "Ok,
do a back flip". The trainer has to figure out what the parts
of the back flip constitute. Parents have to figure out what the
parts of being "respectful" constitute. You have to
define "honest", "achieving" and all those
other abstract goals you have for your children. You have to define
these words in specific ways understandable to kids.
- It is interesting to think on the fact that
when dolphins or orcas are sulking or seem uninterested in work
the trainers dump a whole basket of fish into the tank. SHAMU
usually cheers up and gets to work.
- Try to find ways to remind yourself to CATCH
YOUR KID BEING GOOD.
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