A couple of days ago, my Your Family Matters post on Facebook was: "Great Moments in Parenting--Last night I'm making supper and can't find a pot to steam veggies to save my life. Not in dishwasher, cupboard, or on counter. In a hurry, I improvise. Later, as I go upstairs to tuck littlest in bed, I hear a rhythmic beat. You got it. All the pots are in her bed, and she's drumming to beat the band. Evidently, practiced all afternoon. Big points for creativity!"

I posted this as a funny moment in parenting. A comment shocked me.

One mom congratulated me on not punishing my daughter. She remarked that she knew many parents who would have seen the behavior as mischievous and punished. Really?!!

Though I often work with parents who don't understand how, when, or where to punish children and so choose to let their children run amok; equally concerning are parents who punish too much.

When not to punish:
  • When children are being children. Children haven't yet lived the range of experiences you have. They don't know how to negotiate social situations or accurately assess choices. We don't punish when they act out of childish ignorance.
  • We don't punish because a child's act inconvenienced, embarrassed, or put us in an uncomfortable spot. Just because child asks a question we can't answer, we don't punish. Just because child repeated a remark we made that we now regret, we don't punish. Just because child's plan for learning drums means the pots aren't on hand, we don't punish. We might have a discussion about a better choice. We explain what we would like to see instead. But, we don't punish. They didn't disobey--they merely acted in a way we didn't anticipate and don't know how to handle. We figure out how to handle rather than wreaking vengeance.
  • We don't punish because we're tired, overwhelmed, or stressed. Too often, especially in homes where both parents work, both parents are strained to the limit. The best energy, attention, and emotion get expended for the person writing the pay check. We have only dregs to offer our family. When children demand more than this simply by needing our time or attention, we often snap. And punish. This is wrong. Our children deserve our best time, energy, emotion--not the leftovers. Parents must reserve their best for their family to avoid acting out of stress or tiredness. Don't let work become the excuse for being either a lazy parent or a wrongly punishing parent.
When to punish: Punishment should be given only when a child knows what he should do and refuses to do so. Punishment should be only a tool in the larger picture of guiding our children to live in unity with God--His love, His holiness, His righteousness. We focus on our child's heart--is her heart right with God. If not, we may need to educate. We may need to pray. We may need to punish an ongoing pattern of doing what she knows she shouldn't.

Our family has found that we boil punishment situations down to three:
  • Punish when a child lies. Every time.
  • Punish when a child fails to show respect--in attitude, voice, or action.
  • Punish when a child disobeys a direct command or a standing rule.
That's it. That doesn't mean everything else goes. It just means we deal with other situations in different ways. With education. With prayer. With conversation about cause and effect.

When parents know when, and when not, to punish--we are freed to engage fully with our children. We are focused on which issues are their behavior and which are our own behavior. We are freed to delight in a daughter confiscating ordinary pots to create her own beautiful music.



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This month’s topic: What guides you in punishing your child?


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