T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
92.1 | one experience | A1VAX::DISMUKE | Say you saw it in NOTES... | Tue May 05 1992 10:26 | 18 |
| By DSS may I assume you mean Massachusetts? I believe they take these
things very seriously especially when the source is credible. I know
of an instance in Mass when a teenage girl (age 14) told her teacher
and school nurse that her parents beat her. Now understand that the
incident was your basic slap on the mouth for typical teen freshness.
(No nits or flames, please - don't shoot the messenger here.) Anyway,
DSS intervened immediately and forced the family to seek regular
counseling (the daughter finally admitted that it was an exaggerated
case) together. I think this lasted for about a year (probation).
The DSS caseload also depends on how quickly they react, and what the
problem is. I have heard from DYS (New Hampshire's version of DSS)
that because of cutbacks to the state's budget, they can only intervene
on what they call serious infractions (this was about a year ago - so I
am quoting old news here).
-sandy
|
92.2 | | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Parking Lot Flyer!! | Tue May 05 1992 10:33 | 5 |
|
Yes it is Mass. I'm looking for possibly a step by step process that
the DSS goes thru.
Chris D.
|
92.3 | DSS involvement only fueled the situation and caused consequences! | CALS::JENSEN | | Tue May 05 1992 10:48 | 43 |
|
I know of a case (in Massachusetts) where a 4-year old told her daycare
instructor that her mother beat her with a broom and pushed her down the
stairs ... and I believe another story was she was "hung by her fingernails
on the bedroom window ledge"!!
DSS took it extremely seriously. I believe daycare never warned them they
were "reporting" the contents of the conversation ... the parents just received
a certified letter in the mail to report to the DSS investigator. They hired
a "domestics" attorney. It was ordered that the girl have a complete
physical (looking for bruises or signs of abuse?) and the "family" have a
counselling evaluation.
Based on the above, it was decided that there were no physical signs of
abuse, the Pedi saw the girl regularly and had no cause for alarm in any
past physicals/treatments, the counsellor had some feedback (but nothing
earth-shattering!) ... so the case was "closed", however, that only means
"no further action" - file remains pending for a year (in case another report
is made?).
The child is extremely bright and can be quite manipulative. The mother's
story goes like this ... she was sweeping when the girl demanded the broom.
Mother refused. Girl grabbed broom. Mother pulled on broom, girl's grip
let go and she boomeranged to the floor. Mother went downstairs. Girl
was determined. An argument (of sorts) entailed. Mother ordered girl upstairs
to her room. Girl did not want to go. Mother pulled her along. Girl
grabbed stairway railing, again her grip was broken and she slid down the
last two stairs.
So the facts kind of follow suit here ... but at quite different ends of the
spectrum!
And the results of all this? The girl ultimately WON COMPLETE CONTROL. The
mother to this day is petrified to correct or discipline the child for fear
her own daughter will report her to the "system" again!!!! So her father,
who is quite easy-going, is the only discipliner! It drove a huge wedge
between the mother and daughter. It caused unforgiveable pain for both
parents. This incident only fueled her manipulative ways and lessened
(much needed) discipline and control (from the parents).
Imagine raising a child with the fear of DSS hanging over your head FOREVER?!
Dottie
|
92.4 | | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Parking Lot Flyer!! | Tue May 05 1992 11:12 | 7 |
| The child my question was based on is only 2 years old. So the
consequences in -.1 souldn't apply here. But I imagine the events
like the registered letter, meeting a dss officer, the physical, and
the councelor will all be the same.
Thanks,
Chris D.
|
92.5 | DSS Processes | NODEX::HOLMES | | Tue May 05 1992 13:24 | 62 |
| Here's my understanding of how DSS in Massachusetts works :
A 51A form (report of abuse and/or neglect) is filed with DSS.
DSS sends a social worker to check out the situation. If it's not
considered to be a problem, the 51A is screened out. If it's
considered to be a situation where the child is in danger, s/he
is removed from the home and put into foster care. If it's
considered to be problem but not dangerous for the child, s/he is
left in the home.
If there is a problem, DSS petitions the (district) court for a Care and
Protection order for the child. This says that DSS believes that the
child is in need of care and protection from someone -- usually the
parents, but it could be someone else. At this point DSS is often
granted temporary custody of the child. Physical custody may
remain with the parents, or may be granted to DSS (i.e. foster
care).
DSS writes a service plan which indicates what each of the parties in
the case are to do. For the parents, this often includes things
like counseling, AA, regular visits with the child (if the child
is not living at home). For the child, this includes things like
going to school, doing homework regularly, abiding by the rules of
the home. If there are foster parents, they may be included in
the plan as well.
The case is reviewed periodically in court (about every 3 months) to
determine where custody should remain. At any of these hearings,
custody could be given to the parents if they have made
significant progress toward correcting the situation.
If the problem is not resolved, after some amount of time (usually way
too long in MA, IMHO), a trial date is set. It is up to DSS to
show that the parents are not fit and that the child is in need of
care and protection. If DSS fails to do so, the case is closed
and the parents retain custody. If DSS is successful, they get
"permanent" custody and the child is put (or remains) in foster
care.
Even if DSS is awarded "permanent" custody, the case is not closed.
The parents may still petition for custody, but the emphasis is
shifted. It is now up to them to prove that they are fit to be
parents for the child.
If DSS feels that the parents will never be suitable, they can apply
to probate court to have all parental rights terminated (filing a
2110, I believe). I'm not sure what this process is like, but if
if the 2110 is granted, the child would then be eligible for
adoption.
I think that these are the steps that a case goes through. I've been
working with the CASA project (Court Appointed Special Advocates) for
several months. We get assigned to Care and Protection cases, and our
job is to interview anyone involved in the case (or anyone who knows
anyone involved in the case!) and to make recommendations to the judge
as to what is in the best interest of the child. So far, my case has
only been in pre-trial hearings, but the trial date has just been set.
After that, I should know more about the later stages of the process.
Tracy
|
92.6 | My story | SELL3::MACFAWN | Training to be tall and blonde | Tue May 05 1992 13:44 | 90 |
| I have reported a child abuse case last summer. I live in NH, so the
process may be different than those in Mass, but here's what happened
in my case.
A little boy, in our neighborhood was always on the playground
playing with the other kids. He seemed to be a great child.
But I kept noticing that the child was extremely dirty. I just
thought he had been playing outside for a while and got dirty.
But then I noticed that he was outside at 7:00 in the morning and was
still dirty. One day he came up onto our porch to play with my
daughter and I noticed that the child had bruises on his head, arms,
and legs.
The next day, at 7:00AM, he was sitting on our porch, all by himself in
just his underwear with a jar of peanut butter and a butter knife.
That was his breakfast.
I looked at him and said, "Does your mommy know that you're outside in
just your undies?" It was a little chilly that morning too. He told
me that his mommy had some friends over and she told him to go outside
and then proceeded to push him out the door. When he said that he was
hungry, the peanut butter and knife is what she gave him.
I immediately sent my husband over to try to find out which apartment
the little boy came from while I tried to dress the child in a
sweatsuit of my daughters so that he'd be at least warm. We found out
which apartment it was. My husband walked up to the back sliding glass
door of the apartment. The place was empty. The door was open. My
husband looked into the apartment and saw, sitting on the kitchen table
was about 8 bags of marijuana and rolls of money. He banged on the
door and nobody came to the door.
When my hubby came back and told me what he found, I immediately looked
in the phone book and called the number that was next to CHILD ABUSE
PREVENTION. The woman at the CAP center asked me my name and I told
her that I wasn't going to give my real name, but gave her another name
so that if I called back, she would remember who I was. She asked me
the following questions:
How old is the child?
What signs of abuse are there?
Do you know what the child's name is?
What are the names of his parents?
Where does he live?
How long have you noticed these symptoms?
Has the child mentioned anything to you about his home life?
What does the child look like?
Is the child abusive or withdrawn?
Have you ever seen the parents supervising the child out on the
playground? (This was a 3-4 year old child and I had NEVER seen the
parents!)
She took down all the information and told me that she would call the
local authorities to come to his house to check the story out. She
suggested that if the parent didn't come looking for the child, to
maybe keep him busy out on the playground until after the police
questioned the parents. So I took out the coloring book and crayons
and my daughter and him colored on one of the playground picnic tables.
The police arrived about 1/2 hour after my conversation with the CAP
center woman. The police never came to my house. I called the woman
back later that day to ask what had happened. She explained that the
police made a report and gave that report to a welfare/CAP
representative. The boys mother was arrested for dealing a controlled
substance. The child was taken from the parents for observation,
questioning, a physical, etc. The doctors discovered that the child
had numerous cuts and bruises. He had a broken finger that had healed
in the wrong direction (obviously), he was undernourished, had infected
feet (from not wearing any shoes), had numerous infected bug bites, was
tired, and had a double ear infection.
The family moved away 1 month later. I called the CAP center to check
on how things were and the woman told me that the child was living with
a relative and is happy, healthy and growing strong. The family and
the child are in counseling and are doing extremely well. The mother
has gone through drug rehab and is now trying very hard to finish her
high school diploma. She has gotten a job and is working with CAP to
straighten her life out.
So I guess this was a good story. But let me tell you, I have learned
to become more observant of children, pets, and adults. I don't make
assumptions, I just try to see if anything is out of the ordinary.
Please don't flame me for anything that is written here. The procedure
I used may not have been correct (or maybe it was), but I try to just
focus on the outcome. This child obviously needed help, and I got him
the care he needed. To me that's all that counts. He is happy and
healthly and I'm so happy for him.
|
92.7 | | POWDML::SATOW | | Tue May 05 1992 14:09 | 10 |
| > Please don't flame me for anything that is written here.
Flame you? You deserve a commendation. Many people would have tried to
ignore the situation. Thank you for what you did, and for sharing this with
us.
I question what your husband did, but only from the standpoint of his safety,
not because of what he or you did to try to help the child.
Clay
|
92.8 | | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Parking Lot Flyer!! | Tue May 05 1992 14:25 | 10 |
| I agree with Clay, regarding what you did and what your husband did
(very dangerous).
The child I'm talking about is a 2 year old girl. Her daycare teacher
(or whatever you call them) reported the possible sexual abuse to the
DSS yesterday. All they told her was they were going to send the
parents a letter and copy her. We were wondering what comes after the
letter.
Chris D.
|
92.9 | Hubby | SELL1::MACFAWN | Training to be tall and blonde | Tue May 05 1992 14:52 | 17 |
| The reason my husband went over to their house was to see if the mother
realized that her son was outside in just his underwear.
He was just going to say something like: "Excuse me, I just thought I
would let you know that your son is out on the playground in his
underwear and I didn't know if you were aware of it." Just something
to let her know that he was outside like that and to make note of what
her answer would be. After hubby saw what was on the table, he just
came right home. I guess she was in the shower because when the cop
had gone to her house, her hair was still in a towel.
Obviously she wasn't too concerned about who saw the stuff on the table
because the drapes were wide open, the table was purely visable from
the outside of the door, the light was on, and the door was open about
1-2 inches.
|
92.10 | Reply .5 is correct | GIAMEM::TORTORELLI | | Tue May 05 1992 16:00 | 18 |
| Reply .5 is exactly the way it works.
We saw the whole process from beginning to end and .5 is right on the
money.
We became temporary Foster parents for a child during a DSS
investigation. If the child's mother had cooperated in any way with
DSS or the court appointed investigator, she would surely have gotten
her child back. In fact, if she had cooperated to begin with and not
lied about simple things she would not have lost custody in the first
place.
All the people we worked with from DSS were very caring people and
really want a child to be with the mother/father.
Phyllis
|
92.11 | Must I live in fear of DSS? | ICS::NELSONK | | Mon May 11 1992 11:03 | 16 |
| In re .9, I wonder if the mother left things the way they were as
a cry for help of some sort. Just MHO.
I'm very concerned about abuse, too. At the same time, I do yell,
and I have spanked (I'm trying not to, but sometimes I feel there
are spankable offences. No flames, please). I am glad that everyone
is so much more concerned about abuse, but I'm worried about the
case that Dottie mentioned about the kid using the "system" to
manipulate the family. I am concerned that if my son happens to
say, "My mommy hit me last night" that some well-meaning teacher
will report me to DSS and that, essentially, I don't have the right to
discipline my child in the way that I see fit.
Again, I make every effort not to spank, and I don't want to talk about
the pros and cons of capital punishment. But sometimes the fastest
route to some kids' brains is via the seat of the pants.
|
92.12 | | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | Parking Lot Flyer!! | Mon May 11 1992 11:08 | 6 |
|
From what I'm told, the DSS people are good at weeding out the
punishment spanking from the abusive hitting. I wouldn't worry too
much about it.
Chris D.
|
92.13 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon May 11 1992 11:53 | 7 |
| re .11:
> Again, I make every effort not to spank, and I don't want to talk about
> the pros and cons of capital punishment. But sometimes the fastest
> route to some kids' brains is via the seat of the pants.
You meant *corporal* punishment, right? Just checking.
|
92.14 | | ICS::NELSONK | | Mon May 11 1992 12:38 | 1 |
| Whoops.....corporal I meant. Thank you!!!
|
92.15 | | FSDEV::MGILBERT | GHWB-Anywhere But America Tour 92 | Mon May 11 1992 16:44 | 13 |
| As a school committee member I've seen a couple of things that would lead to
believe that you're both right. It appears to depend on the social worker. I've
seen a vindictive neighbor file a 51A and watched a decent parent's concerns
and actions twisted 65 ways by a truly sadistic social worker. I've seen another
social worker dismiss a similar case after a careful and caring examination
of facts.
I do want to stress that schools and teacher are, under the law, required to
report and to cooperate with DSS in abuse cases. This sometimes puts them in
an awkward position with parents. Parents trust the confidentiality of the
school system and are often shocked at the information that is required to be
disclosed to a DSS investigator.
|
92.16 | | MAYES::SKOWRONEK | | Wed May 13 1992 17:06 | 26 |
|
This is in response to the reply about weeding out the incorrect
reports. If there is abuse (sexual/physical) going on, the daycare
center usually has more than one instance to go on, and daycare
teachers are (or most are) trained to spot actual abuse (ie. certain
areas of the body which are bruised, which under normal situations
would not be).
My daughter is a typical 6 year old. Last summer, she had alot of
bruises on her shins (even I was concerned -- thought she was anemic).
I mentioned it to her doctor, who assured me that they were normal due
to the amount of outdoor playing children do in the spring/summer.
Well, I had said something to my daughter in the effect of "God, your
teachers are going to think I beat you". Would you know, one of her
teachers had asked her "Where did you get all those bruises?" and my
lovely child said back "My mommy beats me!", then the teacher said to
her "Well, what do you do?" and she said "I beat her back". Luckily,
the teacher knew that my daughter was joking (Most children who are
physically abused help to cover up the abuse by taking the blame
themselves) and told me about it when I picked her up. At first I was
shocked, but then I laughed it off --- It is amazing what kids will
come up with . . . .
Debby
|
92.17 | | KAHALA::CAMPBELL_K | Shedding liquid prayers | Fri May 15 1992 14:50 | 14 |
| Re: -1 that reminds me of the time my son Robert got a black eye on
the coffee table. He was about 2 and it was shortly after my divorce
and my second son Shane was born. We were having dinner at my parents'
and my father asked, "Robert, how did you get that shiner?" To which
Robert replied "Mommy". I'll never forget how everyone went silent
and stopped eating, with looks of total concern on their faces. I
could almost read their minds-- single mother, under a lot of stress,
takes it out on her kids. Until I repeated the question "Robert, how
did you get that black eye?" He said "Grampy." Boy did I feel weird.
But it really was the coffee table, and he's going on nine, now and
his brother Shane is nearly seven, and the only beating that ever goes
on at my house is when they beat on each other!
Kim
|
92.18 | Some info.. | POWDML::ROSADO | | Wed Jun 03 1992 13:47 | 10 |
| to the base noter: I can make a copy of some DSS info that I have. I
volunteered for a parent-aide program and went thru a 12-hour training
session. The packet of info explains step-by-step what the procedures
are. When someone calls DSS to report a case of child abuse, he/she
can remain anonymous. If after the call, the DSS feels that there would
be a reason for a house-call, then they will go out to the house and
talk to the parent(s). However, they do not make visits on each and
every call that comes in. Only if they determine a "need". Sometimes it
takes several calls to the DSS before they take action.
|
92.19 | | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | WHO.....MADE.....YOU!!! | Fri Jun 05 1992 14:07 | 6 |
|
Thanks anyway. DSS made the house call and their evaluation was that
nothing was going on. I don't believe it myself, but at least now it's
on record that a complaint was made.
Chris D.
|
92.20 | DSS can be dangerous. | GUCCI::GNOVELLO | Guy = Complete Fulfilment | Sat Jun 06 1992 20:18 | 54 |
|
My wife and I had a bad experience with the DSS. A lunatic ex- friend
of hers filed a phoney complaint of physical, sexual and emotional
abuse of our children. Oh, and neglect too!
The DSS worker called to set up a visitation. A lawyer advised us not
to refuse ( you have the right to refuse them a visit) because then
they may have taken our children.
During the interview with my kids, we were naturally made to leave the
room. We were still able to hear the interview and I wish I had
secretly taped it. Anyway, the interviewer asked very leading questions
and tried to get my son to confirm the allegations. She kept asking the
same questions over and over, which frustrated and confused my son.
Fortunately, he is very articulate and was able to set her straight.
The thing that got me angry is that it took months to get a copy of the
report. In fact, our lawyer had to write them several letters to get
it, and it wasn't particularly accurate.
The information not given in the previous replies is that the
DSS and can work with the Police and the Child Abuse unit to have
you arrested without even speaking to you. Oh, you get a chance for
a hearing, but it is usually after your arrest, arraignment and maybe
even the pre-trial conference: a bit late at that point.
I've known cases where innocent things get blown out of proportion.
Suppose you are watching the 2 year old girl from next door. Your
husband helps her put on her shoes and tucks in her shirt before
her mother comes and gets her. During dinner, the girl says "Guess
what Mommy, Mr. Jones put his hand down my pants" The parents might
freak out, grill the child until she can't remember the fact that Mr.
Jones was only tucking in her shirt.
If the parents call the DSS, and all the little girl can say is that
Mr. Jones stuck the hand down the pants. Mr. Jones is in trouble.
In fact, I belive the DA and a detective might be behind the mirror
during the interview and swear out a warrant shortly afterward.
Since our dealings with the DSS, my wife and I will not watch anyone
else's children under any circumstances. And we are scared of the DSS.
Maybe the above example isn't the best, but If someone ever files a
complaint against you, your life and future is in the hands of an
underpaid, overworked, undertrained, possibly prejudiced person
who works in a system that can arrest people first and ask questions
later.
Guy
|
92.21 | Distorted analysis! | CALS::JENSEN | | Mon Jun 08 1992 10:38 | 24 |
|
I've often "worried" about what our neighbors might be thinking when Juli's
have a stubborn fit about getting dressed in the morning! Juli is very
good-natured and pretty easy-going and flexible, HOWEVER, like all 2-year-olds,
she has that occasional "I WILL CONTROL AND WIN" determination:
eg:
"Mommy - NO! NO! Mommy ... don't touch me Mommy! Go away
Daddy! ... don't take my pants! ...
and if you get into holding kicking legs, you might even hear:
"don't hold me down, Mommy ... you're hurting me, Mommy ..."
And don't forget to add the high-pitched, screeching screams!
Thank God our neighbors have all raised kids ... and hopefully they haven't
forgotten about the terrible two's!!!
An innocent, non-painful endeavor which to an "outsider" can sound like
serious abuse!
Dottie
|
92.22 | I hate being "paranoid". | CSOA1::ZACK | | Mon Jun 08 1992 12:56 | 13 |
| I think that as parents it is scary at how much control DSS could have
over you and your children.
I have often felt somehow guilty when I drop my daughter at daycare and
she has another new bruise on her leg or knee. It drives me crazy to
feel compelled to extensively explain the bruise.
I too have worried about my neighbors comments on hearing my children
in midst of yet another temper tantrum. However recently my neighbors
children and grandchilden have moved in with them and the screaming is
now coming from their house and mine.
Angie
|
92.23 | In a tangle with DSS for alleged abuse | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Mon Sep 14 1992 14:23 | 38 |
| * This note entered anonymously by the moderator.*
My son informed the sitter yesterday that "Mommy spanked me, and it
hurt." She then told me that if he said anything like that at school,
the teacher would be obligated to report the incident to the Dept.
of Social Services and we could lose the children to foster care.
The sitter also said that several neighbors were "concerned" about
the kids, because of all the yelling I do. My husband is furious
with me, the sitter says my kids are afraid of me, and I feel like
scum.
Well, I hit the panic button and called my therapist, who said she had
to report the incident to DSS. She also gave me the PArents Anonymous
hotline number, which I called. This morning we had a brief, but
pleasant visit from a DSS caseworker who was very nice and sympathetic.
He does want to talk to my sitter, who is pretty PO'd with me now
because (1) DSS is in our life now, and (2) she's going to have to get
a license. Apparently, no matter how many kids you take care of now,
you have to be licensed in Mass. He is also going to call the
pediatrician (the caseworker, I mean).
So now, just becasue I made a phone call, I've got all these people
angry at me: my husband (who says he can't trust me), my sitter,
most of the neighborhood, etc., etc.
I feel like I'm guilty till proven innocent. I'm not saying I'm right,
but everyone has taken my son's word for what happened. No one, not
even my husband, wants to listen to me.
My sitter has told me that if she has to go through a lot of hoops to
get licensed, then she'll have to consider getting out of the day care
business, which would make her very sad, and somehow, everything is my
fault.
Somehow, everyone is making me feel like I've ruined people's lives...
all I did was make a phone call for what I thought was help. I will
never do that again.
|
92.24 | | PHAROS::PATTON | | Mon Sep 14 1992 14:56 | 19 |
| Wow, what a crummy situation. It sure feels like betrayal when
you call for support to your therapist, and get reported to the
DSS.
I have always wondered what the specifics governing mandated
reporters are. I bet there is a lot more leeway than it seems,
and that some of them report over *any* incident, because they're
worried about erring on the other side - understandable, but...
A family in my son's school was reported for investigation and
the report was found to be baseless. They said the caseworker was
quite reasonable and they just worked with her patiently through
the process.
On the other hand, a friend of mine was falsely reported-on
several years ago and it was a hellish experience for her. I wish
you luck and hope you can get some support.
Lucy
|
92.25 | | CSTEAM::WRIGHT | | Mon Sep 14 1992 16:25 | 9 |
| I thought that patients were protected from anything they said to
their phychiatrists, just like a confessor is protected about anything
they confess to a priest.
I feel for you going through this mess. Please let us know how
things go.
Jane
|
92.26 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Mon Sep 14 1992 16:38 | 31 |
|
Your sitter is breaking the law. It is *she* that is breaking the law.
You are not forcing her to take care of children without a license and
as she is (presumably) an adult, it was *her* decision to make that
move. (can you see where this is all going?)
You are not responsible for the actions that another person takes.
Sorry to break this to you but it not *you* that is destroying her
life, it is *her* bad judgment that got her into trouble.
As far as your situation, I feel for you. I have often had
discussions with other mothers who have said that they are afraid to
spank or punish their children for fear of being misunderstood and
reported.
That being said, it sounds like your situation is a little more
serious than just being misunderstood. I think that going to your
counselor was a very brave and sensible thing to do. I sure that your
counselor was acting in accordance with the law and is not trying to
get you when she reported you. Now that things are in the open perhaps
your entire family can work on the dynamics that are causing:
mistrust between you and your husband
uncontrolled anger from you (in the form of yelling)
whatever other situations may exist
I commend you on your decision to seek help and even though it may
look like things are coming down around you, the help is available to
put it back together.
Wendy
|
92.27 | | A1VAX::DISMUKE | Say you saw it in NOTES... | Mon Sep 14 1992 16:42 | 23 |
| If your sitter is illegally taking care of children in her home - it's
not your fault. If you find yourself in need of help to gain control
with your "problem" you should be viewed as someone who is trying to do
what is right and not "scum".
A friend of mine had a rough haul with DSS. Her teen (read rebel)
daughter was mad one morning because her step-father slapped her (a
reflex action as the daughter was coming after the step-father) and the
daughter reported it to the guidance councelor. DSS intervened and to
make a long story short the step-father now has a record of "child
abuse" and the mother of "child neglect" because she let the husband
slap the child. This will be on their record - permanently and will
really mess things up for them. They were in the hands of a caseworker
for a year. Now the parents can't be in responsible situations with
other people's children - daycare, teaching, etc. Stinks, doesn't it!
Especially since the parents are GREAT parents and the situation was a
typical teenager rebelling against parents.
-sandy
Don't feel as if you did the wrong thing. Your actions just caught a
few people who really were doing wrong - and now they have to fess up!
|
92.28 | and Leslie whispers, | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Tue Sep 15 1992 13:02 | 7 |
| I don't think that "yelling" necessarily = "uncontrolled anger" (.26).
Frankly, parents who never, ever raise their voices, whose waters
always have a slick surface, give me the *whammies*. They're doing
*something* with that anger (swallowing it)--I don't want to be around
when it blows. ("He was a quiet guy, kept to himself....")
Leslie
|
92.29 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Tue Sep 15 1992 14:01 | 12 |
|
Valid point, certainly yelling can be considered a legitimate and
acceptable way of displaying anger, however, when:
"several neighbors are "concerned" about the kids, because of all
the yelling I'm doing"
is the situation, I think that that goes just a little beyond the
regular and acceptable display of anger and passes into the boundary of
uncontrolled behavior.
Wendy
|
92.30 | | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Tue Sep 15 1992 15:58 | 12 |
| <Entered by moderator for the author of 92.23 "in a tangle", who >
<wants to remain anonymous. >
re .29: The houses are so close together that when I'm in my kitchen,
I can hear my neighbor talking on her phone in her kitchen. Sometimes
at night I can hear my neighbors on the other side running up and down
their stairs. I can also hear my neighbors across the street when they
argue, and I can hear another neighbor's kids when they throw tantrums.
Which is often. I am sorry, I am feeling a little defensive these days
and I feel like I want everyone to know everything.
*****************8
|
92.31 | | SSGV01::ANDERSEN | She smiles with her eyes. | Tue Sep 15 1992 15:58 | 15 |
|
> "several neighbors are "concerned" about the kids, because of all
> the yelling I'm doing"
> is the situation, I think that that goes just a little beyond the
> regular and acceptable display of anger and passes into the boundary of
> uncontrolled behavior.
Wendy
When compared to hitting, I would say yelling certainly is controlled
behavior. I'm not saying it's right or wrong to yell, however, in lieu
of hitting I'd say it was a controlled response.
|
92.32 | a serious question | GEMVAX::WARREN | | Wed Sep 16 1992 15:41 | 4 |
| Re .23: Is it the "official" view that 'Spanking = Child Abuse'?
-Tracy
|
92.33 | My opinion... | ROYALT::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Wed Sep 16 1992 16:50 | 56 |
| re: .32: Is it the "official" view that 'Spanking = Child Abuse'?
Well, the note you reference is not mine, and thankfully I've never
had any run-ins with DSS, but I'll take a stab at a possible answer..
To give you a simple answer, I believe that for some people the answer
is 'Yes', they believe that 'Spanking = Child Abuse'. Maybe someone
else enter something about what DSS "officially" says about spanking.
** Warning ** - personal opinion coming up...
I think people (in general) have a misunderstanding of what spanking
is, and how it should be used. In my opinion, spanking (if you chose
to use it) should be used as matter-of-factly as many people use
time-outs or taking a certain object away if its not used properly.
I think the fear/concern that many people have is that in the cases of
child abuse that we all hear about on the news, spanking is done only
as a last resort, when the parent is near the end of their rope. That
is, spanking, in those situations, was done when the parent was not
completely in control, and therefore was classified as abuse because
the parent could have or actually did injure the child.
re: .23 (I think) - anonymous author - I am in NO way implying
anything about your situation, I hope you understand that. I am
simply trying to offer my opinion about the public's fear of spanking
as an acceptable action by parents.
I believe that if people chose to use spanking, it should be under
pre-defined, clearly understood circumstances, and that it should be a
simple matter of cause and effect. That is, everybody (parents and
kids) understands that if you do "xxx", the resulting consequences
will be "yyy". That way, you avoid the fears that a parent will
strike out at a child in a nearly out-of-control situation, and will
somehow injure the child.
By the way, I do not believe this should be reserved for spanking,
either. I believe that a clear set of "house rules" makes it easier
for everbody to understand what is supposed to happen, and what the
consequences of unacceptable behaviour are.
For example - my kids know that it is not acceptable to write/color on
anything but paper or coloring books (ie, not the walls or rugs).
That is so clearly understood that one day I walked into the room when
my 3.5 year old was drawing on the rug. I didn't have to say anything
- she simply stood up and handed me the pen. No anger, no yelling -
it was simply the normal consequence of an action she already knew was
unacceptable. I believe this mind-set can/should be encouraged for
other areas of unacceptable behaviour.
Anyway, I don't know if this is really true or not, but that's
something I wanted to share.
Peace,
- Tom
|
92.34 | Is there a line | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | It's all in the cue | Wed Sep 16 1992 17:13 | 41 |
| Hi,
I have been following this particular topic with interest because I
was in a similar situation not too long ago.
I am a single parent which in itself is very stressfull. I was
living with my fiance' and we started to have problems. He belived I
was too easy on the dicipline of my son. At one time I just said,
"fine, then you take care of it from now on." He did, Don't get me
wrong, he realy cares for me and my son but was brought up totaly
different. His father was very hard on him and his brothers and they
all turned out to be very successfull adults.
After a while we dicided to go to counciling to try and get some
problems solved before we made definite wedding plans. One side note:
He is in the military and their way of dealing with certian situations
are totaly different from the real world. The main topic of
conversation was my son and our different views on disciplin. I made
the comment that he was too forcefull on my son.
We went to counciling for 3 more sessions and one day I get a
letter stating that my son will be taken from me if my fiance' didnt
move out and continue counciling. Their view was that he was too hard
on him and was also in danger of hurting me. I later found out that he
was going to private sessions. The councilers determined he was
getting out of control.
I left and havent been involved with him since. I still get
letters requesting me to seak counciling because they felt, from his
statements, that I was verbaly abusive to my son. They haven't taken
it any further because I'm am no longer attached to the military.
It is so hard to say where dicipline stops and the abuse begins.
50 years ago is was acceptable (in some areas) to slap a kid or spank
one if the offences warrented.
Sorry this has gotten so long. I just wanted to put in my
situation.
Virginia
|
92.35 | | CSOA1::ZACK | | Thu Sep 17 1992 14:28 | 20 |
| RE: neighbors commenting on yelling.
I used to get comments from my neighbors regarding hearing me yelling
and hearing Alicia crying and I too was concerned that maybe I yelled
too much. However, since this time the neighbors in question have had
their three sons and their familys move in with them and the yelling is
coming from their house also. (All three sons were in the military and
have all gotten out at the same time, there is a total of 6 adults and
five children living there now). I have not heard any comments since.
I feel much better that my discipline techniques are very similar to my
friends and neighbors. It's ashame that as parents we have to worry
about disciplining your children.
As someone mentioned earlier discipline was much stricter in the
previous decades.
Angie
|
92.36 | update | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Mon Sep 21 1992 10:27 | 21 |
| <Entered by the moderator for the noter (author of .0) who remains
anonymous.>
My husband talked to the sitter yesterday. She said that the DSS
caseworker had called her on Tuesday afternoon and said that he was
going to drop everything, that the allegations of abuse were
unsupported. She told my husband that the caseworker didn't ask about
her if she was licensed or anything. She told my husband that she had
"been thinking about getting licensed anyway."
I went to my first Parents Anonymous meeting this week and it was a big
help. I am not the only person out there who is stressed out,
struggling, and feeling boxed in.
I want to thank everyone for their prayers and support and especially
thank the mods for keeping this discussion confidential. This has been
a very painful episode for me.
Final question, the DSS told me that the file remains open for a year,
then it is closed permanently. Does this really happen? Or is this
snake going to bite me again?
|
92.37 | | GOOEY::ROLLMAN | | Tue Sep 22 1992 10:00 | 15 |
|
According to a friend of mine who was under the year long "probation", they
really do close the case when there is no evidence of abuse.
(They were reported by a daycare provider who was trying to get even. They
changed daycare after they found the woman asleep three days in a row, and
they were able to enter the house, get their child's stuff, and take him home
without waking her. The dog was also barking. Their son had fallen and had
cut his forehead a couple days before, so she reported that they had hit him.)
Going to Parents Anonymous is a great idea. Good luck.
Pat
|
92.38 | status
| TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Thu Oct 01 1992 09:18 | 9 |
| <Entered by mod for author of .0, who remains anonymous>
Well, we got the letter from the DSS on Saturday and the report of
abuse was supported, BUT the case is considered closed because I'm
in counseling and because I joined PA. I'm just heartsick, I guess
it's becasue I spanked my son with the wooden spoon. So I don't know
if I should be upset because the finding of abuse was supported or
glad because the case is closed. Please someone tell me when this
will all end. I feel like my life is over.
|
92.39 | | DTIF::ROLLMAN | | Thu Oct 01 1992 09:47 | 25 |
|
No, your life isn't over. This is the worst part, the beginning. This is
when you have to face parts of yourself that aren't very pretty and realize
that you must change. Then comes wanting to change and learning how to. It gets
easier as you learn about yourself and understand.
Everyone has problems. The part that matters is what you do about it.
You're doing something about it, very constructive things, like getting
counseling and going to Parents Anonymous.
Getting started on changing is very hard. There is so much emotion to deal with
and so much confusion. But you're doing the right things, and it will get
easier as you work on this.
I suggest you attend the very next meeting of PA you can and talk about how you
feel. The people there know how you feel, because they've been thru it. They
can and will help you get thru this very difficult time.
I wish you the best.
Pat
|
92.40 | I'm on "The List" | GUCCI::GNOVELLO | Tomorrow we eat sangwiches | Mon Oct 19 1992 22:35 | 33 |
|
RE: last several....
Even if your case is closed with the DSS, if they ever get another
report on you, Watch Out. In fact, I belive if the abuse is
supported, you never get off the list.
If fact, I advise anybody with dealings with the DSS to see an
experienced lawyer just to get all the facts of your rights and
what the DSS does behid the scenes. This is usually free, just don't
tell the lawyer if you're broke :-).
Spanking is considered abuse by the DSS and especially the DAs from the
child abuse unit. Even a swat on the butt. To be blunt, you are lucky
the DSS didn't ask the police to arrest y. To hit a child with an
an object could have been considered an assult.
It is too bad that children don't come with a owner's manual so we
could all raise them "correctly".
If any one wishes to form a support group for people who have had
dealing with the DSS, I'll be the first one to sign up.
On the other hand, it is easy for parents to make mistakes. It is
even easier to get frustrated and hurt a child emotionally or
physically. All parents should take some sort of stress management or
attend a support group.
It helps me to try and look at things from my kid's point of view.
I talk to them a lot.
Guy
|
92.41 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Tue Oct 20 1992 10:29 | 7 |
| A spanking is not abuse. I don't where the DSS gets this rubbish. Maybe
this is part of the problem in families. Maybe we need a little more
discipline, and less DSS crap.
Just thinking out loud.
Ed..
|
92.42 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Tue Oct 20 1992 12:18 | 10 |
|
I beg to differ but *some* spankings are abusive and I think that if
someone were being reported because the child specifically stated that
my mother spanked and hurt me, that the prudent thing would be to
*suspect* abuse until it was investigated. (Isn't it always better to
side with the child at least initially?) Using an instrument to spank
with (my mother used a fly-swatter) tips that 'ol spanking right into
the abuse/assault category that the previous noter mentioned.
Wendy
|
92.43 | | QUILLA::STINSON | "Linda Saisi Stinson...DTN 296-5796" | Tue Oct 20 1992 13:43 | 16 |
| I have been involved with the DSS indirectly as a parent aide. If there is a
history of physical abuse, a parent is not supposed to use physical discipline at
all. I think part of this is that DSS wants the parent to learn non-physical
methods of discipline (and usually once DSS is involved you are hooked up with
parenting classes, parent support classes, therapists, etc). Also, there is the
notion that if the parent has lost control before when disciplining their child,
they may do it again until they have learned new coping skills. And a third
consideration is that if a child has been physically abused (beaten, etc.) then
non-abusive physical punishment may feel abusive to the child, who may also be
in therapy at that point. It seems like there are extreme cases on both sides
(parents who are investigated when there is not a problem, and kids who are
killed by their parents, and no-one reported anything or there were reports with
no follow-up). I am by no means an expert, but this is what I learned during
my one year of volunteering for an agency that provides services to parents
involved with DSS.
Linda
|
92.44 | Spanking | DYNOSR::CHANG | Little dragons' mommy | Tue Oct 20 1992 14:41 | 13 |
| I am a Chinese and I believe most of the Chinese think a child
will and should be spanked at least once in his life. My mom used
a wooden stick to spank all her kids. We seldom get spanked, but
once we did, it really HURT. I was a very stubborn child and
often the only way to get to me was to give me a good spank. My
mom stopped spanking us when we started first grade. But she
did come up other punishments which were more effective than
spanking for that age. After reading the previous replies, I hope
DSS really knows what they are doing. Being a parent, the last
thing I want is to be told that I am a child abuser but in fact
I was just disciplining my kids in an effective way.
Wendy
|
92.45 | More on abuse | SALEM::GILMAN | | Tue Oct 20 1992 15:41 | 33 |
| Any comments on children threatening to turn their parents in for abuse
as a manipulative device? Kids know that abuse is a hot emotional
issue, and kids being kids try to turn things to their advantage at
times. As a hypothetical example:
Kid and parent in dispute over discipline issue.
Parent: "YOU GO TO YOUR ROOM RIGHT NOW"!
Kid: "NO I WON'T AND YOU CAN'T MAKE ME"!
Parent: "IF YOU DON'T GO THIS INSTANT I WILL HAUL YOU UP THERE MYSELF".
Kid: "IF YOU DO I WILL TURN YOU IN FOR CHILD ABUSE, I KNOW YOUR NOT
ALLOWED TO DO THAT!"
Now what? When does it become abuse? Is dragging a 7 year old to
their room child abuse? If you let it go you can be sure there will
be further discipline issues which the kid learned he could get away
with by letting this issue go.
I know, I know, take away TV or do some passive thing which doesn't
require a physical confrontation. The parent never should have told
the kid to go to his room in the first place because it set up a
situation where a physical confrontation could occur. But, being human
hindsite is cheap, a parent tends to use discipline methods which until
we learn otherwise might work.
But my question still stands.... is dragging a screaming kid to his
room abuse?
Jeff
|
92.46 | Moderator caution | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Tue Oct 20 1992 17:42 | 6 |
| While the subject matter of this topic is clearly appropriate for this
conference, we would like to keep it focused. Thus, we request noters
to stick to discussion of personal experience (direct and indirect), and
refrain from digressing into hypotheses, conjectures, and rumors.
-Neil Faiman, PARENTING co-moderator
|
92.47 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Wed Oct 21 1992 10:31 | 19 |
|
I thought that the hypothetical situation posed in .45 was both
timely and relevant and I was very interested in the PARENTING
community's responses to the given situation.
In an atmosphere where an adult can be reported for spanking their
child in public (say the grocery store) I think that it is important
for us to figure out where to draw the lines and where our rights as
parents to discipline begin and end.
Also, in an atmosphere where everyone is hypervigilant about child
abuse, are you really expecting discussions about personal examples of
abusing our children?
Again, I see no conflict with the hypothetical situation posed and
the ongoing conversation regarding abuse.
Wendy
|
92.48 | Regarding: moderators comments | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, DTN 821-4022, Management Systems Research | Wed Oct 21 1992 10:33 | 28 |
| >>While the subject matter of this topic is clearly appropriate for this
>>conference, we would like to keep it focused. Thus, we request noters
>>to stick to discussion of personal experience (direct and indirect), and
>>refrain from digressing into hypotheses, conjectures, and rumors.
But this is the heart of parenting and EXTREMELY difficult for someone to say
"yes, I spanked my child and now, am *I* a candidate for the dreaded DSS?"
I applaud Wendy for the courage to say what is normal in her culture and to say
how she deals with her children. I live also outside my culture (fortunately in
one which I consider less interfering than the US culture) and have trouble
dealing with certain aspects of discipline because of this. For example, my
son is a thief (no bones about it). He has stolen from me, he has stolen from
stores. If I were in the U.S. I would drag him with his stolen merchandise to
the store and make him own up. If I do that here, he will end up with a
permanent criminal record that will follow him the rest of his life. I can't
do that.
I can agree with not digressing into rumors but hypothesis and conjectures
are probably the only way we are going to deal with a very great parental
concern (child abuse, discipline) without relating to very hard personal
experiences (unless we want to end up with replies from Anonymous#1, Anonymous#2
etc. :-)
I think we will need a lot of tolerance and consideration to deal with this
topic.
Cheryl
|
92.49 | my concerns as participant and moderator | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Wed Oct 21 1992 11:04 | 38 |
| As a parent, I share the previous noters' concerns. In the
NEW_HAMPSHIRE notes file (my home state) a noter recently reported
his terrible experiences with DCYS, that state's agency. It
raised a lot of fears and questions in my mind.
I also wear the moderator hat here, along with Neil and several other
dedicated folks. Several replies back, I sent a memo to the other
moderators raising my concern that this discussion might degenerate
into a fire with lots of heat but little light. In response, Neil
posted the earlier reply.
We are not trying to artifically limit the discussion, nor shut it
down. We do want to prevent it from getting out of hand.
You may recall the long dispute in an earlier PARENTING about daycare
versus keeping kids at home. Several noters actively participated who
never participated in other PARENTING discussions. I don't even know
if they have children themselves. The discussion veered into a highly
"religious" argument where actually there are not absolute rights and
wrongs. I, for one, was very hurt by the escalating tenor of arguments
against daycare. It brought up a lot of guilt for me. I just don't
want to see that happen again to me, you, or PARENTING.
This topic is pertinent, worthwhile, and very important to us. Please
bear in mind that there are few absolute rights and wrongs and lots of
grey area in between. Feel free to express your opinion but please
respect others' opinions. Recognize that this is a subject in which
people don't readily change their ideas.
Also, because we generally have only the newspaper or TV reports of
specific situations, which usually lack depth and even lack
objectivity, please think twice before speculating about cases in the
news.
Laura
co-mod
|
92.50 | Abuse? | SALEM::GILMAN | | Wed Oct 21 1992 12:55 | 18 |
| .46 Focused on what? SPECIFIC cases of actual child abuse rather than
conjecture? As others have said you are unlikely to get people baring
their souls in writing on a topic as hot as this. The instance I citied
was hypothetical, but I bet any parent with a kid over five has faced a
similiar situation. There are gray areas, and I picked a scenerio
which I thought WAS gray to help ME figure out the boundaries.
I hope that the witch hunt (SOME of it appropriate) for child abusers
does not go to the other extreme, and make parents AFRAID to discipline
their children appropriately. But sometimes it hard to figure out what
IS appropriate... thus my question. Our kids can wind up hurt by lack
of discipline due to parential fear of being marked as a abuser.
I do love my son enough to not back off on discipline too far because
of that concern. But I am very careful about avoiding physical
confrontations.
Jeff
|
92.51 | What are the consequences of no discipline????? | STRATA::STOOKER | | Wed Oct 21 1992 14:13 | 41 |
|
I have a nephew who has a "I don't give a d**m what type of discipline
you give me, I will do what I want to do".... My nephew is just now
starting 2nd grade and his growing up has been very much a trial for
his parents. He defied every boundary his parents set up for him. They
finally were at such a loss as to how to handle him that they went for
individual and family counseling. It turns out that a lot of his
attitude came from an instance where he was somewhere with his parents
and they walked out of the room for a few minutes. He thought he'd
been abandoned by this action and turned his anger out against his
parents and decided that he wouldn't do anything they wanted. He was
starting fights and being mean in every way that he possibly could be.
My sister-in-law once said to me that she could understand how parents
could be driven to abusive actions. The therapist suggested getting
him involved with an activity that was just his own... not shared in
any way with his older sister. The therpist also said that he needed
to understand what his boundaries were. That when something was off
limits, its off limits and under no circumstances vary from this idea.
He also said to use a wooden spoon (yes a wooden spoon) as the
disciplinary tool. To give him the option once of doing what he is
supposed to do or the consequences was to receive a spanking on his
bare bottom with the wooden spoon. This method has been somewhat
successful in making my nephew understand and realize that there are
boundaries although they do still have problems, because he just
doesn't care. Getting a spanking with the wooden spoon to him means
it hurts for a little while, but then its over. I think he feels its
worth the risk of getting a spanking to be able to do what he wants to
do. I think my sister-in-law worries about the fact that if he doesn't
care now and discipline means nothing to him, then what could happen as
he grows older. Will he go rob a bank and kill someone because he just
doesn't care about the consequences? Hopefully that will never happen
and as he gets older he does beging to respect boundaries and
discipline a little more.
I feel that the DSS's attitude about spankings and discipline are
ridiculous, because in some instances a child may not understand
anything else, and in some instances it doesn't matter how much
discipline and boundaries that a child is raised with, they still
could become our future rapists and murderers that seem to dominate
the news today.
|
92.52 | .. | GUCCI::GNOVELLO | Tomorrow we eat sangwiches | Wed Oct 21 1992 15:25 | 37 |
|
Here are some facts:
A friend's daughter threatened to tell her principal if her mother
physically punished her. They kids may know that "telling" on their
parents is a good weapon.
This is one of the things I got in trouble for with the establishment.
My wife and I babysat for her friend's two kids. The mother was in a
motel room on a date but negelected to give us the last name of her date.
Her youngest woke up, found his mother gone and began crying, refused
to got back to bed etc....
We tried calling the motel, but couldn't find the room number with the
first name only. My wife tried everything to get the kid back to sleep.
He started screaming. After about 2 hours (literally) he had a tantrum.
He wanted his mother now and that was that. I gave him a swat on the
butt, took him into the room and demanaded he go to sleep. Guess what?
He stopped crying and was sleeping within 2 minutes.
This issue came up during my adventure with the DSS and they implied
that I was a violent man and should have continued to give the child
compassion as my wife was doing.
IMO, the only reason I didn't get in big trouble for this was because the
mother admitted that she didn't give us the last name of her date,
which was neglect on her part, plus she didn't want too many people
to know that she spent the entire night in the motel (she was going thru
a divorce) with an engaged man that she had just met.
Now, my own kids know that they are punished less than their friends,
but they don't know the real reason why. We never spank them in anger,
and give them plenty of warning before a spanking.
Guy
|
92.53 | Nightmare | SALEM::GILMAN | | Wed Oct 21 1992 15:41 | 16 |
| .51 points out the type of attitude which I think is MOST difficult to
handle in a kid.... and that is when he/she simply doesn't CARE about
the consequences of misbehavior, or considers the consequences
ACCEPTABLE when measured against the gain of the misbehavior! In
this type of situation I too can understand how an adult can be driven
beyond their limit to handle the situation appropriately. Especially
if it is an on-going situation and 'nothing' helps or works. In
a situation such as .51 described I certainly consider counseling
appropriate. Nobody ever said parents had a monopoly on being perfect
or correctly reacting to discipline problems. As in much of life there
is alot of trial and error. Also, the DYS is comprised of humans too
and they have no monopoly on error free performance either, especially
when the information they have is second hand, out of context, or
wrong. I suppose some of the DYS people don't even HAVE any kids.
Jeff
|
92.54 | | ROYALT::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Wed Oct 21 1992 16:30 | 35 |
| re: .52
> We never spank them in anger,
> and give them plenty of warning before a spanking.
BINGO! That, I believe, is the crux of the disconnect that many
people see between what DSS does and what they do in their own lives.
I don't have any first hand experience with DSS, but I would speculate
that one major contributing factor to their opinion of spanking is
this very issue. I would speculate that what they are seeing is
people who, for whatever reason, do spank out of anger, and so to
avoid this very volatile activity, they tend to look down on all
spanking, regardless of the situation. Right or wrong, they are
probably reacting to a situation where they have seen too much of the
"wrong-type" of spanking to ignore.
I think its safe to say that all of us here are reasonable,
intelligent, relatively thoughtful people, neither prone to violence
nor uncontrolled emotional outbursts. But I have serious doubts that
looking at the emotional profile of people in this conference would
give is an accurate view of society. While there are reasonable
people being intimidated by thoughts of a DSS investigation, I suspect
that their (DSS) intent was not that, but to save those children who
really need it. Its unfortunate that good people are being hurt by a
system that is overstressed and understaffed, because it probably had
good intentions when it was initiated.
Wow, did I write that... egads.. this from someone who would rather
see much, much, MUCH less government involvement in regular peoples'
everyday lives and who doesn't have any better personal opinion of DSS
than many other people.
Peace,
- Tom
|
92.55 | That child is out of control!! | MR4DEC::LTRIPP | | Fri Jan 22 1993 13:19 | 33 |
| Still getting caught up on all the older notes, but just needed to
reply to this one.
My Humble opinion of a child who can threaten a parent with "I'm gonna
tell on you", and then gets away with it has the parent(s) under
control, not vice versa. I think my reaction to this would be, "go
right ahead, but you had better be able to *prove* this acusation in a
way that leaves no doubt in anyone's mind". period! It might also help
to explain the ramifications of these accusations, (I assume that if
the child is old enough to threaten, then his is old enough to be
rational) That if the DYS or whatever agency investigates this, finds
the parent(s) at fault then it is likely the child will be removed from
the home at least temporarily to some sort of foster care. Does he
want to live in that situation?
We have been through a parent training series for hyperactive children.
These classes teach that *physical* restraining is OK, accepted and
condoned. We were advised a one point to put a lock on his bedroom
door to keep him in after bedtime. We were also advised that if the
child won't stay in a timeout chair that we should first try to
physically restrain the child by wrapping our arms around the child in
a criss-cross way, then if this is not working use a physical restraint
such as a belt. Yes it sound cruel and extreme, NO we haven't used
these methods, but when a child is out of control as this one might
appear to be, extreme methods are in order. Back to the original
question, I don't see it as abusive to physically carry a child to his
room. FWIW, a good swat on the butt probably wouldn't hurt either!
(we've done it a few time ourselves, we admit humbly) If spanking is
illegal, then check all the other silly laws on the books like the ones
that make sex on Sunday in MA illegal, and anything but the"missionary"
position illegal. How may of us have broken *those* laws?
Lyn
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