Effective Parenting: Tough Love

Manda Spring
Tough Love is a hard thing to do sometimes but is unfortunately, at one point or another, absolutely mandatory. It is the only way, on occasion, to express the seriousness of a situation. This article will take an in depth look at the reasons and need for this type of effective parenting skill and offer the appropriate tough love punishments for common issues amongst children and teens today.

This is an educative guide to parents everywhere that will offer support and encouragement in their parenting decisions. Remember, parenting is a serious job that needs serious attention for the entire duration that you are a parent- it is not job a short task that ends when your children begin to walk away and talk back.

Effective Parenting: The Foundation of Discipline

There are some parents that believe that discipline is a bad word. They do not comprehend that children need to be taught what is appropriate; they need to experience the trial and error of life and personal choice. It is the parent's job to ensure the stability of this foundation and enforce punishment that is suitable for the crime. Without the disciplinary aspect of parenting, children will grow up believing that breaking the law is a matter of personal preference instead of what is right.

The best lessons in life, for most of the world's population, came with a severe penalty attached. I never got a spanking that I liked at the time, but all were necessary for my growth and education. Speaking of spanking, some parents are for this act and some against. I, myself, must admit that sometimes it is important to get the point across for the benefit of the child and it does seem to get the message across.

Without discipline children can not possibly understand the full affect that bad decisions have on their lives. If a child is raised without being punished for stealing or hurting another then they will grow up believing that this is okay, and when they are arrested for these actions it will come as a shock to them. Our job as parents is to get our children ready for the adult world. Learning the 'do's' and 'don'ts' are very important to the growth and development of every human being.

Effective Parenting: When Grounding Doesn't Work

There will often be time when grounding doesn't work. It is at this point that other disciplinary actions should be implemented so that the children can learn from their mistakes and you can teach them by effective parenting.

It is important that you don't get discouraged; every child will push the boundaries during their childhood to see what they can get away with and how dedicated /serious their parents are when it comes to teaching them right from wrong.

Effective Parenting: Competing with Bad Influences

There should be no competition between you and other influences in your child's life. If there is then you have not been as active and involved in your child's life and decisions as you should've or could've been. By being an active parent your child learns to trust you and value your experience, this means they will need you to be the most important factor in their lives.

By teaching your kids right from the start the bad types of friends versus the real friends you can avoid some of the headache involved with bad decisions down the road.

If you find yourself being blatantly ignored in front of certain influential friends then it is pretty safe to say that there is something going on behind the scene that needs your prompt attention.

Effective Parenting: Crossing the Line

Children need to know that crossing the clear boundaries will not, under any circumstances, be tolerated. The rules and laws that are set in your family are there for a reason. Explaining this along with punishments for breaking these rules will result in a thought provoking meditation that will come back the next time they wish to commit the same offense.

It is imperative that you take this portion of your parenting job seriously and follow through. With ever time you turn your back or give a 'warning' about the punishments to come you are suggesting that the actions themselves are not that serious. This diminishes all sense of what should be considered right and wrong.

Effective Parenting: The Last resorts

Last resorts should be reserved as just that... last resort. If grounding, sentences, and other general punishments don't work then your child is trying to see just how far you will go to make them understand that what they are doing is wrong. Below are a few of the most common issues that parents and children face and the last resort that would be appropriate to implement should the need arise to enforce and support your parental point.

  • Crimes: stealing, drug issues, etc.-Boot camp can introduce structured stability in a tough yet encouraging way.
  • Disturbing acts with friends: cyber sex, sneaking out, excessive cursing, violent acting out, etc.-removing the computer and keeping it locked until you are present to observe EVERY use is important along with taking your child out of the reach of the influences (current education facility) and placing them in either home school or a private school where a constant monitoring system can be enforced.

Effective Parenting: In Closing

It is important to impose a set of rules and a disciplinary action plan. By being diligent in educating your kids on exactly how difficult these decisions are on you, for their own benefit, you can help ensure the cooperation of your children and obtain the respect for the important job you have by keeping them safe and healthy.

Published by Manda Spring

Manda Spring is a published author of books, screenplays, advertisements, and articles (in print magazines and online).  View profile

22 Comments

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  • tree.hugger.chick4/22/2007

    I don't think that anyone is against discipline; it's just a matter of what is considered appropriate discipline. Many people are in favor of discipline that isn't physical, and I see nothing wrong with that. I kind of got to experience both trains of thought, as I would live for a couple of years with one parent (who spanked and switched and so forth) and then a few years with the other parent (who would never dream of doing that but who also did much more excruciating things for punishment like boxing up everything I owned but my textbooks and clothes and putting it all in the attic for a couple of weeks). To be honest, I think that kids can learn equally from physical and nonphysical punishment. Either one will get the point across, so I don't see the need to actually lay a hand on a kid. *shrug* But that's just my opinion.

  • Manda Spring3/15/2007

    Very well put Renee, and thank you.

  • Renee Bodkin3/15/2007

    I have to agree with D Armenta. Valid, important points here. The most important message about "tough love and effective parenting" being that children need to know the limits and know that the parents will follow through with consistent consequences.

  • Manda Spring3/15/2007

    Thank you D Armenta and Zane, I appreciate your comments sincerely. And D Armenta, very valid points you bring to the table. I see that my message is getting out there.... Zane, you are very perceptive. Thank you both!

  • Zane Ewton3/15/2007

    I am dissapointed that this has been downrated so much. It deserves better than a 3.0.

  • D Armenta3/15/2007

    I thought this article had some very valid points. The bottom line is that the parent *must* be the one to teach the child the boundaries of good behavior. The parents must set good examples and be moral guides for their children--not their "buddies" or their fairy godparents. As for Ms. Brewington's comment, I can see reasoning with an older teen, but with a toddler? You cannot reason with the id, which is all toddlers have at that stage. In order to be able to reason, the child must first be aware of the feelings of others besides himself. Thank you for the article.

  • Manda Spring3/15/2007

    Thanks Pleasurebound and Charlotte! Parenting is a rewarding and most loving experience isn't it?

  • Charlotte Kuchinsky3/15/2007

    Whoa, you stirred up some comments here. But that is good.

  • pleasurebound3/15/2007

    I must have been very lucky raising my wonderful grown responsible son. (Yes, I am a bit fond of him, lol) but I never did have to use tough love, or even grounding. There was one time he almost talked back to me, but he was right, I wasn't listening to him.

  • Manda Spring3/15/2007

    I did not say that everyone else is wrong... try reading a bit ok? If you see no blatant attacks on your part then you are either blind or don't know what that word means... and no that is not a dig but rather a mere observation. And, for the record, I do remember saying thank you all for your opinions which are also referred to as comments (in case you weren't aware) so yes, I know people have their own ideas and opinions-- but saying them once and moving on is polite, sticking around just to 'mock' 'scoff' and belittle other ways and methods other than your own is rude to say the very least. What I know IS based upon education, what's wrong with that? I never said you are ignorant so that is a lie, and I never suggested that any children you would have would grow up to be "fiends" either. That is a hostile tantrum yet again.

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