Coping with Abusive Children
By Kathryn H. Kidd
I was hoping to start the year with a warm and fuzzy topic
that is dear to my heart — asking all of you what was
the greatest lesson you’d learned in the past year. I
always like to ask people what they’ve learned, so I can
absorb their painful lessons without going through any
of the agony myself.
But alas, I have three topics that have been suggested by
desperate readers, and that have been sitting in my to-do
files since September. The time has come to help
these women, and you’re just the one to help them.
The first topic deals with a problem that is all too common
in this disrespectful age. I’ll let the anonymous reader
lay it out for you:
I am struggling with a child who is verbally abusive.
He's a teen — defiant, rebellious, and on probation. How
does a Mormon mama deal with the guilt and pain?
I'm
sure I've contributed to his anger and frustration. How
do I handle his slings and arrows? I'm finding myself
cornered, reporting him to the police and probation officer,
and feeling as if I ought to be turned in, too.
I
have to stay strong. He's not my only child, and I don't
want his example to be followed.
What
do you do if your son calls you names that can’t be printed
in a family publication? So far, I've corrected him at
least once when he called me obscene names in front of
his sisters. Since he repeats the offense, I guess I'm
feeling that wasn't enough. I don't want to make him eat
soap. I'm sure that would just become a physical struggle
between him and me, and he'd probably force the soap into
my mouth instead.
And
please don't attack his dad. He and I both are frustrated,
angry, and tired. I think I'll put our names on
the prayer roll now. Thanks for reading.
Wow! That’s a major problem. And you’re not alone by any
means. Not to sound like an old person (yes, I am
an old person — but let’s not go there), but manners seem
to be in short supply these days. And once a person has
dispensed with basic courtesy, the next thing on the list
is open hostility. It sounds as though you’re dealing
with that in a big way!
Readers — we need your
help desperately. If you have conquered this problem,
please tell Mormon mama how you did it. Send your email
to circleofsisters@meridianmagazine.com.
Put something in the subject line that will let
me know your letter isn’t spam. And when you
write, be sure to include your full name,
city and state or province. (If you’d rather be semi-anonymous,
sign your name as “A Reader from Michigan”
or “Sandy from Timbuktu.”
The important thing is that we hear from you.)
Until next week —
Kathy
"What
a mistake to suppose that the passions are strongest in
youth! The passions are not stronger, but the control
over them is weaker! They are more easily excited, they
are more violent and apparent; but they have less energy,
less durability, less intense and concentrated power than
in the maturer life.”
Edward
Bulwer-Lytton