Click here to view La Crosse Area Weather
Home > Family > Story
 Advertisement 

SECTION SPONSORS


Published - Sunday, July 06, 2008

POST COMMENT | READ COMMENTS (No comments posted.)

John Rosemond: Not every question deserves an answer


.
In the mid-1970s, I attended a seminar that promised to train me to become an instructor in positive discipline methods. It turned out that the methods amounted to one: talking. Any behavior problem could be solved, the trainer told us, by properly reasoning with a child. Furthermore, he said, adults should answer children’s questions honestly. To not do so is to disrespect them, to deny they are intelligent. By this point, I had had enough experience trying to reason with my own kids to recognize baloney when I heard it.

Notwithstanding my perennial incorrectness, the nouveau philosophy promoted in that seminar captured the popular imagination, one sign of which is the fact that today’s parents, by and large, believe in talking. When their children misbehave, they talk. I call it “yada-yada discipline.’’ They also seem to feel that if a child asks a question, he is due an explanation. The problem, as the mother of a 5-year-old girl recently discovered, is children — to borrow from the title of a popular 1950s television show — sometimes inquire about “the darndest things.’’
Said mother and her daughter are sitting together one afternoon when the child asks what “hump’’ means. (At this point, it is my obligation to inform my audience that this column contains adult material and should not be read to children or even left lying around where one might find it.) The mother, startled, blurts out that a hump is what one finds on the backs of camels. So far, so good.

This little girl is not so easily bamboozled, however. She persists. “I know that,’’ she says. “I mean what does it mean for one person to hump another person?’’

By now the mother is sweating bullets. She asks her daughter why in the world she is asking such a question. Who told her people hump each other? The child answers that a boy at school told her adults sometimes hump each other. “Like this,’’ she says, and then proceeds to demonstrate a pelvic motion familiar to fans of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show.’’ She then asks the most dreaded question of all: “Do you and Daddy hump?’’ The mother’s bullets turn instantly into cannonballs and she begins, yes, talking.

She tells her daughter that this is an inappropriate question and the topic itself is inappropriate and it is inappropriate for children to be talking about such things with one another and making that particular motion with one’s hips is inappropriate. All this talking, I will bet, only further inflamed the child’s curiosity. She probably went to school and told her friends that her mother said that to talk about humping was “inappropriate’’; therefore, they will certainly talk and giggle some more about it and even make that motion with their hips.

The mother’s sister asks, “What would you have done?’’ Easy. I would have given the camel answer (or said that it means to carry something), but then I would have said, “I have no idea what you are talking about. Your friend at school is mistaken’’ and I would have followed up on this, immediately, with something like “I feel like a bowl of ice cream. How about you?’’ And the matter would have probably died a natural death.

Children are not entitled to answers to all of their questions. They are only entitled to answers to questions they should be asking. If that means they are sometimes “disrespected,’’ I’m all for it.

Family psychologist John Rosemond answers parents’ questions on his Web site at www.rosemond.com.)
.
 Advertisement 
 Tell us what you think...

 Comments »


PLEASE NOTE: Comments on stories that frequently update through the day disappear with each update.
The comments above are from readers. In no way do they represent the views of the La Crosse Tribune.

Click here to report offensive or inappropriate comments. Please identify the comment you're concerned about, the story to which the comment was attached, the date of the comment and the person who made the post.

 Post a comment (150 word limit) »

Log In - If you have already signed up with The LaCrosse Tribune, please sign in now!
Member ID:
*Password:
  Forgot Your Password?
 
Sign Up - To encourage intelligent and meaningful conversation, The LaCrosse Tribune requires all commenters to register before posting comments. It's quick, it's easy, and it's free! Just fill in the information below to get started!

**Your Member ID and password will be required to log in. Your comments will appear under your user name.

Do not use usernames or passwords from your financial accounts!

Note: Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required!

Create a Member ID:
*Choose a password:
*Re-enter password:
E-mail Address:
Year of Birth:
 

(children under 13 cannot register)

First Name:
Last Name:
Company:
Home Phone:
Business Phone:
Address:
City:
State:
Zip Code:
 

NEWSPAPER ADS

LACROSSE JOBS

TOP HOMES

HomeSeller
Top Homes



 
 
Dailies
La Crosse Tribune
Winona Daily News

Weeklies
Coulee News
Courier Life News
The Chronicle
Houston County News
Tomah Journal
Vernon Broadcaster
Westby Times

Regional
Inside Preps
My LIVE! Entertainment
Best of River Valley
Business Report
Healthy Living Today
Strictly Golf
River Valley Bike Trails
River Valley Blogs
River Valley Outdoors

Shoppers
Tri-County Foxxy

Marketplace
Newspaper Ads
Local Website Directory
7 Rivers Rentals
HomeSeller
Wheels Website
Outdoor Motors
Work For You

Portals
La Crosse NET
Winona NET

Classifieds
River Valley Classifieds

Links
Lee Enterprises

About Us | Classifieds | Contact Us | Terms of Use | F.A.Q. | Privacy Policy | Requests | Search | RSS | Videos | Advertiser Directory | Add to My Yahoo!
Copyright © 1997 - 2008 The La Crosse Tribune. All rights reserved.
Material from this site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or distributed. A Lee Enterprises subsidiary.