Hello Everyone ❤️🩹,
Growing up, I thought discipline meant pain.
If I scored below 70%, my dad had a cane waiting. If I talked back, I got the silent treatment for days.
I hated it then. But now at 19, I realize that cane wasn’t what changed me.
What changed me was what happened "after"the punishment.
My dad would sit me down and say: "I hit you because I hate seeing you waste your brain.
You’re smarter than this, and I’m not letting you settle."
That 5-minute conversation hit harder than the cane ever did.
It taught me that discipline without explanation feels like abuse.
Discipline with explanation feels like love.
Here’s what I’ve learned about discipline that actually works:
Discipline should correct behavior, not crush spirit
If a child feels worthless after being punished, you’ve failed. The goal is to fix the action, not break the person.Always explain the "why"
Kids don’t need to agree, but they need to understand. "Because I said so" raises rebels. "Because I care what happens to you" raises thinkers.Be consistent, not emotional
Punishing only when you’re angry teaches kids to fear your mood, not the rule. Set the rule calmly, enforce it calmly.Replace physical pain with logical consequences
Missed homework? No phone for 2 days. Broke something? Help fix or replace it. Pain fades. Lessons stick.
I’m not saying physical discipline is always wrong. I’m saying it’s useless if you don’t pair it with dialogue.
The stick gets their attention. The conversation changes their mind.
What was your experience with discipline growing up?
Did it help you or hurt you? Be honest — let’s learn from each other.
❤️🩹❤️🩹❤️🩹❤️🩹❤️🩹❤️🩹
Images ara AI generated
❤️🩹❤️🩹❤️🩹❤️🩹❤️🩹❤️🩹❤️🩹