Thereâs something we donât talk about nearly enough: When children are punished too oftenâespecially for having feelings or telling the truthâthey do
Thereâs something we donât talk about nearly enough:
When children are punished too oftenâespecially for having feelings or telling the truthâthey donât just become quiet.
They donât just âtoughen up.â
They donât just grow out of it.
Sometimes, they become compliant in dangerous situations.
They learn to go along with things they shouldnâtâbecause theyâre trying to survive, not disappoint, not get punished again.
đ§đž A child who gets in trouble for crying learns to hold back tears⌠even when theyâre terrified.
đ§đ˝ A child whoâs silenced when they say, âThat made me uncomfortable,â learns to ignore discomfortâeven when itâs a red flag.
đŚđź A child whoâs punished for saying ânoâ or asking questions learns to say âyesâ to things they donât want, donât like, and donât understandâjust to keep the peace.
The truth is, a lot of children are not abused because they were âtoo wildâ or âtoo trusting.â
They are abused because they were trained to be obedientâno matter how they felt inside.
And that training often began at home.
Sometimes in well-meaning homes.
Sometimes in homes full of love, faith, structure, and discipline.
But still, homes where feelings were feared.
Where emotions were met with âStop that noise.â
Where honesty was met with âThatâs disrespectful.â
Where disclosure was met with punishment or disbelief.
We cannot expect children to speak up later if we silence them now.
We cannot expect them to run away from predators if theyâre punished for walking away from adults.
We cannot expect them to trust themselves if we teach them that their feelings are flaws.
đĄď¸ Your childâs voice is part of their safety system.
Their tears are clues.
Their discomfort is data.
Their stories are sacred.
When we shut them down, we donât just end a conversation.
We damage a vital connection.
And that connection might be the only thing standing between them and someone who wants to harm them.
Yes, discipline matters.
Yes, boundaries matter.
But not at the cost of a childâs ability to feel, think, and tell.
Because when they can do those things safely with you,
They are far less likely to follow someone into harm.
Handle childhood like the one-time miracle that it is.
And remember:
A child who is safe to feel is far more likely to stay safe in this world.
â
âđ˝ Tonya GJ Prince
Founder, WeSurviveAbuse.com | Survivor Affirmations | Rosas Children