Discipline and
guilt: Another Look at the Problem Child
There are lots
of issues related to discipline in the classroom. Here’s one
that’s seldom mentioned.
Some years ago, I
helped put on a day camp as part of a Mission to the World project
in Fairmont WV. One morning, two boys got into a fight with one
ripping off the shirt of the other. I pulled them apart and one
began screaming at me “you can do whatever you want. You can’t
hurt me. I don’t care. Go on, send me home!”
I took him aside
and began to talk, asking him what was going on. He said that his
father had left. His mother was dying of cancer. He was afraid he
was going to have to live with his older brother and his
brother’s girlfriend. He didn’t see any other option.
With all of those
circumstances, his outburst was understandable. Some boys in that
situation would close down, maybe even drop out. Because this boy
chose to act out, it was much easier to discover the problem.
I suggest that
both guilt and fear were at work. Obviously he was afraid of the
future. He had been rejected by his father, was losing his mother
and would be set adrift. Guilt has to do with punishment, so
it’s not a big leap to say that he felt guilty. Fear and guilt
are present in those who feel inferior. In some instances, that
results in acting out: “I’ll prove to you that I’m
somebody.”
If that is the
dynamic, understanding will go much further than punishment and
will open the way to present the gospel and affirm the person’s
intrinsic worth.
Robert Edmiston
Training Coordinator, CE&P
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