"Train up a child.."Prov. 22:6
Part 2: Developing A Childs Self-Control
The Importance of Self-Control
In the previous page we found that the developing of the proper
character is the supreme part of rearing a child. Now the most important
part of developing the right character is the developing of self-control.
Self-control is the will conquering attention. It is the appetite being
satisfied only when the will allows. It is the will conquering the appetite
rather than the appetite conquering the will.
When children are infants we often place things over their cribs such as
little birds that move abut with slightest wind. The child's attention is
captured by these little birds. His will is a slave to his attention. He
does not decide at what he will look. He looks at that thing which is most
attractive to him. In other words, he is affected by an external stimulus.
Self-control comes when the will takes over and decides what a person does.
His actions are decided by his will rather than by the appeal to the
senses. Unless self- control is developed a person will decide to do in
life whatever is most attractive and most pleasant. This, of course, leads
to shipwreck.
A person walks down the street and smells popcorn. He cannot resist. His
appetite decides what he eats. The attractiveness of the popcorn on the
outside has made his decision for him. The disciplined person eats popcorn
only when he needs it. His will controls his appetite. He decides what he
looks at; he decides what he eats; he decides where he goes; he has control
of himself. He is not a slave to appetites, pleasures, and passions.
How can one train a child to exercise such self-control? This is done by
developing something on the inside that becomes more attractive than that
which is on the outside. Then more pleasure is gotten inwardly by
resistance than outwardly by yielding. For example, my son, David, is an
athlete. During basketball season he does not drink carbonated drinks nor
eat pastry. This is not to say that chocolate pie is not attractive. Quite
to the contrary, it is most attractive, but there is something on the
inside that is more attractive - the satisfaction of making the team, of
being in good condition, and of pleasing the coach! Hence, the inward
pleasure has overcome the competitive attractiveness of external pleasure.
He has developed self-control. His will decides whether or not he eats
chocolate pie. Hence, in this matter he is in control of himself. He is not
a beast; he is a man. He derives more pleasure inwardly by not eating the
chocolate pie than he would derive outwardly by eating it.
As the parent develops such self-control within the child he must make the
inward attractiveness so great that it is worth the hurt of being deprived
the satisfying of the appetite. The pleasure of self-control must be
greater than the pleasure of indulgence. If this can be done, the person is
in control of his body rather than a slave to it.
One must then seek to find these things that can be more appealing. One is
that of a goal. Lead the child to have in his mind the pleasure of
attaining a certain goal. Teach him to let nothing stop him in attaining
this desired end. For example, suppose a boy is saving to by a new bicycle.
The wise parent will remind him over and over again of the desired goal so
that no immediate appetite can rise up and capture some of his money. He
continues to save toward this end even when the county fair comes to town.
The boy looks at the county fair. He finds it so appealing to the outside
that it competes with the inner desire to save for a bicycle. If he is
trained properly, he will not sacrifice the reaching of the desired goal
for a brief pleasure. The child should be led to have in his mind the
pleasure of attaining a goal, and this internal satisfaction should be
greater to him than the appeal from the sight of the bright lights, the
smell of good food, etc. of the county fair.
Another internal competition is that of punishment. Punishment for
wrong-doing is a necessary and vital part of rearing a child and developing
his character. The punishment should always hurt more than the pleasure
feels good. For example, a young man stays out thirty minutes late with his
girlfriend and all he gets is a scolding or a spanking. Now what young man
wouldn't be willing to trade a spanking for thirty minutes with a lovely
girl! The wise parent will take the car away from the boy, ground him, and
not let him be with his girlfriend for one week, Hence, he is trading an
entire week for thirty minutes. This is not a good trade and he will be on
time henceforth, for the punishment has brought more displeasure than the
offense brought pleasure. In the mind of the boy that particular appetite
will always have associated with it the punishment that was inflicted.
It might be wise for the parent to list the different appetites from which
he wants his child to refrain. He then should make very plain to the child
what the punishment is so the child will know whether or not refraining
will be worth it.
Another internal competitor to outward attractions is that of pleasing
and/or not hurting someone who cares. Here is a very strong internal
pleasure or displeasure. If a close relationship can be developed between
the parents and the child, the child will have an intense desire to please
them. If he feels much displeasure and pain when he displeases Mom and Dad,
then the external attraction will be limited by the thought of pleasing
those he loves
Still another of these competitors against external pleasantness is the
desire for praise. This is an important factor in rearing children. It is
vital, however, that the parents praise character, not talent! It is more
important that a child be praised for being punctual than for singing a
song and that he be praised more for being honest or working hard than for
displaying some talent. Character properly praised can do much to give the
child control over his will so that he decides what appetites he fills and
when he fills them.
The following paragraphs will list some general statements concerning
self-control.
1. The child should be taught not to sacrifice a present good for a
permanent one. Reference was previously made to a child's saving to buy a
bicycle. The county fair came along and he faced a present pleasure versus
a future pleasure. The word "no" should immediately have popped into his
mind. Yes, the excitement and pleasures of the county fair are many, but
there are many more pleasures spread over the bicycle. As Dr. Bob Jones,
Sr. used to say, "Never sacrifice the future on the altar of the present."
2. The child should not be punished because he displeases the parents nor
should he be rewarded simply on the basis of the parents' pleasure. In
other words, the parent should not be guilty of the same offense from which
he is trying to wean the child. The offense is that of responding because
of external pleasure. This does not mean the child should not try to please
the parent. It simply means that the reward should come because of the
child's disciplining his will, and the punishment should come because the
child does wrong. Children are often punished for restlessness as if it
were an offense of the will. The mother who says to a child, "I am sick and
tired of hearing our cry," and punishes the child because she is sick and
tired is acting unwisely. Just as the child is being trained to use his
will instead of external pleasures, so the wise parent will use his will in
the punishment of a child and not external pleasures or displeasures
derived from the child's behaviour.
3. The child should be taught that "ought" and "can" are synonymous.
Someone has said, "You can do that what you ought to do." Emerson wrote,
"So nigh is grandeur to our dust, so near is God to man, when duty
whispers, `Lo thou must,' the youth replies, `I can.' "This is just another
way to say that the wise young person is taught that he can do what he
ought to do.
My mother used to have me repeat the following three words over and over
again, "I ought, I can, I will. I ought, I can, I will. I ought, I can, I
will. I ought, I can, I will." Charles Sumner said, "Three things are
necessary for success: first, backbone; second, backbone; third, backbone."
An old proverb says, "Kites ride against the wind, not with the wind."
Another say, "Only dead fish float with the stream; live ones swim against
it."
4. Children should be taught to say "No!" A child should stand in front of
a mirror and practice saying "no" in many ways.
Gertrude Atherton wrote the novel, RULER OF THE KINGS. In it a rich man
sent his boy to be reared in a poor home. The person rearing him required
the boy to say "no" twenty times the first thing in the morning and twenty
times the last thing at night.
Plutarch said that the people of Asia became vassals largely because they
could not say "no."
My mother would get a bottle, put water in it, and pretend it was an
alcoholic beverage. She then would say to me, "Son, would you like a bottle
of beer?" My answer was to be an emphatic "NO!" Again she would say, "Son,
how about a bottle of beer?" I would answer, "No!" Then she would say,
"Son, do you want some wine?" My answer was "no." She would repeat the
aforementioned questions many times so that later in life when I was really
offered liquor I had associated the word "no" with beer, whiskey, wine,
etc. so long that I would again say "No!" She did the same thing with
cigarettes. She would pretend that she had a package of cigarettes and
would ask me if I would like to have one. I would say, "No!" This was
repeated many times. The wise parent will list the things from which he
wants his child to refrain and will train the child to associate the word
"no" with this particular thing. My mother would hold up a liquor ad and
say, "No, no, no, no, no, no, no." She would then tear it up, throw it on
the floor, and stomp on it, all the time saying, "No, no, no, no, no, no."
She would then give me a liquor ad. I would say, "No, no, no, no, no, no."
Then I would tear it up, throw it on the floor, and stomp on it saying,
"No, no, no, no, no, no."
5. Children should be taught not to let the crowd influence them in any
direction. Many fine parents have taught their children not to run with the
crowd and their motives are good ones. This, however, is not a good, hard
and fast rule. It would be better for the child to be taught not to let the
crowd influence him either way. Theodore Munger said, "Suspect the crowd,
resist it." The first part of that statement is unquestionably right. The
last part is not always a good criterion. Suppose the crowd is going to
church. Suppose the crowd is not drinking. Hence, it seems that it would be
better for the child to be taught that he should not go because the crowd
goes nor stay because the crowd stays. He should hold the scaled of right
and wrong in his own hands and should decide what he does by his will. When
a person refuses to go with the crowd just because the crowd is going, he
is not acting from his own will. Again an external stimulus is the
motivating him. The crowd should have nothing to do with his decision.
Someone has said, "When I assent without thought to what another person
says, when I do as he wishes without reasoning for myself, there is but one
person present; I am nobody."
I have said to my son many times, "Son, be your own man. do not let the
crowd influence you either way." Though it is true that the crowd is
usually wrong, and the Christian is often in the minority, it is not always
the case. There will be times when a child would be wrong to refrain from
what they are doing. The basis of judgment, however, should be on the
matter of right and wrong, not who is doing it.
6. Teach the child not to fear unpopularity. It is not what others will
think of me , but what I will think of myself. One should not fear being
unpopular with others, but being unpopular with himself.
7. The parents should be consistent with punishment. The same offense
should be punished in the same way so the child can learn a pattern of
behavior. Suppose little Johnny stayed five minutes too long at Billy's
house and his mother says, "Johnny, you can't play with Billy now for two
days." Then the next time Johnny is late from Billy's house he should
receive the same punishment, so it is registered in his mind that five
minutes too much time with Billy will cause him to forfeit two days with
Billy. Hence, the same offense has the same punishment. Johnny will be able
to learn a pattern of behavior by knowing what the punishment is for each
offense. Year ago I sat down and listed the most common offenses committed
by the children. I then listed the punishment that I felt each offense
warranted. After months of receiving the same punishment for each offense,
the children began to associate certain wrongs with certain types of
punishment which allowed them to weigh the price subconsciously before
committing the crime. Far too many children do not know what the price is.
One time the parent will spank a child for a particular wrong. The next
time the child is sent to his room; the next time he is scolded for the
same offense. Perhaps later the parent will overlook it completely until in
the mind of the child there is developed a willingness to gamble, "Maybe
this will be the time that Mom will do nothing or simply give me a
lecture." When tempted he is often willing to chance it, for there is
always that possibility that he will get by with it. If, however, he knew
that without exception he would pay a certain penalty, and if that penalty
brought more discomfort and displeasure than the wrong brought pleasure, he
would realize there was not a chance in the world that he could get by
without being punished. This leads to another very important thing in child
rearing.
8. Always make the pain of the punishment far in excess of the pleasure of
the wrong: For example, a boy comes in thirty minutes late from a date. He
could have gotten home on time but he wanted to spend thirty minutes more
with his girlfriend. he is scolded or maybe even spanked. Now what boy
wouldn't be willing to get a spanking for thirty minutes more with his
girlfriend? What boy wouldn't be willing to get a lecture in exchange for
thirty extra exciting minutes? In such a case the parent might well forbid
the boy from seeing his girlfriend for a week. When this punishment is
meted out consistently for this offense, the boy will realize that he will
always have to trade an entire week for thirty minutes if he stays out too
late.
In the aforementioned punishment there is also another important
observation that should be made. The punishment should often involve the
withdrawal of the thing which has been done in excess. In other words, the
son should not be refused permission to be with a boy friend for a week.
Most teenage boys would be glad to trade a week with a boyfriend for thirty
minutes with a girlfriend, but grounding him from seeing the girl will hit
him where it hurts and will do him more good.
9. Punishment should not be given because the parent is annoyed, but
rather, because right has been offended and wrong has been committed. In
other words, the child should not be punished because of personality
weaknesses, but rather because of character weaknesses. Far too many of us
demonstrate the opposite of what we are teaching! We teach our children to
be motivated by the will rather than by external stimuli, but then we
punish them strictly on the basis of external stimuli, such as when we are
annoyed with their actions, etc.
10. Self-control in eating should be strongly emphasized from infancy.
Parents are largely to blame for the appetites of their children. Instead
of providing food on the basis of nourishing the body, building up tissue,
supplying energy, etc., the supply food highly spiced that provokes
appetite instead of satisfying it. Such food makes the child sluggish and
dull instead of active, healthy, and vigorous. Hence, the child is taught
he should eat what tastes good instead of what is good for him. If a family
overfeeds a valuable horse, they are considered cruel. The purpose of food
is to nourish the body. When eating is done just for the pleasure that
results from the gratification of taste, the end is overeating, Overeating
causes the body to perform its functions poorly and causes the person to be
a slave to his appetites. The Apostle Paul reminds us in I Corinthians
10:31 that whatever we eat should be to the glory of God.
Breeders of fine horses and dogs pay more attention to proper feeding than
the average mother does for her children. Chickens are fed more carefully
than children. From early childhood a child should be taught self-control
in eating. He should be taught that the purpose of eating is to make the
body healthy. Eating is to the body what filling the tank with gasoline is
to the car. The body will run no better than its fuel allows. One does not
buy gasoline for his car according to how it smells or how pretty it is; he
buys it according to the performance it give to the car. This same rule
should apply to our bodies.
There is more, however, to the control of one's appetite than health alone.
The desire for food is one of the few appetites that are developed early in
life. Hence, if a child is taught self-control concerning eating, he will
become master of his own will, and when other appetites are developed he
will be able to exercise self-control in them also by transferring the
character he has developed in to other areas of temptation. Why not feed
the child apples, grapes, oranges, etc. instead of candy; fruit juices
instead of carbonated drinks; nut, such as almonds and pecans, in the place
of "snick-snacks"? Good food can be as delicious to the child as bad food,
and proper diet can be as tasty as improper diet if the parent leads the
child to develop tastes for that which is healthy and nourishing.
11. The will should control the temper. Controlling the temper means that
one's will prevents expression of his inner feelings and thereby prevents
reaction. Anger should be allowed or disallowed by the will. It is not
wrong to become angry; however, it is wrong to become angry because we are
annoyed or because we have been wronged. Usually our anger does not come
from a hatred of wrong, but because we think we have been wronged. Hence,
it comes from outside stimuli and this is why we "fly off the handle."
Children should be taught to hate injustice and wrong. They must learn to
be angry not because they have been wronged, but because someone whom they
love has done wrong. Oftentimes a person who exhibits his temper will make
such statements as, "I just get it off my chest and get it over with." This
sounds very good but the truth is, it simply makes it easier for passion to
follow the same path and to seek the same relief the next time his is
offended. Hence, a habit is formed because the person has given way to
anger.
One reason anger is so deadly is that it defeats the one who is angry
rather than the one who is the object of the anger. Someone said to me
recently, "I was so mad I didn't know what I was doing." Such
uncontrollable temper leads to murder, bad health, broken friendships, and
perhaps worst of all, the breakdown of self-control which may be
transferred into other areas until restraint is almost impossible and anger
is an automatic reaction which divorces a person's actions from his will.
Because of this a child should be taught to count to ten before he gives in
to his feelings, for the time that is gained in counting to ten or in the
thought of the ritual gives opportunity to reason before hasty action takes
place. It gives the will time to collect itself in order to gain supremacy
over the reaction. The wise man said, "A soft answer turneth away wrath."
Another has said, "Govern your passions or they will govern you." Franklin
said, "What error is begun in anger ends in shame." Jefferson said, "When
angry count ten; when very angry, one- hundred."
12. Children should be taught to finish a task. Each job should be done
completely and well. Never should the parent finish the task for the child.
No food should be left on the plate and no satisfaction should be allowed
for a job that goes unfinished. Napoleon once said, "Impossible is a word
found only in the dictionary of fools." Hence, a task that is begun should
be finished regardless of how difficult it is. The child who is allowed to
let another finish a job that he starts does not develop self-control and
later is found bouncing from one job to another, one school to another,
etc.
This is especially true when a task is an unpleasant one. Teach him to fix
his mind on the goal. Teach him the joy of accomplishing the goal and
finishing the task. Teach him the shame of a task unfinished. Let him
understand that he is being conquered when he does not finish an unpleasant
task. Let the joy of doing a job well overcome the drudgery of the work
itself.
I know one parent who listed all of the tasks that were unpleasant to his
child. The parent led the child to call the tasks "Goliath" and himself
"David." The child was taught to get angry at the tasks and refuse to be
conquered by Goliath. When the child conquered a task the parent praised
him, as David was praised when he defeated Goliath.
Hence, work should be a challenge and perseverance should be a habit. This
would teach the child to work hard, which in essence is a fruit of
self-control. Fortunate is the child who is made to work hard.
In summary, character is habit and habit is formed by practice. I would list all of the things I
wanted them to do and do well. Such things as how to answer the telephone
properly, how to meet friends, how react when an adult enters the room,
etc. were listed. Each evening we would practice one of these things. The
boy would practice walking like a boy and the girls would practice walking
like girls. They would practice sitting, standing, being graceful, being
kind, etc. We would act out a sample situation and repeat it over and over
again until certain reflexes would cause the child to respond automatically
to certain stimuli. May God help us to teach our children to have
self-control.
NEXT: Part 3: Developing Manners in a child
Index of all pages can be found HERE
