The majority of us
have been brought in a setting where rules are rules, and your parents' word is
final—supper by 7 p.m., bedtime by 9.30 sort of thing. We didn't get to
negotiate our way through issues or have our side of the story heard. Mischief
was met by BMW (I wish it were the car, instead of Black Mama Whooping), or a
milder version of discipline was through an intervention. This is where unruly
behavior was sorted out by spiritual advisors or senior members of the extended
family.
As adults now, we
are probably grateful for the parental corporal punishment we received.
However, at some point, we've thought there were few situations our parents
could've (or should have) handled just a little bit better. We would try to
justify their actions on busy work schedules, large families to keep up with or
simply not in the right frame of mind when whatever happened, happened. Perhaps
I wasn't a parent to see it through their eyes. A huge percentage of failed
adult parent-child relationships stem from unresolved childhood experiences,
whether from the parent's or the child's perspective.