THE ART OF TRAINING.
It is very clear that the most simple
and the most obvious of the modes by which a parent
may establish among his children the habit of submission
to his authority, are those which have been already
described, namely, punishments and rewards punishments,
gentle in their character, but invariably enforced,
as the sure results of acts of insubordination; and
rewards for obedience, occasionally and cautiously
bestowed, in such a manner that they may be regarded
as recognitions simply, on the part of the parent,
of the good conduct of his children, and expressions
of his gratification, and not in the light of payment
or hire. These are obviously the most simple
modes, and the ones most ready at hand. They require
no exalted or unusual qualities on the part of father
or mother, unless, indeed, we consider gentleness,
combined with firmness and good sense, as an assemblage
of rare and exalted qualities. To assign, and
firmly and uniformly to enforce, just but gentle penalties
for disobedience, and to recognize, and sometimes
reward, special acts of obedience and submission,
are measures fully within the reach of every parent,
however humble may be the condition of his intelligence
or his attainments of knowledge.
Another Class of Influences.
There is, however, another class of
influences to be adopted, not as a substitute for
these simple measures, but in connection and co-operation
with them, which will be far more deep, powerful, and
permanent in their results, though they require much
higher qualities in the parent for carrying them successfully
into effect. This higher method consists in a
systematic effort to develop in the mind of the
child a love of the principle of obedience, by
express and appropriate training.
Parents not aware of the Extent of their Responsibility.
Many parents, perhaps indeed nearly
all, seem, as we have already shown, to act as if
they considered the duty of obedience on the part of
their children as a matter of course. They do
not expect their children to read or to write without
being taught; they do not expect a dog to fetch and
carry, or a horse to draw and to understand commands
and signals, without being trained. In
all these cases they perceive the necessity of training
and instruction, and understand that the initiative
is with them. If a horse, endowed by nature
with average good qualities, does not work well, the
fault is attributed at once to the man who undertook
to train him. But what mother, when her child,
grown large and strong, becomes the trial and sorrow
of her life by his ungovernable disobedience and insubordination,
takes the blame to herself in reflecting that he was
placed in her hands when all the powers and faculties
of his soul were in embryo, tender, pliant, and unresisting,
to be formed and fashioned at her will?
The Spirit of filial Obedience not Instinctive.
Children, as has already been remarked,
do not require to be taught and trained to eat and
drink, to resent injuries, to cling to their possessions,
or to run to their mother in danger or pain. They
have natural instincts which provide for all these
things. But to speak, to read, to write, and
to calculate; to tell the truth, and to obey their
parents; to forgive injuries, to face bravely fancied
dangers and bear patiently unavoidable pain, are attainments
for which no natural instincts can adequately provide.
There are instincts that will aid in the work, but
none that can of themselves be relied upon without
instruction and training. In actual fact, children
usually receive their instruction and training in
respect to some of these things incidentally as
it happens by the rough knocks and frictions,
and various painful experiences which they encounter
in the early years of life. In respect to others,
the guidance and aid afforded them is more direct
and systematic. Unfortunately the establishment
in their minds of the principle of obedience comes
ordinarily under the former category. No systematic
and appropriate efforts are made by the parent to
implant it. It is left to the uncertain and fitful
influences of accident to remonstrances,
reproaches, and injunctions called forth under sudden
excitement in the various emergencies of domestic
discipline, and to other means, vague, capricious,
and uncertain, and having no wise adaptedness to the
attainment of the end in view.
Requires appropriate Training.
How much better and more successfully
the object would be accomplished if the mother were
to understand distinctly at the outset that the work
of training her children to the habit of submission
to her authority is a duty, the responsibility of
which devolves not upon her children, but upon her;
that it is a duty, moreover, of the highest importance,
and one that demands careful consideration, much forethought,
and the wise adaptation of means to the end.
Methods.
The first thought of some parents
may possibly be, that they do not know of any other
measures to take in order to teach their children submission
to their authority, than to reward them when they
obey and punish them when they disobey. To show
that there are other methods, we will consider a particular
case.
Mary, a young lady of seventeen, came
to make a visit to her sister. She soon perceived
that her sister’s children, Adolphus and Lucia,
were entirely ungoverned. Their mother coaxed,
remonstrated, advised, gave reasons, said “I
wouldn’t do this,” or “I wouldn’t
do that,” did every thing, in fact,
except simply to command; and the children, consequently,
did pretty much what they pleased. Their mother
wondered at their disobedience and insubordination,
and in cases where these faults resulted in special
inconvenience for herself she bitterly reproached the
children for their undutiful behavior. But the
reproaches produced no effect.
“The first thing that I have
to do,” said Mary to herself, in observing this
state of things, “is to teach the children to
obey at least to obey me. I
will give them their first lesson at once.”
Mary makes a Beginning.
So she proposed to them to go out
with her into the garden and show her the flowers,
adding that if they would do so she would make each
of them a bouquet. She could make them some very
pretty bouquets, she said, provided they would help
her, and would follow her directions and obey her
implicitly while gathering and arranging the flowers.
This the children promised to do,
and Mary went with them into the garden. There,
as she passed about from border to border, she gave
them a great many different directions in respect
to things which they were to do, or which they were
not to do. She gathered flowers, and gave some
to one child, and some to the other, to be held and
carried with special instructions in respect
to many details, such as directing some flowers to
be put together, and others to be kept separate, and
specifying in what manner they were to be held or
carried. Then she led them to a bower where there
was a long seat, and explained to them how they were
to lay the flowers in order upon the seat, and directed
them to be very careful not to touch them after they
were once laid down. They were, moreover, to leave
a place in the middle of the seat entirely clear.
They asked what that was for. Mary said that
they would see by-and-by. “You must always
do just as I say,” she added, “and perhaps
I shall explain the reason afterwards, or perhaps
you will see what the reason is yourselves.”
After going on in this way until a
sufficient number and variety of flowers were collected,
Mary took her seat in the vacant place which had been
left, and assigned the two portions of the seat upon
which the flowers had been placed to the children,
giving each the charge of the flowers upon one portion,
with instructions to select and give to her such as
she should call for. From the flowers thus brought
she formed two bouquets, one for each of the children.
Then she set them both at work to make bouquets for
themselves, giving them minute and special directions
in regard to every step. If her object had been
to cultivate their taste and judgment, then it would
have been better to allow them to choose the flowers
and determine the arrangement for themselves; but
she was teaching them obedience, or, rather,
beginning to form in them the habit of obedience;
and so, the more numerous and minute the commands
the better, provided that they were not in them selves
unreasonable, nor so numerous and minute as to be
vexatious, so as to incur any serious danger of their
not being readily and good-humoredly obeyed.
THE ART OF TRAINING. 101
When the bouquets were finished Mary
gave the children, severally, the two which had been
made for them; and the two which they had made for
themselves she took into the house and placed them
in glasses upon the parlor mantel-piece, and then
stood back with the children in the middle of the
room to admire them.
“See how pretty they look!
And how nicely the work went on while we were making
them! That was because you obeyed me so well while
we were doing it. You did exactly as I said in
every thing.”
A Beginning only.
Now this was an excellent first
lesson in training the children to the habit of
obedience. It is true that it was only
a first lesson. It was a beginning, but it was
a very good beginning. If, on the following day,
Mary had given the children a command which it would
be irksome to them to obey, or one which would have
called for any special sacrifice or self-denial on
their part, they would have disregarded it. Still
they would have been a little less inclined to disregard
it than if they had not received their first lesson;
and there can be no doubt that if Mary were to continue
her training in the same spirit in which she commenced
it she would, before many weeks, acquire a complete
ascendency over them, and make them entirely submissive
to her will.
And yet this is a species of training
the efficacy of which depends on influences in which
the hope of reward or the fear of punishment does not
enter. The bouquets were not promised to the children
at the outset, nor were they given to them at last
as rewards. It is true that they saw the advantages
resulting from due subordination of the inferiors to
the superior in concerted action, and at the end they
felt a satisfaction in having acted right; but these
advantages did not come in the form of rewards.
The efficacy of the lesson depended on a different
principle altogether.
The Philosophy of it.
The philosophy of it was this:
Mary, knowing that the principle of obedience in the
children was extremely weak, and that it could not
stand any serious test, contrived to bring it into
exercise a great many times under the lightest possible
pressure. She called upon them to do a great
many different things, each of which was very easy
to do, and gave them many little prohibitions which
it required a very slight effort of self-denial on
their part to regard; and she connected agreeable
associations in their minds with the idea of submission
to authority, through the interest which she knew
they would feel in seeing the work of gathering the
flowers and making the bouquets go systematically and
prosperously on, and through the commendation of their
conduct which she expressed at the end.
Such persons as Mary do not analyze
distinctly, in their thoughts, nor could they express
in words, the principles which underlie their management;
but they have an instinctive mental perception of the
adaptation of such means to the end in view. Other
people, who observe how easily and quietly they seem
to obtain an ascendency over all children coming within
their influence, and how absolute this ascendency often
becomes, are frequently surprised at it. They
think there is some mystery about it; they say it
is “a knack that some people have;” but
there is no mystery about it at all, and nothing unusual
or strange, except so far as practical good sense,
considerate judgment, and intelligent observation and
appreciation of the characteristics of childhood are
unusual and strange.
Mary was aware that, although the
principle of obedience is seldom or never entirely
obliterated from the hearts of children that
is, that the impression upon their minds, which, though
it may not be absolutely instinctive, is very early
acquired, that it is incumbent on them to obey those
set in authority over them, is seldom wholly effaced,
the sentiment had become extremely feeble in the minds
of Adolphus and Lucia; and that it was like a frail
and dying plant, which required very delicate and careful
nurture to quicken it to life and give it its normal
health and vigor. Her management was precisely
of this character. It called the weak and feeble
principle into gentle exercise, without putting it
to any severe test, and thus commenced the formation
of a habit of action. Any one will see
that a course of training on these principles, patiently
and perseveringly continued for the proper time, could
not fail of securing the desired end, except in cases
of children characterized by unusual and entirely abnormal
perversity.
We can not here follow in detail the
various modes in which such a manager as Mary would
adapt her principle to the changing incidents of each
day, and to the different stages of progress made
by her pupils in learning to obey, but can only enumerate
certain points worthy of the attention of parents
who may feel desirous to undertake such a work of training.
Three practical Directions.
1. Relinquish entirely the idea
of expecting children to be spontaneously docile
and obedient, and the practice of scolding or punishing
them vindictively when they are not so. Instead
of so doing, understand that docility and obedience
on their part is to be the result of wise, careful,
and persevering, though gentle training on the part
of the parent.
2. If the children have already
formed habits of disobedience and insubordination,
do not expect that the desirable change can be effected
by sudden, spasmodic, and violent efforts, accompanied
by denunciations and threats, and declarations that
you are going to “turn over a new leaf.”
The attempt to change perverted tendencies in children
by such means is like trying to straighten a bend
in the stem of a growing tree by blows with a hammer.
3. Instead of this, begin without
saying at all what you are going to do, or finding
any fault with the past, and, with a distinct recognition
of the fact that whatever is bad in the native
tendencies of your children’s minds is probably
inherited from their parents, and, perhaps, specially
from yourself, and that whatever is wrong in their
habits of action is certainly the result of
bad training, proceed cautiously and gently, but perseveringly
and firmly, in bringing the bent stem gradually up
to the right position. In doing this, there is
no amount of ingenuity and skill, however great, that
may not be usefully employed; nor is there, on the
other hand, except in very rare and exceptional cases,
any parent who has an allotment so small as not to
be sufficient to accomplish the end, if conscientiously
and faithfully employed.