Parental Control Introduction: The hegemony of parents to children over the decades has evolved due to technological advances, however, the roots have remained the same. Like parents in the Elizabethan Era, parents today are protective of their children, with constant attempts to guide them to not make the same mistakes they did in their childhood in hopes that their children will be successful. In The Taming of the Shrew, Baptista arranged a marriage for Kate which leaves her with a lack of choice and feeling conflicted. For decades, lack of choice as a child has caused issues in the childs adult life such as emotional stress, mental health issues, and in extreme situations, it has led to substance abuse. As literature provides a pathway …show more content…
In The Taming of the Shrew, Baptista coerced Kate to get married in order for Bianca to get married (Shakesphere 47). In the first act of the play, when Baptista spoke with Gremio and Hortensio, he told them if either of them loved Kate, he would give his blessing for one of them to marry her whenever they want (Shakespeare 47). The expectation of an arranged marriage focused on “kindship bonds and rearrangement of property” (Lyon). Kate was not fond of this because she had grown to be an independent woman, and her father telling her that she HAS to get married, degrades her and causes her to act out towards the men in her …show more content…
As Baptista plans an arranged marriage for Kate, she felt as if her independence was ripped from her hands. In relation to the current generation, parents have become overbearing with their children. They start controlling aspects of their childs life from such a young age so the child grows up thinking it is normal for parents to be overprotective. The parents overcontrollingness stems from their childhood. With more and more technological advancements coming into play, future generations are at risk to serious problems as an adult, such as substance abuse, emotional damage, and/or stress. Although parents control their children to protect them, to guide them to make good decisions, and to set them up for success by not allowing the kids to make the mistakes they
Parents have a large impact on their children's lives, and depending on what type of parent they are, the child will act differently in the
‘The Child Trap: The Rise of Overparenting’... ‘Abuse of Overparenting’...” (Kohn). With Kohn listing all of these other articles he establishes credibility with his audience, as it shows the amount of prior
The Glass Castle is a memoir that was written by Jeannette Walls, who explains how within her childhood grew up extremely poor and had an alcoholic father, a mother who took advice from no one, and had three siblings, Brian , Lori, and Maureen. Rex and Rose Mary Walls show signs of being permissive or uninvolved parents by having very few demands, neglect to the children's needs, and letting their children make their own decisions. Throughout her memoir, Jeannette had multiple occasions were herself or her siblings would have to fend for themselves, because Rex or Rose Mary refused to hold on to a job. For example “When we wanted money, we walked along the roadside picking up beer cans and bottles that we redeemed for two cents each.”
The Permissive Parents The parenting paradigm best exemplified to Rex and Rosemary Walls in The Glass Castle Jeanette Walls is the permissive parenting paradigm. The parents of Jeanette are more reactive than demanding to the children (Cherry, “The Four Styles of Parenting”). Jeanette at one point expressed, “I loved the desert, too… we’d catch scorpions and snakes and horny toads. We’d search for gold, and when we couldn’t find it, we’d collect other valuable rocks…” (21).
How much freedom and supervision should parents give their children really depends on them both. Most parents today are too overprotective. Overprotective parents can be a negative influence on their children due to the fact that they avoid going through struggles and challenges. If the parent is overprotective their children would not learn how to be independent. In the memoir The Glass Castle, Jeannette mentioned “Mom liked to encourage self-sufficiency in all living creatures.”
A little girl is forced to grow up with the “helping” hand of a drunk father and an excitement-addict mother, both of which pay little attention to what their children need: love. Instead, they go on wild adventures: breaking out of hospitals, travelling the desert, encountering perverted relatives and jumping into animal cages- just to name a few. While this may seem obscure, this story is actually true.
Parenting is difficult. The responsibility of leading by example for the next generation is terrifying for the majority of parents. At the very least for the ones that care about the welfare of their child, not only in the present but more so in the future. Parenting and the fears related are some of the themes discussed in the short story Re: Summary by Rodge Glass.
As the story continued, the father and the mother did not show improvement, which made them unqualified parents due to the lack of providing for the basic survival needs or their children. According to Abraham Maslow 's theory of "the Hierarchy of Needs” there are five different types of needs that should be provided to all human beings, which are “the physiological needs, the needs for safety and security, the needs for love and belonging, the needs for esteem, and the need to actualize the self” (Boeree 2). Those are the needs that have to be satisfied for someone to have a healthy, successful, and a happy life. At the end of the story, the children received all their needs on their own, without the help of the parents. They only addressed those needs, when they escaped home and their parents.
For example, consistently throughout the film and story, the children control their parents through the nursery and tell them when they will be coming home, where they are, and what they are doing. “At dinner they ate alone, for Wendy and Peter were at a special plastic carnival across town and had televised home to say they'd be late.” The children, Wendy and Peter, are constantly thinking about and threatening their parents through the veldt and the actions of the lions. In the end, we see this sense of control, become domination as the kids take out their parents. In addition, in the film and story, from the beginning Lydia suggests that there is an issue and throughout the story is the driving factor of the therapist, the vacation idea, and the shutdown of the nursery.
A good parent is usually defined as somebody who: takes responsibility, loves and cares for their children, supports them, gives them a place to live and keeps food on the table, makes sure their kids have clothes so they don’t get cold, a good parent is someone who takes care of themselves so they can take care of their children. In the story “The Glass Castle” Jeannette Walls lives in a family of six, with parents Rex and Rose Mary Walls. The family travels all over in search of new homes to live in because the parents can’t keep a steady income to pay for their houses. Rose Mary is a bad mother because of her lack of caring for the children, and how bad she is at taking care of responsibilities, although she takes her children into consideration
Like an auctioneer standing at the block, Baptista ‘sold’ his daughter off to the highest bidder. However, whether willing or unwilling, it was certain that Bianca was to be married off eventually. Because, unlike in modern society, women were considered ‘unfit’ to live independently and forced into marriages, as shown especially in Kate’s ‘taming’ by Petruchio. Because the society was entirely male-driven, both sisters “have no option but marriage and will be utterly dependent on whatever husband they can get” (Adney
Parents, however, do have the authority to control what their
However, some parents will try to protect this process which can harm their child by them not accepting responsibility on their own. An article by Dr. Nathan Lents has given the audience a view about those who tend to be overprotective parents are actually not
The daughters first thought when entering the madness of their father’s room is to try to impose order by cleaning and making it like the rest of the house. This shows the impact the mother has had on the children, they are extremely disciplined to fulfill the domestic household ideals. The mother manipulates the daughters so they only know one type of life, this compels the father to make a selfless impact to broaden their worldview. As soon as the daughter began to be involved with the father “change would begin”(5) because he can show them an alternate lifestyle. Shortly after the father's quarrel with his daughters they “grew restless and lost interest”(5) in activities like darning socks or baking bread.
Helicopter parents are too controlling in their children's lives because they are