It would show a weakness, I think, that needs to be addressed, to help so that the child might grow up with a better disposition, if the parent has been adversely affected ( -- a likely case). Even if the parent thinks he's fine, seeing one's father abuse one's mother likely left an impact, like it or not, and THAT can leave a growing child "coping" or trying to deal with all of that for years. The result may be that, as a grownup, the person may never really think there is a problem, but it might be in ways that show up in subtle ways in behavior within the family, influencing how they raise their own kids, too. It could also wind up have far greater results, like being abusive toward his own kids, who might become abusive, likewise, unless the terrible cycle is broken. Well, that's my thought, anyway. I do know of a foster kid who saw his older brother get beat by his mom's boyfriend. He, himself, hid and didn't get hit so much, it seems, but later, while in foster care, he started "acting out" with spurts of impulsive, violent behavior which took some time & effort to bring under control.
I did see some harsh behavior in my own family as a child, but later, I turned to God much more seriously, began thinking more often about how behavior affects others and as a much more caring person than in my younger years, I can hardly imagine ever allowing myself to be abusive to a child of my own. Love is a big motivator & with understanding can conquer a lot of problems.
2007-01-22 13:01:13
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Unless there is a medical history of diagnosed mental illness in your family, there is no reason your child should be born with a problem like that.
What a parent suffered emotionally as a child is part of that parent's experience - it does not get into his "genes" and so can not be passed on to his children hereditarily. However, that parent should be extra vigilant to not let behaviors repeat themselves. Let it stay in the past so your children can have a bright future.
2007-01-22 13:00:19
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answer #2
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answered by Veritas 7
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As an Early Years Practitioner, i understand between the perfect thoughts for kids that age to income is via depending play, no longer depending to the point the position they're made to play/do a particular element, although the play pastime has an target. which include playing interior the sand with great pincher grips and small products to carry close enables strengthen their positive manipulative skills. I did once have a difficulty with a Macho-guy dad who informed me he didn't wish his son "to gown as a lady" in the course of the function playing activities. It broke my heart to ought to tell/propose the toddler to placed on "boy's clothing" instead of the pink jeans or pink gown he had to attempt on. there is no longer even a link between wearing colored clothing and sexuality! maximum father and mom do understand the magnitude of play, some do not, although, it is the practitioners pastime to describe, instruct them a replica of a depending play time table, clarify the reward, even get out countless the play equipment and instruct the way it enables their toddler. At 3-5, very few children can sit down with a pencil and paper for more suitable than 15/20 minutes with out dropping interest, fidgeting, poking someone with the properly of the pencil, and so on.
2016-10-15 23:17:27
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Truthfully, I think that if a child witnesses his parents beating the crap out of each other, he's likely to be affected in some way, shape, or form. The extent to which he's bothered is undetermined, though, because no one child is the same. My parents were extremely violent to each other, and caused a lot of pain in my life. I've struggled with depression, anger, hatred, and confusion for most of my life. Really, it all depends on whether or not the individual is a strong person, and whether or not they can handle things of that sort. I believe that things that happen in your home environment will affect each and every person involved.... simple as that....
2007-01-22 12:55:55
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answer #4
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answered by abercrombie2177 2
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No, unless the parent (due to his messed-up childhood) is strange or abusive himself to or in front of the child. The child isn't just going to "catch" a mental illness because his father (or mother) saw things.
Hopefully, the parent has had therapy or has found some other way to deal with the crap they had to live with by the time he or she has a child of his or her own.
2007-01-22 12:56:15
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answer #5
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answered by Holiday Magic 7
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a.d.d.? nopes. and not any learned behaviours either unless that parent is repeating the cycle of behaviour and doing to the kid what the parents did to him/her.
let me try simplify - a mental disorder is when something is wrong - due to genetics, accident, metal disability, or some other such physical thing etc - (e.g. cerebral palsy, ADD, FAS). you can't "fix" them - you learn how to cope with it. a messed up childhood will not cause one of those issues - a LEARNED behaviour would be something like abuse, a mental illness would be something like depression which is treatable.
2007-01-22 12:49:42
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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No thats not true, that would be like saying your child is going to fail school because the parent failed a grade when they were younger.
2007-01-22 12:48:53
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answer #7
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answered by angel01182 3
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I don't think so if they grow up and want better for themselves, but if they continue to live among those types of situations and don't wish to remove themselves from that environment...it's possible.
2007-01-22 12:53:26
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answer #8
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answered by mom2ghl 3
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The child himself my grow up to abuse women as well, because it is what he saw.
2007-01-22 12:49:21
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answer #9
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answered by Boo 3
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I am not a doctor, but I don't think that would be the cause of those things..... I think that it more genetic make-up.....
2007-01-22 12:50:12
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answer #10
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answered by fishpond3021 1
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