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A CURE FOR TATTLING: HEAR NO EVIL
Dear Dr. Ray, My son and daughter, ages eight and five, seem to be having a contest over who can tattle on the other more. I’m at the point where I don’t want to hear another accusation of any kind. How can I end this constant tattling? Tattle-Weary
Kids like to tattle. It seems to arise from juvenile sense of justice. As little Benedict sees it, there’s no way he can idly stand by as his sister gets away with the very same things he tries to get away with. That simply isn’t fair, and it must be stopped. Basic tattling comes in several forms. Most straightforward is the do you know what he did? tattle, designed simply to get a sibling into hot water. “Mom, Cliff just climbed on the couch again.” Here the tattler benevolently leaves the form of discipline up to you, the parent. She just wants to make sure you’re aware of the transgression.
Then there’s the more urgent do something about her tattle. “Make Iris quit looking at me.” In this instance the tattle-worthy offense, looking, is brought to your attention, along with the demand that you do your parenting duty, now. Most hardcore is the don’t just look at him, do something tattle. “I can’t believe you’re letting him talk to you like that. You never let me use that word, in that tone of voice yet!” Here the tattler makes sure not only to point out what you’re already aware of, but also to pressure you into feeling that if you don’t take action, you’re being lazy, unfair, or – heaven forbid – inconsistent in your discipline.
Probably the simplest way to silence tattling is to ignore it. Set up a house rule: Tattled words are unheard words. If you didn’t see what happened, or if you have no solid evidence of misconduct, you will not act.
Obviously, if you spy Rufus hanging upside down from the spouting or Harry shows you his bald spot where Cutler snipped a chunk of his hair while he was sleeping, you may want to investigate further. But on the whole, the stuff of day-to-day tattling is highly ignorable, however highly irritating. Then too, if you try to ferret out the degree of truth of every tattle, you risk opening a can of worms, filled with tattles and countertattles, but short on facts.
To quiet inveterate tattlers – those whose main aim seems to shadow their siblings and make their lives miserable by reporting to you in graphic detail every misstep – you might consider a more active approach. “Ripley, whenever you tattle on Angel, whatever happens to her will happen to you.”
With either method, must you worry that you’re teaching your kids never to monitor each other’s behavior and never to act responsibly if the situation calls for it? Absolutely not. Tattling is a far cry from genuine sibling concern. Tattling is endlessly bringing to your attention minor scrapes and childish conduct that you’d be better off just overlooking. A chronic tattler knows, or will quickly learn, what you’ll attend to and what you won’t.
There’s a bright side to tattling. It should leave no doubt in your mind that your kids know exactly what you expect. Even while Polly is tattling, she’s also telling you loud and clear that she knows what is right and what is wrong, what is allowed and what isn’t.
Discipline That Lasts a Lifetime Pages 143-145 |
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