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Treatment Abuse, Behavior Modification, Thought Reform => Straight, Inc. and Derivatives => Topic started by: Kathy on July 01, 2001, 09:47:16 AM

Title: A question...
Post by: Kathy on July 01, 2001, 09:47:16 AM
A question...
I have a question for everyone who was ever involved in (or knows someone who was in) a  "program":


Were there any parents, in the family that was involved in the "program", who stayed at home with the children prior to putting the child in the program?


I'll explain more later.  Thanks, Kathy

Title: A question...
Post by: KimberlyNJ on December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM
Parents staying home...
My mother was a stay at home mom for the most part.  She played the organ at a church & a synogogue, so she was home most of the time except weekend days.

Title: A question...
Post by: Antigen on August 01, 2001, 04:57:11 PM
Re: A question...
My mom stayed home till around `70 or so. My oldest sister was a Sr. in HS, I think, and I was the only toddler left at home by then. I think I was the only one to go to pre-school a year before Kindergarten.

-If there's a worse idea going than locking kids up for victimless crimes, it's probably locking them in close proximity to some tyrannical altruist bent on helping them even if it kills them.
Saving our Children from Drug Treatment Abuse

Title: A question...
Post by: j on August 01, 2001, 10:43:27 AM
stay at home
my mom worked at home

Title: A question...
Post by: FaceKhan on August 02, 2001, 02:43:14 AM
Re: stay at home
Alex's Mom stayed at home, but spent most of highschool in a boarding school. It was only after he was expelled and was at home for a few months did she start looking to send him to a program  

Slavish discipline makes a slavish temper... If severity carry'd to the
highest pitch does prevail, and works a cure upon the present unruly
distemper, it often brings in the room of it a worse and more dangerous
disease, by breaking the mind; and then, in the place of a disorderly young
fellow, you have a low spirited moap'd creature, who, however with his
unnatural sobriety he may please silly people, who commend tame unactive
children, because they make no noise, nor give them any trouble; yet at
last, will probably prove as uncomfortable a thing to his friends, as he
will be all his life an useless thing to himself and others... Beating them,
and all other sorts of slavish and corporal punishments, are not the
discipline fit to be used in the education of those we would have wise,
good, and ingenuous men...
John Locke, 1692