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			 Parent’s fighting affects children Parent’s fighting affects children
			
				
					 
 Spouses often disagree on one issue or another, which is quite  normal. But when they start fighting to resolve their conflicts in front  of the children, it leads to a negative impact on kids. Quarrels  between parents can cause detrimental effects on children’s emotional  and overall health and their relationships with others later in life.
 
 Fighting spouses should understand that they should be mature enough  to handle their disagreements in the right perspective and manner, so  that they can deal with their differences in a peaceful way. But this  hardly turns out to be the case; spouses often blame each other for  having initiated the quarrel, and ultimately repeat the vicious cycle.
 
 Children, who often are silent witnesses to these unpleasant  scenarios, may find it difficult to adjust and cope with the situation.  They deserve to be brought up with happy parents and an integrated  family.
 
 When kids witness their parents fighting
 Imagine how draining and frustrating it is for both you and your spouse  to scream and yell at each other. Now imagine how difficult it is on  you, as a parent, to discipline your child when he is stubborn or goes  on crying. And finally think about and imagine the converse: how  difficult it is for the child to see two stubborn parents, fighting  uncontrollably, while the child is at a loss to understand what to do.
 
 A small child observes that her parents, who are the center of the  universe for her, aren’t stable and reasonable. For the child, nothing  seems to remain trustworthy and stable and the child’s sense of security  dies.
 
 Children become physically and emotionally upset when they see their  parents fight. They become scared, may cringe, cower or hide. Some start  crying while others may become badly scared.
 
 Many children blame themselves for their parents’ quarrel, thinking  that somehow they might have been able to prevent the blow up, even when  it wasn’t triggered by any action of the child.
 
 If the situation was preceded by involvement of the child or even a  discussion about him/her, children think that if only they had been  “good,” their parents fighting wouldn’t have happened. Children  internalize the problem and develop anxiety when parents fight.
 
 Even though children are helpless to change the circumstances, the  fear clings on to them, doubts and insecurities fill their world, and  they begin to suffer from low self-esteem.
 
 Constant fighting traumatizes children
 Children, who are brought up in houses where parents quarrel very often,  cannot recover from the memories of their parents fighting with each  other. Lasting images of particular fights can traumatize children and  stay with them forever.
 
 Physical abuse in the home, in particular, creates a permanent scar  on the memories of children. Living in a home where parents are fighting  and violence is a part of “everyday” life is like living in a war zone.  Children in these circumstances can suffer all sorts of problems—from  lack of concentration to bed wetting to learning disabilities to  recurrent illnesses to stomach aches and ulcers. Children living in such  circumstances suffer tremendous amount of stress.
 
 Children learn what they see
 Quarrelling parentscan only teach their children the same. When children  grow up with parents fighting all the time, they either come to think  of that as “normal” and become fighters themselves or they recognize  this as abnormal and do anything to avoid it. They may become bullies;  this stems from the need to have everything under their control. On the  other hand, they may become completely unassertive; giving in whenever  there is a conflict or disagreement because they would rather keep the  peace at all costs than risk having an argument.
 
 This takes away a very important aspect of their learning—how to  resolve conflicts in a calm, peaceful manner through effective  communication, because they don’t have a role model to teach them these  skills. Children learn by example—and the children of parents who are  always fighting—struggle with their relationships with others all their  lives because they never learned how to communicate, compromise or  assert, and get along well with others. The role models that were meant  to be positive had, in fact, served as negative role models.
 
 Long-term effects of parental conflict
 There are parents who don’t physically brawl with each other or consider  their relationship abusive, rather fight a “cold war”, keeping mum and  not speaking to each other. They feel that their children are unable to  notice and recognize their fight. But they don’t realize how much of an  effect it has on their children. While they can easily see how the  extreme circumstances in other people’s homes could traumatize children,  they fail to see that their own seemingly unapparent arguments may be  impacting their own children.
 
 When children grow up in a home where the parents fighting every now  and then, the child’s security is snatched away and the child feels out  of control of anything in his or her young life. The child fails to  learn effective discipline techniques, including self-discipline. The  trauma from the memories of the fighting can cause the children of  fighting parents to fear and avoid relationships or marriage because  they fear they might repeat the cycle. In other cases, when they do  enter into relationships, they tend to repeat the cycle of their  parents.
 
 Even in families where parents’ fighting is not at an extreme,  parents should remember that what they do and say, and how they act  towards one another, influences their children, their children’s  self-esteem, and their children’s short- and long-term emotional health,  as well as their future relationships.
 
 It’s never too late to say sorry
 When parents recognize how badly their fights are affecting their  children, they should make every effort to reverse the losses. The first  is to set a healthy example for their children: stop fighting,  apologize to each other and resolve their conflicts in an amiable and  peaceful way. They should do this in front of their children.
 
 However, if parents cannot see each other eye to eye, they should go  for counseling in order to develop more effective communication and  conflict resolution techniques, at least for the sake of their children.
 
 
 
 
 Keywords: quite normal,stubborn parents, fighting uncontrollably,badly scared,Children internalize ,suffer tremendous ,amount of stress,discipline techniques, including self-discipline,influences children, children’s self-esteem, children’s short, emotional health,   future relationship
 
 
 
				
					Last edited by sherlyk; 06-08-2011 at 06:27 AM.
				
				
			 
 
 
 
 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
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