English, asked by sujalpatel7489, 7 months ago

Read the passage given below and answer the question that follow:

1. A spoiled child is an enraged child. Children become enraged when their deepest
emotional needs gets neglected. Most parent advocates argue that firm limit
settings and even punishment is the antidote to spoiling. This is untrue. It only
ignores the depth of problem. The real antidote to spoiling is that parents find
ways to meet their children’s needs. Children who get their deepest needs met
never become enraged and would never put with being spoiled. Such children
have nothing to be enraged about. And yet most parents lack the capacity to meet
their children’s deepest needs. And figuring out how to gain this capacity is simply
too hard for most parents.
2. Gaining this capacity requires that parents enter realms within themselves that
are terribly painful: the realms of their own unresolved childhood need which lie
dormant and split-off in their own unconsciousness. This depth of unconscious is
so off- limits to most parents that it is even hard for them to conceive that it might
exist. But it does exist, and their raging child is a externalized manifestation of it.
Thus, the sooner the parents control their child rage the quicker they can return
to their state of blissful denial of just how disturbed they themselves are beneath
the surface.
3. Healthier parents try to appease their children’s rage through whatever
compensatory means they have at their disposal- primarily through spoiling. Less
healthy parents simply try to kill their child’s rage- by burying it.
4. If it were easier for parents to have accessed their own ancient, unresolved anger
they would have worked on it. They would have gone within and reflected on
their own painful truth, blamed and even confronted the people who were
responsible for it, grieved and ultimately healed through integration. But when
this does not happen it passes to their children and the wounds never healed.
Today we find many children get angry for small things. The parents look confused
and don’t know how to address this. Over a period of time it’s get out of control.

Answer the following question on the basis of the passage you have read: 6
i) When do children get enraged?

Answers

Answered by architapatra238
2

Explanation:

Children became enraged when their deepest emotional needs get neglected.

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Answered by askomala1205gmailcom
1

Answer:

Children become enraged when their deepest

emotional needs gets neglected.

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