English, asked by ranchodas3089, 6 months ago

They deceive their parents

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

I hope this helps you

Explanation:

human beings have innate tendencies towards selfish interests, which are ideally, albeit slowly, minimized as a child emerges into an adult integrated into society with the hope that he/she will cooperate in the social process.

To some extent I think the exact motivation for why children lie depends on the particular season of childhood in which the one finds him/herself.

Younger children (4 to 11) still retain a great deal of the self-centerdness that characterized their toddler years, but they recognize now that there’s a tension between their desires and the will of their parents, and that “No” is an option that they can’t always get around. They also start to grasp the relationship between certain actions and negative consequences. Between the overarching urge to satisfy their own desires as well as the desire to avoid negative consequences, the groundwork for a disposition to begin deceiving parents occurs instinctively.

In the later years of adolescence and teens this initial groundwork is still intact, weakened somewhat by an emerging sense of moral conscience, but also has the added complexity of a teenager feeling the beginning of an independent thought life and feelings which aren’t necessarily proscribed by parents. The “deception” now manifests also in withholding discussion about sexual/romantic urges, or periods of infatuation with religious or political opinions contrary to those of their parents.

take care dear ♥️

sleep well

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