CFLarsen said:
But that's what we are discussing: The use of handcuffs on unruly kids.
Just answer the question: Were they handcuffed when they were unruly?
I see that other parents have also handcuffed their kids during play, and that no physical harm resulted, so now the question changes to "were they unruly".
I will acknowledge taht I have never handcuffed my child as a means of restraint or as punishment, but I'm not sure I see the relevance. First, the act of handcuffing wouldn't cause more harm to an unruly child. If they are unruly, before the handcuffs they could run into things and break them. After, they can't.
Furthermore, I have reached out to my child, and grabbed both of his wrists in my hand while pulling him toward his bedroom. That situation was much more likely to produce injury than if I had used handcuffs. And yet, I feel absolutely no guilt.
Just an hour or so ago, when putting my dear one to bed, he chose not to go. I informed him he really didn't have a choice, and he ought to settle down and go to bed. He upped the struggle. As I wrapped my arms around him, I noted to him, "Son, have you noticed how many of these conversations end with 'OW'?" Sure enough, as I carried him through his doorway, he jerked his head back, and it slammed against the door.
"OW. (pause) I need boo bear."
If only I had had some handcuffs, that whole incident could have been avoided.
But he didn't seem to be harmed in any real manner. I do my best to make sure that real violence or injury is as unlikely as possible in those situations.
[disclaimer]
The above incident is based on true stories, but a few incidents have been melded into one story for dramatic effect. All of the elements have indeed happened at one time or another. Tonight, it was his knee that got hurt, not his head.
[/disclaimer]