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Yashar Ali

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Now...Give Your Uncle a Kiss

Posted: 11/15/11 12:57 PM ET

The shocking and tragic events at Penn State that have unfolded over the past two weeks, which have allegedly exposed former assistant football coach, Jerry Sandusky, as a sexual predator, have (yet again) brought the issue of child sex abuse to the forefront of our collective consciousness.

In light of recent events, I want to discuss an issue, a behavior, that has bothered me for some time. It's about how we encourage our kids to abandon their sense of self-trust -- their instinct and intuition -- in order to be polite through showing physical affection to adults.

How often, especially during the holidays, are children confronted with moments like this one: a relative comes to visit and the child's parents say something like, "Now, give your uncle a hug and kiss."

And when the child refuses to provide physical affection, or hesitates at the request, they sometimes hear things like, "You're hurting your uncle's feelings. It's not polite. Now, go give him a hug and kiss."

Some of us even remember our relatives asking us (some may say pleading or begging) for affection, "Aren't you going to give me a hug and kiss? Please?!"

I think this insisting and cajoling of a child into showing physical affection towards an adult is incredibly dangerous. Whether it's a relationship between a child and his/her relatives or one between a kid and an adult who is an acquaintance, family friend, mentor, this type of behavior, in which children are expected to show physical affection as a sign of respect, is something I think we all need to be careful about.

For me, it's about the issue of when a child gives us the sense that they don't want to be physically affectionate with someone, and our tendency to encourage the child, at that particular moment, to abandon their intuition and instinct. It's a small step towards the erosion of that child's sense of self-trust.

At that moment, we are telling them, "Forget about how you feel. Do something that makes you feel uncertain and uncomfortable, so that someone else (an adult) can feel acknowledged and respected."

We are all built with a natural, innate inclination, a real sense of what feels right and wrong. Every species of animal is born with an instinctual drive. Unfortunately, the human species is the only one continually taught to ignore their instincts.

There is, however, a difference between intuition and instinct. Even though the words are often confused as synonyms for each other, there is a simple way to separate the two. We are all born with instinct, but intuition is built through education, living, and practice. Our intuition is linked to a keen and quick insight.

These two internal senses, intuition and instinct, make up my idea of self-trust. I see self-trust as related to trusting your reactions, your feelings about people, circumstances, and decisions. I see self-trust as the most authentic reactions and feelings.

I acknowledge that some kids are just being difficult, but it's not about their motivation so much as it is about our reaction. At that moment, we initiate a process where we require boys and girls to have physical interaction when they don't want to and at that moment, we also tell them to ignore their sense of self-trust. We are teaching kids that adults are in charge of who they should be and are affectionate with. We are telling them that they don't have the right or power to make their own decisions about human, physical interaction.

Again, it's the little moments that create a big collective weight over time.

But my point is, no one has the right to receive affection, especially from a child. It's not part of normal, polite interactions. It's extra. When we ask kids to offer physical signs of affection, a hug or a kiss may seem innocuous enough to us, as adults.

Can you imagine asking, or expecting an adult to hug and kiss another adult, as a way to show acknowledgement or respect? Normally, we wouldn't encourage two adults to have that sort of interaction because we all have a sense of what kinds of physical affection are appropriate in a given circumstance. We have a sense of what we feel comfortable with and we react according to our gut.

Why can't we allow children to tap into this same instinctive, internal sense?

This doesn't mean I think we should live in a society without affection. To the contrary.

But the idea that a child can be guilt-tripped or cajoled into affection is disgusting to me. It's not a light-hearted or funny moment, it's sad. At that moment, we are telling that child to give their physical selves in order to appease us adults, for reasons that they don't fully understand or appreciate. Our motivation, whether it's social embarrassment or a desire to connect with the child, puts us first, rather than thinking of them first...as it should be.

When it comes to acknowledging other people, the most we can expect from children is for them to politely and verbally greet adults. And as far as I'm concerned, anything else, is expecting too much and is patently unfair.

Some may say that this way of handling interaction between adults and children will build up cynicism in kids, will rob them of their innocent childhood, and will make them overly cautious of adults -- or even teach them to be aloof.

Well, our childhoods have never been innocent (now or ever). One out of every four girls and one of out of every six boys will face sexual abuse before their 18th birthday. We only have to look at the numbers to understand that for many kids, there have never been bright, sunny childhoods.

For much too long, they have been filled with silent moments of sexual abuse, we just haven't discussed them. They have been hidden away, just like the Penn State victims. It's only when we shatter this myth of a childhood era of innocence that we can begin to understand what children truly face.

Sexual abuse completely revamps the blueprint of the victim's life. Their worldview shifts, the way they process trust, how they build relationships, their sense of safety, are all permanently altered.

So, I think I'd much rather have our children be slightly cynical and aware, to encourage them to follow their sense of self-trust, and as a result, to give them a better chance at protecting themselves, than to insist that kids must show physical affection when they don't feel comfortable.

After all, it's not like we've done our part to protect our kids, not at all. And if we have any doubt about that, all we have to do is think about Mike McQueary, looking on as that poor boy was raped in the locker room shower at Penn State.

Yashar will be soon releasing his first short e-book, entitled, A Message to Women From a Man: You Are Not Crazy -- How We Teach Men That Women Are Crazy and How We Convince Women to Ignore Their Instincts. If you are interested and want to be notified when the book is released, please click here to sign-up.

I hope you will join me on Facebook and follow me on Twitter.

This piece originally appeared on The Current Conscience.

 

Follow Yashar Ali on Twitter: www.twitter.com/yashar

The shocking and tragic events at Penn State that have unfolded over the past two weeks, which have allegedly exposed former assistant football coach, Jerry Sandusky, as a sexual predator, have (yet a...
The shocking and tragic events at Penn State that have unfolded over the past two weeks, which have allegedly exposed former assistant football coach, Jerry Sandusky, as a sexual predator, have (yet a...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bluegirl424
somewhere over the rainbow
10:58 AM on 11/17/2011
Flashback to the 70's. When Uncle Rudy came around we would climb the apple trees to
avoid his wet, slobbery kisses. Kids know, on some level, who is safe and who is not.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
madjanssen
Neurotic mother of one displaced in Europe
03:18 AM on 11/17/2011
When I was 15, I had an uncle from a neighbouring country come visit us and I had to hug him (something rare in our culture where we usually just kissed the hands of our elders) and he reciprocated by touching me in inappropriate places. Of course I was horrified but I didn't know how to handle it so I 'iced him out', refused to talk to him for the rest of the time he was there and even pulled a long face. My mother was mortified that I was being rude to our visitors/guests and gave me a verbal thrashing down in front of them even though I tried to explain it to her. I have since moved to Europe where people are less affectionate and where the only people my daughter have to kiss are her grandparents and her godmother. If she wants to hug and kiss the other people in her life, it would be entirely up to her and the relationship she builds with them but I certainly am not going to encourage her. A handshake and even a wave and a smile will just do.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Allena Tapia
Will write for food
12:22 PM on 11/16/2011
In Latin families, the hug-as-greeting is ubiquitous. But not too much for extended family members, and my children have always had teh option of a light "side hug." But what this brings up is the whole concept of respecting adults just because they're adults. No, that adult needs t EARN the child's respect. It's not automatic. And having this understanding could probably prevent a lot of issues.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
madjanssen
Neurotic mother of one displaced in Europe
03:08 AM on 11/17/2011
That's very true. I've always maintained that respect, by anyone, is earned and not demanded. You don't get it just because of who you are.
07:51 AM on 11/21/2011
Actually, you do get respect just for existing. We'd be at our throats even more if that were not so.
Bianca S
You can't go trick-or-treating. Ever. For a week
09:54 AM on 11/16/2011
If I had read this article 5 years ago, I might have said stop being so paranoid and stop fear mongering, but in light of recent events, now, not so much. We are clearly failing our kids when it comes to protecting them from the dangers of child abuse and I simply would not feel comfortable putting my (hypothetical) child in a position they don't feel comfortable with. Yes, the reasons why they don't want to hug Aunt Mabel & Uncle Bob may be more benign ( "she pinches my cheeks" "he smells funny") than my own fears, but I simply can't take the risk.
This doesn't mean I'm going to make children feel that they should have a reason to be cautious of their relatives nor does it mean I'm not going to instill manners and etiquette in other areas, it just means I'm going to let them build their trust on their own w/o forcing politeness in this situation and relatives and strangers will just have to learn that my kid's safety outweighs their feelings being hurt.
04:47 PM on 11/21/2011
No one says you should encourage your kid to hug a complete stranger. Some simply feel it's unreasonable to let kids forego the same gestures of respect to one relative that they give to others, in their parents' presence. My daughter is nine; she must, at the very least, give me a reason (in private, of course) if she refuses to hug my brother, if she'll hug her own brother or his girlfriend.

Instinct easily devolves into irrational fear. You'd think a guy with the surname Ali would understand this. It strikes me as if this post was simply opportunistic use of the Penn State controversy to do some male-bashing and build his brand. He does have a book coming out.
Bianca S
You can't go trick-or-treating. Ever. For a week
04:58 PM on 11/21/2011
"Some simply feel"

I'm not one of them. Next.
12:43 AM on 11/16/2011
I agree with children not having to show affection if they are not comfortable and that sexual abuse is an issue that our society is facing but acting under the presumption that every person including family members is a pedophile only creates more unnecessary fear and that more people are out to get you than reliable and safe.
08:10 AM on 11/20/2011
I couldn't agree more. Children's instincts are often....wrong. The witch-hunt of 'satanic ritual abuse' in the 1980s and 1990s was abetted in the idea that children's instincts are infallible.
11:13 PM on 11/15/2011
Brilliant article! We train Intuition and as a result Self Esteem and Self Empowerment right out of our children ~ leaving them without a sense of inner direction or personal strength. It leaves us with children who are bullies and are targets for being easily bullied - Never mind making bullying illegal - start empowering your kids by allowing them to follow their own inner compass - even if it makes no sense to you. If the kid says he's cold and wants a sweater - let him put on a sweater. If she says she is full and can't eat any more, let them be finished with dinner. If they cringe or step away from a family member - let them keep their distance. Allowing our kids to honor their Intuition and honoring it in them as well, gives them a sense of 'knowing' that no other empowerment can.
07:48 AM on 11/21/2011
Until, of course, the inevtable day when their instinct proves to be incorrect and even ignoble.
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Gonzo36
Pro-awesome!
08:44 PM on 11/15/2011
Totally agree. I am 37 but STILL dont like it when my gross relatives want to hug me. Why would I force my kids to do something that I wouldn't do? Though I am trying to teach them to shake hands.
07:46 AM on 11/21/2011
Wait until you're the one that no one wants to hug.
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Gonzo36
Pro-awesome!
09:48 AM on 11/21/2011
Haaahahaa! Thats awesome. Never thought of it that way. I never go to hug a kid, I always shake their hand or pat them on the back. Oh, btw, I am a female.
01:33 PM on 11/15/2011
Thank you Mr. Ali for this article. I've been battling with relatives about this for years. I don't care if my children hurt adults feeling by not hugging or kissing them. I want my children to know they have the right to say no!!