Tuesday, 13 November 2018

#52Ancestors, Week 44, Frightening


What is frightening ? For me, rats and mice are terrifying. Snakes too, but more because they are not something I grew up with. Spiders, meh ! I can deal with them, mostly.

For other people it is the opposite, or heights, or confined spaces...did I ever tell you how much I hate being in a cave or underground ? Long tunnels freak me out just a bit too, if I let myself think about where I am.

For our pioneering ancestors the strange sounds and sight of wildlife in their new home countries must have been pretty scary at first. Machinery and contraptions like cars, must have been incomprehensible although there were likely many of our forebears who feared more simple things, horses, water, fire for whatever reason.

I came across this article from 1899 on Trove. (I have transcribed it below as it is a little tricky to read.) Articles like this seemed to be regularly appearing in papers across Australia, and no doubt in other countries as well. The message is clear about the damage which needless “frightening” can have long term on anyone, but especially for children. 
  
Albury Banner and Wodonga Express Friday 28 April 1899 page 10 www.trove.nla.gov.au,
Accessed 11 November 2018.


Frightening Children

   Nothing can be worse for a child than to
be frightened.   The effect of the scare it is
slow to recover from; it remains sometimes
until maturity, as is shown by many instances
of morbid sensitiveness and excessive nervous
ness.   Not unfrequently fear is employed as a
means of discipline.   Children are controlled
by being made to believe that something
terrible will happen to them, and punished
by being shut up in dark rooms, or by being
put in places they stand in dread of.   No
one without vivid memory of his childhood
can comprehend how entirely cruel such
things are.   We have often heard grown
persons tell of the suffering they have endured,
as children, under like circumstances,   and
recount the irreparable injury which they are
sure they then received. No parent, no
nurse, capable of alarming the young is
fitted for her position. Children, as near
as possible, should be trained not to know
the sense of fear, which, above every-
thing else, is to be feared in their education,
early or late.   Some interesting facts dealing
with the fears of children have been collected
by a well-known professor.   He has found: that
1701 were afraid of 6456 things.   The
leading fears were lightning and thunder, 
reptiles, strangers, the dark, death, domestic
animals, water, ghosts, insects, rats, and mice 
and high words.   Some of the fears were the
results of personal experiences ; that is, in a
district  where a great wind had wrought a
havoc the children were afraid of it. In other
cases the analysis showed by what means: parents had worked upon the imagination of
their children.   In one district 16 poor little
ones were dreading the end of the world.   The
most gratifying fact of all was that not one
child had been frightened into obedience or
good conduct by the fear of the devil.   A
century or two ago that fear would have led
all the rest.   The pleasing inference is that
parents now dwell upon affection and love to
insure the goodness of their children, instead
of terrorising them with Satan’s wrath.


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