MOST DEFINITELY.
Abuse can be physical (beating, not feeding..etc)
Or mental (torturing by taking away things that make them happy, putting them down to kill their self-worth, telling them that no one loves them, instilling fear in them with constant threats, blaming for things like divorce, making them responsible for things like "if you do ___ I'm going to hit your sister/mommy..."...etc)
I mean there are adults that have complexes from childhood psychological issues and they WEREN'T around a mental child abuser (even my dad has major depression issues, lack of confidence, feelings of worthlessness..etc because his mom played the 'favorite' thing with him and his other siblings and obviously, he turned out no able to earn the title of the "favorite")
No he is not a child abuser.
Medical treatment for battered child syndrome will vary according to the type of injury incurred.Counseling.an intervention plan.physical and psychological therapy.The child abuser may be incarcerated,and/or the abused child removed from the home.
not necesarilly...sometimes it can be stress, being drunk, or maybe even SOMETIMES having a psychological problem....Whatever they do have stilld oes not under no circumstances give them the right to hit their children.
That's like asking "Should a child abuser be allowed to keep custody of their child?"
A court would never award custody or visitation rights to a convicted child abuser.
Sushma Pandey has written: 'Psychological consequences of child abuse' -- subject(s): Child abuse, Psychological aspects, Psychological aspects of Child abuse
abuse the child mentally or physically
They wanted money.
they was a child abuser o.0
No, you should never tell an abuser you love them and if you think you love them then you need psychological counseling because abusing a person is not about love. You don't hurt the ones you love! Get out of this relationship while you still can!
There are many different reasons that children and adults remain silent about the "secret" of abuse, including: - scared that the abuser will hurt or fatally injure them - fear that the abuser will hurt or fatally injure a love one - embarrassment - the abuser convinced the victim that "no one will believe you" - the abuser convinced the victim that "you wanted it as much as I did" - the abuser uses bribes or any form of "currency" that the child needs or wants including attention, money, gifts, or special treats - the victim starts to believe he/she did "want it" simply because he/she wanted the items the abuser promised - just want to pretend it never happened - don't know it's abuse - the lack of words to define or describe what happed - the abuse occurred at night so that the incidents become clouded "as if a dream" - the victim dissociates so there is a wall between "now" and what occurred "before now", even during the abuse - the victim suffers from Stockholm's syndrom (start to have feeling for the abuser and will sympathised with the abuser) Parents who do nothing after being told by a child about abuse often do not tell anyone because: - the parent is the abuser in many cases OR.... - the parent/s do not understand the danger of abuse, even if they have another child in the home - the abuser is the mother's boyfriend so the mother chooses her boyfriend over the child - the abuser is the mother's boyfriend and the mother cannot get away from him - the abuser is the father who also commits domestic violence--the mother feels she cannot safely leave and take her children with her - the abuser is the spouse or boyfriend who has threatened the mother as well as the kids and the victim - the parent fears involvement of child welfare - the parent was also an abused child so he or she thinks "I got through it, so can you" - the parent feels powerless - the parent is in denial - the parent has a mental illness and is ineffective at protecting a child - the abuser is the parent's workplace boss and the parent needs the job so therefore chooses not to tell the authorities OR.... Both parents or the mother and a live-in boyfriend commit the abuse together against the child.
Legally? No, I do not think so. Morally, yes, unless there are overriding reasons not to, such as his being a convicted child abuser, violent, drug addict, etc.