Re: Children With Oppositional Defiant Disorder
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Phylodog</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
Now, I'm sure I could beat her on a daily basis until her spirit is absolutely broken and she is so afraid of me that she becomes an introvert but I'm not trying to break a horse to take a saddle here. </div></div>
I take A LOT of exception to what was said. I make a living training horses, and have started some that wound up being world champions. You dont beat horses to train them. You train them through repetition and consistency while keeping them confident (for the most part). It is no different than you training to draw your pistol. I bet your chief doesnt come beat you with a nightstick if you dont draw your weapon correctly, horses dont get beat if they dont slide correctly. You make the correct things easy, the wrong things more diffucult.
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Phylodog</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
Now, I'm sure I could beat her on a daily basis until her spirit is absolutely broken and she is so afraid of me that she becomes an introvert but I'm not trying to break a horse to take a saddle here. </div></div>
I take A LOT of exception to what was said. I make a living training horses, and have started some that wound up being world champions. You dont beat horses to train them. You train them through repetition and consistency while keeping them confident (for the most part). It is no different than you training to draw your pistol. I bet your chief doesnt come beat you with a nightstick if you dont draw your weapon correctly, horses dont get beat if they dont slide correctly. You make the correct things easy, the wrong things more diffucult.