An Intergenerational Exploration of Discipline, Attachment, and Black Mother–Daughter Relationships Across the Lifespan
Abstract
1. Introduction
“Black children raised without whuppings and fear can flourish. Rooting out violence in all forms—from our families, schools, and communities—is an essential step to challenging racist devaluation.”
2. Theoretical Framework: Intergenerational Narratives Among Black Families
3. Maternal Discipline and Black Mother–Daughter Attachment
4. Method
4.1. Participants
4.2. Procedures
4.3. Interview Protocol
4.4. Coding Analysis
5. Results
5.1. RQ1—Disciplinary Experiences During Childhood
5.2. RQ2—Disciplinary Reflections and Current Practices as a Mother
We were never spanked. We did a lot of talking. A lot of conversations. The thing that I did get grounded for though, would be grades. So, like in eighth grade for example I got three B’s on my report card and I was grounded for six weeks. And so, I was pissed. As a kid, I was pissed. And now we’ve talked about it as an adult and she feels bad. And for me, now, my ultimate goal and what I hope [with my kids] is to keep our relationship and connection, because I think, especially now with two tweens as they’re coming into adolescence, I want there to be communication. And they’ll mess up or whatever, but we can work through that. And I take a lot of this from my mom, for sure.
Honestly, I think she was very effective because there was a lot of communication and there were a lot of warnings before steps were taken to other types of discipline, or any type of physical punishment or handwriting that we had to do. It was always a warning. And it was explained to you and so I understood it. I saw other friends whose parents were not like that. They would just physically discipline them in front of anybody. So my brothers and I were really fortunate because my parents did not do that. My mother did not believe in humiliating us. So my parents had a different disciplinary style from most other Ghanaian parents. We were lucky because they never humiliated us. That was not part of the agenda. It was usually, let me talk to you privately. I knew, as a mom, I wanted to model a lot of what my parents did with me. I wanted to model that and I work in the education field, so you see quite a bit and I wanted, my children should be rooted in culture and respect and proper etiquette.
I think it was revolutionary, honestly. When I talk to my grandparents or older aunts and uncles, it stands out to them how my mom parented us, because it was not how they were brought up and not how they brought up their kids. So we always stood out. My mother got ridiculed for how she disciplined us, because it wasn’t the way everyone was doing it. And in leaving home and realizing, “Wow, she was telling the truth.” That kind of thing. And then it was also meeting other people and realizing, “Your mother said that” or “Your mother did that?” and realizing the blessing that I had. People telling me about getting spankings or whippings or beatings, and that’s when I realized, “Wow, my parents really did things differently.” And of course the icing on the cake was having my own kids. That was definitely the thing that helped me really view her in a different way.
They [parents] did instill some great values. I think professionalism, timeliness, and those kinds of things were instilled that were good, but there are some other things such as, the fear, the spanking and all that stuff that I’d prefer not to do. With my parents, it was more through fear that you listened. As a kid, it was always in the back of my mind, I’m like, “Wait, I have questions about this.” I want to understand and know why I’m doing this and that. But it was considered rude to even ask why. Which I didn’t like very much. So I think there was some feeling of resentment. So with my kids—in order for them to respect me enough, to listen to what I have to say, not that they have to do what I say, but in order for them to respect me enough, to at least listen and consider the guidelines that I’m setting forth, I need to be willing to listen to the things that are important to them.
My father was very strict, with a lot of rules. A lot of rules that didn’t seem to make sense. Rules just for the sake of rules. But not rules that were intentional or really even applicable to the individual child. And definitely physical discipline. Even for my mother, it was like we were all kind of in a little prison. Dealing with a warden [her father]. So there are things that I definitely still took from my mom and there are things that I threw away. I look at it now in terms of who built the relationship and who didn’t. Who was invested in the relationship with us, in their children, versus who wasn’t. When I look at what parent has the relationship with their children now, it’s my mother, and who was tolerated was my father. Just like, I knew I could tell my mother anything, even if she didn’t want to hear it, I could tell her anything. And I want my kids to have the same thing with me. But when I think about discipline, I knew I definitely didn’t want to use physical discipline. And I tend to lean more into it terms of planting the seeds.
I kind of wish she was a little stricter, as far as like, not allowing me to tell her to shut up. What else? I’m thinking about my husband’s, my mother, my in-laws, their disciplinary style and how they turned out, and certain things I do like about it. I’m a Christian and a lot of their disciplinary things [with my husband] connected to the Bible and we do this because God says blah, blah, blah. And my mom didn’t do that as much. I wish she would have made sure I was respecting her the way I would want to be respected as a mom.
Now, I’ve deviated. My spouse is more so the one who still says, “If we were spanking them, we wouldn’t deal with this.” But the more I got into my own consciousness around anti-violence, I was like how could I be anti-violent and be spanking my children? Plus, as a child I didn’t really…that didn’t really work for me, right? Because I always felt like if it worked, why do people get repeat spankings, right? If it really worked, you shouldn’t get spanked more. Coming into my own consciousness and then being introduced to Dr. Stacey Patton. Once I started getting some of her information, I was just like whoa, I’m done with this spanking crap, yeah. But my mom still holds her line. She’s like, “Yeah, well there were four of you guys.” My mom was a physical therapy aid and she was doing manual labor. She was lifting people out of whirlpools and she was like, “I’m tired by the time I get home I just needed you all to fall in line and spanking did it.”
Honestly I decided a long time ago I wasn’t going to spank. And then I had to build up to say, “What am I going to do instead?” And honestly, the first time I held my baby and I was looking at her—I think I was changing her diaper and I looked at her little booty and I was like, “I don’t ever want to hit that.” It just kind of came over me and it was probably the hormones too, right? I was like, “I’m not going to do it.” I wish my mom had tapped into that more. It’s hard especially being that my family was very educated, right? Like my grandfather had a PhD and all these other things. So it wasn’t about degree and education—it’s really about a mindset. I do agree she did the best she was able to.
I don’t fault my mother. I think that parenting changes with new information and different periods of time. I think she disciplined me in the way that was common for ‘80s kids. So it is what it is. We also didn’t usually use car seats. We use car seats now. I know some people that have really deep seated feelings about getting spankings as children, and I don’t. I definitely do think that I probably deserved some of those spankings, and even if I’ve chosen to do something different with my kids, I don’t fault my mom for using the information that she had available at the time to discipline me the best that she could.
5.3. RQ3—Characterizations of Current Mother–Daughter Relationships
Well my mom, she was a yeller and a cusser. And if you didn’t do something she wanted done, you were getting a whooping. You were scared all the time because you didn’t know what her reactions were going to be. It was annoying. It was scary at times. I think I had a lot of anxiety. Just not even knowing what was going to happen every day. I’m just doing everything possible not to be my mother and to make sure that my kids know that I’m there for them through everything. And I want them to understand that they can express themselves. They have an opinion. They can be heard. So they don’t go out here thinking that they’re not worthy of whatever it may be that they want in this world. I’m trying to do the exact opposite of what was done for me. And our relationship now—it’s strained. It’s strained. It’s a tough situation to deal with her. I can talk to her, but at the same time, she’s very difficult to deal with because I just feel like she’s very toxic and a lot of it comes from her upbringing and how she was dealt with as a child. And it’s a lot of things that she hasn’t dealt with and she tends to take it out on other people. She’s been through a lot. I understand that. But when you’re dealing with an adult child, I feel like there are certain ways that you should go about speaking to them. She is just not that person and she wants everything her way or it’s no way. So I distanced myself.
Okay, so I’ll say that I lived with my mother for only one or two years of my life, even though she was around. I lived mainly with my mother’s sister until I was about four years of age. And then my father and my stepmother and then my maternal grandmother. My mom was present during that time, but we didn’t live with her. And so as far as my relationship with her, she’s my mother. But when you think about a mother–daughter relationship, we don’t have that. I didn’t grow up crying on my mother’s shoulder. My mom was not the one who I ran to when something went wrong. As a matter of fact, my mom is very sensitive. So even though she can say whatever she wants to, you can’t say what you want to without her having an attitude. We went 10 years without speaking because of what she felt I said about her. So our relationship is more like friends.
My relationship with my mother is good. There was a barrier because she always wanted me to be more girly and I was always the tomboy and very comfortable being the tomboy, so we butted heads a lot on that. And it’s just recently that we’ve been able to have open discussions about it and realize where we both had mental blocks against it or still have issues with it. So, to hear some of the issues she has and for her to hear mine and for us to kind of come together and try to work through it, I feel closer to her now. Growing up, I didn’t really think she liked me, but it was always because…you know, it’s that parent/child relationship where neither one of you is really feeling heard or understood. But it’s recently shifted because I became a mom, and I had a failed marriage and I left my husband and literally had to move back in with her. So, us having to communicate when it comes to my son and life in general, it’s really become a bridge to be able to talk about things that we probably never talked about before.
I’m pretty close to both, but I can relate more to my dad versus my mom because we did have that teenage rough patch I think everybody hits. And it took a long time to fix that teenage rough patch. She didn’t really yell or anything like that, it was just very…it was a nag. Kinda authoritative. My mom wanted me to follow this mold of going to school, having a career, and traveling, doing all of that. But she wanted me to do it her way versus my way, so we clashed and she would often take things away or refuse to talk with me. Now, it’s completely different. Now with my kids, they’re [parents] just like, oh come get all the sugar. They’re totally different as grandparents. And my mom and I have become closer once we got over the patch. When I first had my eldest daughter, she was kind of like, “Okay, well you should do it this way.” Almost like when I was a teenager. I had to, in the nicest way, be like—no. This is my baby—we’re going to do it this way. She would try to say her two cents and then she would be like—you know what, it’s your baby. You do it how you want. So that’s where we are now. We’re a lot closer now and she gets it.
I would say I had pretty close relationship with my mother growing up. I think she did a really good job of balancing the nurturing side of parenting with the other aspect of it, which is more of the disciplinarian side. So she was someone who growing up, we spent every evening together with my mom, all of us in the living room. We ate dinner together. We traveled with her, just quite close. That has continued throughout even my adulthood. I would say that we’re probably even closer now, and that’s only in part because my parents are now in their late 70s. I talk to my mom once a week. She lives in North Carolina and I live in Kentucky. I’m also the youngest of four girls, and the relationship has kind of shifted in the sense that I feel like I’m starting to become the parent in the relationship. But my mom always had this really good way of balancing.
I was the only girl and I was the youngest. I was close to my mom because my older brothers would go off and play football and stuff. My grandparents had my mom in their 40’s and she was born in the 1950’s. She had a really old school, traditional upbringing. So my mom was super strict, and I started to realize that as I went to middle school and talked to my peers. We [brothers] would all get whooped if one of us got in trouble. So she was pretty strict, but she was also very easy to talk to.
Authentic. I have a really good relationship with my mother now, but when I was a kid! Woo. She raised me to be strong, independent, and free thinking. Doesn’t translate well when you’re strong, independent, and free thinking as a child. Right? Because that means you don’t always agree. It means you have a mind of your own. It means you do what you want to sometimes. That was not how my mother was raised. She was raised as a person who followed her mother. It wasn’t a democracy with my grandmother. She pretended like it was, but it really wasn’t. So with my mom, I don’t think she realized at the time that she wasn’t raising us in a democracy. And now, as an adult, you reflect and talk about it, and my mother will be like, “That’s not how that went.” But it was. We had a discussion recently about the way she raised me. She said, “I’m not even sure if I raised you to be that person. You guided me into that as who you are.”
6. Discussion
7. Limitations and Areas for Future Research
8. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In the current study, we did not include empirical articles that focused explicitly on child abuse in the context of discipline. We recognize scholarly and sociocultural debates about the extent to which punitive discipline practices—and, more specifically, physical spanking—constitute child abuse (Afifi et al., 2017; Patton, 2017), but this was beyond our scope of analysis. |
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Pseudonym | Ethnicity | Age | Education | Children’s Ages | Discipline Recalled as a Child | Disciplinary Practices as a Mother | Current Relationship with Mother |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Althea | African American | 32 | Graduate degree | 3, 3 | None | Shift | Progressing |
Alyce | Biracial | 41 | Graduate degree | 4 | Punitive | Shift | Strained |
Angela | African American | 41 | Graduate degree | 5, 9, 12 | Punitive Natural | Shift | Strained |
Bessie | African American | 33 | Graduate degree | 1 | Punitive | Shift | Healthy |
Charlie | African American | 45 | Graduate degree | 8, 15, 17 | Punitive Logical Natural | Continuity | Healthy |
Claudette | African American | 41 | Graduate degree | 21, 13, 13 | Punitive Logical Natural | Continuity | Healthy |
Daisy | African American | 40 | Bachelor’s degree | 2.5 | Punitive Logical | Mix | Healthy |
Daisy | African American | 39 | Some college | 2.5 | Punitive | Shift | Strained |
Deja | Caribbean | 36 | Graduate degree | 9, 11 | Punitive Logical | Mix | Progressing |
Fannie | African American | 40 | Bachelor’s degree | 3, 4 | Punitive | Shift | Healthy |
Florynce | African American | 33 | Bachelor’s degree | 2.5 | Punitive Logical Natural | Continuity | Healthy |
Gwendolyn | African American | 27 | Bachelor’s degree | 6, 3 | Natural Logical | Shift | Progressing |
Harriet | African American | 33 | Bachelor’s degree | 3, 1 | Punitive Logical | Shift | Healthy |
Henrietta | African American | 33 | Some college | 13, 11, 9, 7, 4, 11 mo | Natural Logical | Mix | Progressing |
Ida | South African | 43 | Graduate degree | 20, 16 | Punitive Logical | Shift | Strained |
Imani | African American | 32 | Trade school | 11, 15 | Punitive Logical | Continuity | Progressing |
Jada | Ghanaian | 26 | Graduate degree | 6, 6 mo | Punitive Logical | Continuity | Healthy |
MaeJae | African American | 33 | Graduate degree | 2 | Punitive | Shift | Progressing |
Mariana | African American | missing | missing | missing | Punitive Logical | Shift | Progressing |
Mary | Biracial | 33 | Graduate degree | 10 mo | Punitive | Shift | Healthy |
Maya | African American | 46 | Graduate degree | 17 | Punitive Logical | Shift | Strained |
Miriam | African American | 27 | Bachelor’s degree | 12, 10, 8 | Punitive Natural | Shift | Progressing |
Misty | African | 47 | Graduate degree | 19, 18 | Punitive Logical | Shift | Healthy |
Nova | African American | 34 | Graduate degree | 5, 14 mo, pregnant | Punitive Logical | Mix | Healthy |
Phyllis | Black American | 44 | Graduate degree | 14, 4 | Punitive | Shift | Healthy |
Rosetta | Multiracial | 28 | Graduate degree | 5, 3, 3 mo | Punitive | Shift | Strained |
Shanice | African American | 35 | Graduate degree | 1, pregnant | Punitive Logical | Mix | Healthy |
Shirlee | African American | 31 | Graduate degree | 8, 14 weeks | Punitive | Shift | Progressing |
Soujorna | Biracial | 43 | Bachelor’s degree | 14, 12 | Punitive | Mix | Strained |
Sylvia | African American | 34 | Trade school | 8 | Punitive Logical | Shift | Healthy |
Violet | African American | 36 | Bachelor’s degree | 4 | Punitive | Shift | Progressing |
Type of Discipline | Excerpts |
---|---|
Punitive (n = 23, 74%) Consequences rooted in negative reinforcement; consequences are given by an adult in response to a child’s perceived misbehavior; punishment may not be connected to the perceived misbehavior | “She would put me on punishment, whoop me, or she would give me the silent treatment. Restrictions, no TV, you can’t go out, stuff like that. Mostly it was no TV. I was never really a social butterfly, so her saying, “You can’t leave the house,” didn’t bother me at all.” (Imani, 34, African American) “I think probably the central theme, we come from a culture where respect for elders is very much kind of like a pillar culturally. So we were kids that got spanked, but not often. I think it was so rare that I can remember every time that I ever got spanked because it was so rare. I think the last time I ever got spanked I might’ve been like eight years old. But pretty much, once you started heading into adolescence, spanking was no longer a part of how she parented. It was more so restrictions in terms of where you could go. So grounding you—you are not allowed to participate in certain events if you were misbehaving or something like that. The physical discipline was more so concentrated on the earlier part of childhood.” (Nova, 43, South African) “I remember I used to ask for whoopings because my mom was verbally abusive. She would just yell. It makes me so anxious when people yell. I feel like my insides are shaking, I can’t take it. So I just used to ask her, “Can you just whoop me and get this over with?” She kind of talked to me and treated me poorly. There was just no respect there. I remember her at least one time calling me a bitch, and I was like, “Oh my gosh, I got to get the fuck out of here.” She was so hateful sometimes. And I wasn’t a bad kid. I mean, I did typical stuff but I wasn’t doing nearly as much as I could have. She would say anything, it would sound so harsh. I can just remember the way it felt, it just felt like there was just hatred in there. Like, “I don’t understand why she doesn’t like me.”” (Shirlee, 32, African American) |
Logical (n = 18, 58%) Consequences imposed by an adult that were tied to a perceived rule violation by a child; could be punitive in nature; often involved communication about misbehavior and the consequence | “Discipline was just ongoing. It was telling you what you needed to do and reminding you of what you needed to do. If something came up, it was discussed. If I didn’t do something I was supposed to do, then it was like, “Okay, you didn’t do this. How come you didn’t do it?” It was more like teaching, more conversational.” (Miriam, 32, Black American) “We had things taken away, we couldn’t watch TV, we weren’t able to go out with friends. Lots of conversations. Kind of explain to me why you felt like that was a good idea, type of thing. We got a lot of “What do you think the consequence should be for this?”” (Claudette, 36, Caribbean) “It was authoritarian and like, “We make the rules, you follow them, and if you don’t, we’re going to find out about it, and do something.” So that was tough, right? It doesn’t really teach the problem-solving for the relationships between the siblings and things like that. Or like, one year, I found the Christmas gifts and then she took my stuff away.” (Gwendolyn, 33, African American) |
Natural (n = 3, 10%) Consequences that were a direct result of a child’s behavior and were not imposed by an adult | “In discipline, she’s always giving us the benefit of the doubt. Like more than she should have, I think. And when I got pregnant at 18, she just instantly did everything she could to make sure that I was fine and felt supportive. And no judgment at all, honestly. And from there, too, because I had a period in my adolescence where I was like really acting a fool. Not disrespectful. We didn’t have a contentious relationship. I was just quietly doing whatever I wanted. But still being nice to my mom. Just not doing what I was supposed to do. And so it wasn’t that surprising that I got pregnant, I guess. But from there because I had these secrets like that, it put a divide between our closeness, I feel, because I was double life’ing it in high school.” (Florynce, 27, African American) |
Multiple Categories (n = 15, 48%) | “When I was younger, she was whooping us. But as we got older, she would have talks with us, conversations with us and tell us right and wrong and how it was wrong. She was such a great parent. As you hear, I didn’t grow up with my Dad. They got a divorce when I was an infant. It was just her and three kids, and I think that she did a great job. We went through the homelessness and we had to stay together. We had to stay secretive so we wouldn’t end up in foster care, right? And so it made us significantly closer. Us three, we are super, super close. We’re both adults now and my oldest brother is doing great.” (Bessie, 32, African American, Punitive + Logical) “My mom was very into natural consequences. She would say or do something like, hey tie your shoes or you’re going to fall. In the end, when you fall, you fall. Just life teaches you fast. She didn’t really yell or anything like that, but it was very much—like a nag. I don’t want to call it authoritative, because it wasn’t but it was just like a nag. Like, did you do the dishes? You didn’t do the dishes. Okay, now you got to do the dishes for two weeks.” (Henrietta, 27, African American, Logical + Natural) |
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Leath, S.; Bryant, L.; Johnson, K.; Pitts, J.B.; Omole, T.; Butler-Barnes, S.T. An Intergenerational Exploration of Discipline, Attachment, and Black Mother–Daughter Relationships Across the Lifespan. Behav. Sci. 2025, 15, 887. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15070887
Leath S, Bryant L, Johnson K, Pitts JB, Omole T, Butler-Barnes ST. An Intergenerational Exploration of Discipline, Attachment, and Black Mother–Daughter Relationships Across the Lifespan. Behavioral Sciences. 2025; 15(7):887. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15070887
Chicago/Turabian StyleLeath, Seanna, Lamont Bryant, Khrystal Johnson, Jessica Bernice Pitts, Titilope Omole, and Sheretta T. Butler-Barnes. 2025. "An Intergenerational Exploration of Discipline, Attachment, and Black Mother–Daughter Relationships Across the Lifespan" Behavioral Sciences 15, no. 7: 887. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15070887
APA StyleLeath, S., Bryant, L., Johnson, K., Pitts, J. B., Omole, T., & Butler-Barnes, S. T. (2025). An Intergenerational Exploration of Discipline, Attachment, and Black Mother–Daughter Relationships Across the Lifespan. Behavioral Sciences, 15(7), 887. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15070887