I have been thinking a lot about the Japanese boy who went missing this week. In case you missed it, a wide-scale search is currently underway to find 7-year-old Yamato Tanooka in northern Japan who disappeared after his parents left him on the roadside as punishment for misbehaving.
They drove down the road, about 500 metres and returned after 5 minutes, only to find he had vanished. Gone. In a bear-infested, mountainous and chilly area. He had only been wearing a t-shirt.
When I read that story, a mixture of guilt, shame and anxiety washed over me. Last weekend, I had driven off and left my son on the roadside as punishment. He refused to get in the car, then threw a massive tantrum. So we left him, where he was happily pulling up grass in a vacant lot. We got in the car, announced our departure loudly and started driving off.
I had heard about this tactic several years ago, when it was introduced to me by Joshua Gans, the author of “Parentomics” in a Freakonomics podcast. Here’s the transcript:
GANS: We would go to the park and our child, this is our then-eldest child was probably around four, would invariably not want to leave. So, we would have this big song and dance about, we have to go now, you can’t keep on playing, she’d run off, you know it would be costly, let me put it that way.
So what we did one day we were sitting there and she was doing it yet. Again and we said, you know, we keep threatening that we’ll just leave, why don’t we get in the car and just leave? And so we said, you know, you come or we’re going to go and we’re going to get in the car and drive off, and that is actually what we did in front of a full park, other parents as well, we had a screaming child running after us going, you know, no, don’t leave me, exactly to get that message across.