Asian Punishment

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Home Misc Asians Reveal the Craziest Ways Their Parents Punished Them as Kids
It seems like every Asian child has at least one memorable ass whooping story they like to share on repeat. While white parents like to ground their children or take away their phones, immigrant parents like to exercise a bit more creativity — after all, there’s nothing better than the element of surprise, right?
We asked our readers to reveal to us some of the most bizarre ways they were punished by their parents as children, and well, we received an overwhelming number of responses — almost a concerning amount actually.
So here are 22 people sharing the most unusual punishments they received from their Asian parents when they were younger. Please note, none of these methods are recommended — don’t take this list as a parenting guide because it certainly isn’t.
“When I was around 6 or 7 years old, one girl snitched on me saying that I insulted my sister with a cursing word. I didn’t but my mom believed that stupid girl. So she fed me chili powder. I am alive though.”
“If I got in trouble, I would have to let my siblings walk around the carpet in my room with their shoes on.”
“I honestly don’t even remember what I did but I’m pretty sure I deserved it. First my mom threw a remote at my head and it hit the wall behind me… since she wasn’t successful she took our Wii control with the nunchuck attachment, held both in one hadn’t and used the cord as a whip. Whipped me everywhere where clothes would cover haha I had welts for days.”
“This didn’t happen to me but it happened to my lil sister. My sister accidentally broke two eggs that my mom had just bought and my mom made her eat them raw.”
“When I was 6 I was writing on my mom’s leather couch with a ballpoint pen, she found me then used the same pen I used to write on my arms.”
“Do wall sits for several minutes with books in my hands.”
“Be on my knees, crossed my arms (something Viet people do to show ‘respect’), and faced the wall for 3 hours. My whole body got all numb.”
“I ate chocolate without their permission. When they knew it, they took 5 boxes of chocolate and asked me to finish it all at once until I puke.”
“Whenever I got in trouble as a little kid, my mom would take away all of my books and my library card in order to get me to do my chores or something. I know, it’s very weird for an Asian parent to take away their child’s books as punishment, but along with the reading restriction, she would also have my hair cut super short then put gel in it every day before school. I would get teased by the girls for not having their cute hairstyles but the guys thought I looked like Goku or Vegeta from Dragon Ball.”
“I had a green chili rubbed into the gums of my teeth (I love spicy food now so whatevs).”
“When I was maybe 10 she cut chili and grind them on my lips because I said a bad word.”
“My parents actually left me on the side of the road when I was 13 for breaking my friend’s PSP. I remember I had to walk 15 miles to get home.”
“I had to sit outside the house when it was raining (I was under an overhang dw) but it was for like an hour because I forgot how to write a capital R like I completely forgot and I couldn’t remember so I had to sit outside until I did remember which took a very long time.”
“When I was a kid, I had to get whipped with a spatula and put it in my mouth and hold it for an hour.”
“Whenever I misbehaved, I was locked in the toilet with no lights for an hour. Doesn’t seem like a very long time now but back when I was 8 that shit took FOREVER and was very scary (no gadgets, just me sitting on the toilet for an hour bawling my eyes out scared of ghosts popping up).”
“If I didn’t finish every Kumon packet, I had to stand still a few inches in front of the wall and not move or breathe too hard for 30 mins.”
“Mom used to light a candle and put the melting parts onto my hands because I cut my hair without her knowing when I was 6 or 7.”
“My mom made me eat my dinner out of a dirty, full trashcan with the food on top mixed with some of the trash cuz when my friend came over and we ate food, my mom had to leave so we were home alone and we were full so my friend was like ‘let’s just throw it out’ but then I was like, ‘what no, I’m gonna get my ass beat girl,’ but she said it was fine and she was a year older so I guess I thought she was wiser? And the next thing I know, my mom is home looking at the trashcan just yelling at my ass to eat it.”
“Made me eat plain pasta while I watched them eat hot pot.”
“If I didn’t want to be hit by my parents, I would have to hit myself. I was around 6-10 years old.”
“Growing up I got in trouble for not bringing out the chicken from the freezer in order for my mom to prep dinner (Mother called me two hours before she came home). As a kid I was playing online games with my friends so it slipped my mind. Two hours pass then I hear the door unlock — I rush to the kitchen and remove the chicken. So me being me, this was a reoccurring issue as a kid. My mom was so livid, so being Asian she goes for her slipper… right before I was gonna get spanked I asked her to just ground me like all the ‘white parents’ do. She laughed and I got hit. I was 11… lol.”
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The Five Punishments (Chinese: 五刑; pinyin: wǔ xíng; Cantonese Yale: ńgh yìhng) was the collective name for a series of physical penalties meted out by the legal system of pre-modern dynastic China.[1] Over time, the nature of the Five Punishments varied. Before the time of Western Han dynasty Emperor Han Wendi (r. 180–157 BC) they involved tattooing, cutting off the nose, amputation of one or both feet, castration and death.[2][3] Following the Sui and Tang dynasties (581–907 AD) these were changed to penal servitude, banishment, death, or corporal punishment in the form of whipping with bamboo strips or flogging with a stick. Although the Five Punishments were an important part of Dynastic China's penal system they were not the only methods of punishment used.
The earliest users of the Five Punishments are believed by some to be the Sanmiao Clan (三苗氏). Other sources claim they originated with Chiyou, the legendary creator of metalwork and weapons and leader of the ancient Nine Li (九黎) ethnic group. During the subsequent Xia dynasty (ca. 2070 BC–ca. 1600 BC), Qi of Xia, son of Yu the Great, the dynasty's founder, adopted the Miao's punishments of amputation of one or both feet (yuè 刖), cutting off of the nose (yì 劓), chiseling (zhuó 琢), tattooing the face or forehead (qíng 黥) and other types of punishment. Tattooing, amputation of the nose or feet, removal of the reproductive organs and death became the main five forms of the punishment system during this period. From the Xia Dynasty onwards through the Shang dynasty (1600–1046 BC) and the Zhou dynasty (1046–256 BC). The "Five Punishments for Slaves" were abolished during the reign of Emperor Wen of Han following a petition from a female subject Chunyu Tiying (淳于緹縈), and replaced by the "Five Punishments for Serfs".
Apart from the death penalty, the remaining four Punishments for Slaves were designed to bring about damage to their bodies that would mark them for life.[4] All ordinary citizens were subjected to these punishments.[5] These punishments were for men. The number of crimes to which the punishment was applicable is listed next to each one.[6]
During the Western Han dynasty, tattooing and amputation were abolished as punishments and in subsequent dynasties, the five punishments underwent further modification. By the Sui dynasty, the five punishments had attained the basic form they would have until the end of the imperial era. This is a brief survey of the five punishments during the Qing dynasty:[14]
The scale of the remittance payments can be gauged from the fact that at the time of the Qianlong Emperor (r. 1736–1795 AD), the average wage of a construction laborer in Zhili Province was 0.72 wén or 0.6 troy ounces of silver per day.[16]
These punishments were applied to women for the same crimes as committed by men.[citation needed]
^ Chen, Ivan (1908). "Chapter XI". The Book of Filial Duty.
^ Fu, Zhengyuan (1993). "Law as punishment". Autocratic tradition and Chinese politics. p. 109. ISBN 0-521-44228-1.
^ "Marquis of Lu on Punishments (吕刑)". Retrieved August 25, 2010.
^ International Comparative Literature Association. Congress, Elrud Ibsch, Douwe Wessel Fokkema (2000). The conscience of humankind: literature and traumatic experiences. Rodopi. p. 176. ISBN 90-420-0420-7. Retrieved 2011-01-11.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^ United States. Foreign Broadcast Information Service (1979). Daily report: People's Republic of China, Issues 223-232. Distributed by National Technical Information Servicei. p. 78. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
^ Qian Sima; William H. Nienhauser (1994). The grand scribe's records, Volume 1. Indiana University Press. p. 69. ISBN 0-253-34021-7. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
^ Garant Uitgevers N.V.; J.C.P. Liang; A.S. Keijser (2003). Modern Chinese II: Reading and Writing. Garant. p. 116. ISBN 90-5350-714-0. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
^ Zhen Zhang (2005). An amorous history of the silver screen: Shanghai cinema, 1896-1937. University of Chicago Press. p. 335. ISBN 0-226-98238-6. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
^ A.F.P. HULSEWE (1955). remnants of han law. Brill Archive. p. 127. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
^ Philip R. Bilancia (1981). Dictionary of Chinese law and government, Chinese-English. Stanford University Press. p. 366. ISBN 0-8047-0864-9. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
^ Dorothy Louise Hodgson (2001). Gendered modernities: ethnographic perspectives. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 250. ISBN 0-312-24013-9. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
^ William Theodore De Bary (1993). Waiting for the Dawn: A Plan for the Prince : Huang Tsung-Hsi's Ming-I-Tai-Fang Lu. Columbia University Press. p. 262. ISBN 0-231-08097-2. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
^ a b Paul Rakita Goldin (2002). The culture of sex in ancient China. University of Hawaii Press. p. 76. ISBN 0-8248-2482-2. Retrieved 2011-01-11.
^ Bodde, Derk, and Clarence Morris, Law in Imperial China: Exemplified by 190 Ch'ing Dynasty Cases (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1967), pp. 76-77.
^ a b c d e Yonglin, Jiang (translator) (2005). Da Ming Lu (大明律) (1397).
^ Databases on Materials, Wages, and Transport Costs in Public Construction in the Qianlong Era
This article is based on 五刑 in the Chinese Wikipedia.
Content is available under CC BY-SA 3.0 unless otherwise noted.
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