Preview

Dave Pelzer's Childhood

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
205 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Dave Pelzer's Childhood
Many people use their childhood as a way to justify the means of their adulthood. This is especially the case when we talk about abused or neglected children. Statistics comes to show that children who suffered from an abusive parent tend to grow up and become the abusers themselves. These children might even become involved in criminal activity. This was not the case for Dave Pelzer. When Dave Pelzer woke up one morning to an abusive mother, he didn’t use this as a reason to behave a certain way in the future. Instead he took it to himself as a duty. He took it to himself that as a survivor of this tragic event to help others and to spread awareness through his memoirs and self-help books.

For my upcoming paper, I will be including citations

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    The characters in both stories are alike and have the same themes. Both texts share the story “Dave’s Group” and “Precious Shall’.’ Sometimes listening to your peers or somebody that has more knowledge can be good for you. According to the text in the story “Dave’s Group", it says, “Dave decided he was still smart, but he had to listen and discuss everyone’s ideas.” According to the text in the story "Precious Shall” it says “You need to molt soon,” his mother warned him one bright, sunny morning.…

    • 235 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The documentary “Me facing Life; Cyntoia’s Story” is about a young girl named Cyntoia, who is sixteen years old, going through a trail after committing murder; her life and what may have led her to committing so many delinquent acts is also expressed. Throughout the film her family, lifestyle and way of thinking is shown deeply. Still, after seeing the film I feel as if her pathway to delinquency could have been avoidable by just having more supervision, having a better family structure, and even being more active in school. Cyntoia had hit the streets at thirteen, she was a chronic runaway. “I wasn’t running from; I was running to,” she explains now. The streets of Nashville gave her “what I thought was freedom.”…

    • 456 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Daniel Pelka report

    • 2433 Words
    • 10 Pages

    This report is based on Daniel Pelka. A four year old boy who was starved and beaten to death by his own mother and her partner. In this report I will be looking into Daniels short life and identifying what happened to him. I am going to be exploring not only what happened but how it was allowed to happen and in what ways this young boy was failed by systems that are put in place to protect vulnerable children. I shall then give my recommendations and opinions based on my findings.…

    • 2433 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Although he did not endure physical abuse he was severely verbally and emotionally abused. He did not receive the acceptance and love that every child needs and deserves. Instead he was called names and isolated from his peers. “Kemper had spent the formative years of his sexual development isolated from females in a mental hospital” (Fraiser 263). The years that he spent at Atascadero State Hospital were the years that Kemper should have been socializing with peers, especially females. Kemper enjoyed his stay at the hospital; when he was released he had no idea what to do. Kemper stated in an interview, “When I got out on the street it was like being on a strange plant. People my age were not talking the same language. I had been living with people older then I was for so long that I was an old fogy” (Beroldingen…

    • 2175 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Pelzer is the survivor of the third worst case of child-abuse in California's history, a case he vividly recalls in A Child Called "It". Here he tells of a childhood so horrific and, at times, so nauseating that while reading I found myself praying that there was a hell so Pelzer's parents could rot in it for all eternity. And not just hell, mind you, but a special place in hell designed specifically for people like this, a level of hell beyond anything Dante could imagine.…

    • 2120 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Prior to the twenty-first century, most cases that involved trauma towards a minor were not evaluated close enough to reveal the psychological and social damage children were experiencing. Experts believed children possessed an innate attribute that allowed them recover quickly from oppression or abuse. However, in the novel The Boy who was raised as a Dog, Bruce Perry exemplifies how despairing experiences can psychologically damage a child’s brain and leave permanent damage that guide dysfunctions in behavior and cognition. Perry urges how healing sessions and social interaction with positive role models, are key to help children cope with traumatic experiences that direct their life.…

    • 538 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Child Called It Paper

    • 1478 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Uri Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Model does a great job of helping to display that child abuse is not an issue that is isolated to the home, but rather a problem that can be confronted on multiple levels. Through his use of a “target-like” diagram, he is able to show that each systems builds on each other and are interrelated. Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Model consists of five, linked systems, the Chronosystem, the Macrosystem, the Exosystem, the Mesosystem, and the Microsystem. To better understand Bronfenbrenner’s model, a walk through each layer of the model using explanations and examples from Dave Pelzer’s memoir, A Child Called “It”(Pelzer, 1995) is necessary.…

    • 1478 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Gary Paulsen had a rough but adventurous childhood. He was born in May, 1939. To start off with, he had pnumonia twice before age four. The doctors were sure he wouldn’t make it, but he pulled through. Paulsen had a bad family life. His parents fought constantly, and at seven years old, he went to live with his grandmother. Later on, his mother brought him to the Philipines where his father was currently living, and their fighting continued. Both his mother and his father had new boy/girl friends. He found comfort in his dog snowball.…

    • 172 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Jerry's Early Childhood

    • 219 Words
    • 1 Page

    Jerry was born in Cleveland, Texas on August 28th of 2000. He was raised in a small town named Splendora, Texas. A year after Jerry was born, he began to take his first baby steps. He isn't the only child his parents had. Jerry had six siblings, he is the third child out of seven. he is a very kind, quiet, and respectful person. One of Jerry's interests in school is science. He finds science very mysterious and interesting. Another interests Jerry has is sports, he has liked sports ever since he was six. In fact, he decided to play little league baseball around the age of six. He enjoyed the idea of being part of a team and putting effort into a sport he had just started playing for the first time ever. Jerry also enjoys fishing on his free…

    • 219 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Sheppard-Towner Act

    • 996 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The Nation’s attention was being caught by a series of stunning news reports depicting the most tragic consequences of child maltreatment. In this chapter, partially, we…

    • 996 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Child Called It Novel

    • 33880 Words
    • 136 Pages

    David J. Pelzer's mother, Catherine Roerva, was, he writes in this ghastly, fascinating memoir, a devoted den mother to the Cub Scouts in her care, and somewhat nurturant to her children--but not to David, whom she referred to as "an It." This book is a brief, horrifying account of the bizarre tortures she inflicted on him, told from the point of view of the author as a young boy being starved, stabbed, smashed face-first into mirrors, forced to eat the contents of his sibling's diapers and a spoonful of ammonia, and burned over a gas stove by a maniacal, alcoholic mom. Sometimes she claimed he had violated some rule--no walking on the grass at school!--but mostly it was pure sadism. Inexplicably, his father didn't protect him; only an alert schoolteacher saved David.…

    • 33880 Words
    • 136 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In the Columbine interview, Sue Klebold talks about what she went through as a parent and her grieving process during and after her son’s involvement in the Columbine shooting. In accompaniment to talking about her experience, she wants people to know that what her son did was a horrible thing and she has to accept that reality; she does not want another parent to miss the signs that her son went through during his depression. As a way to show our understanding with this interview, in particular with Sue Klebold’s involvement, our group has integrated the following key concepts from “Life-Span Human Development”: Nature vs. Nurture, Bronfenbrenner’s Bioecological Model, and the Id, Ego and the Superego. In this essay we explore these concepts…

    • 2132 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    But the child in the dark still feels like I don’t deserve it. That’s the legacy of abuse. The beatings never really stop” (Stanton, 2014). Various forms of child abuse such as beatings become internalized and make victims feel like they deserve it; because that is all they know, they learn to accept and believe it. Opposite of the victims’ feelings, the abusers’ perspective is seen through the second political cartoon. In the political cartoon, a judge asks, “Where did you get the idea child abuse is acceptable behavior?” while branching out an abuser’s family history of child abuse (Fitzsimmons, 2013). This directly suggests that child abuse is more likely to occur when an abuser has had past experiences of abuse. As a result, the “victims” are the children who are products of these abusive…

    • 476 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Parenting practices

    • 1068 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Diamond analyzes the story of a young man named Enu who was born into a village which practiced a repressive and neglectful parenting style. In this type of child rearing, the parents are neither demanding nor responsive. They are uninvolved with the child and do not participate or show interest in the activities that exist in their child's life. In today’s Western society, neglectful parenting can stem from various reasons such as financial stress, lack of support, or addiction to harmful substances. These parents may prioritize their needs before their child’s needs and lack a sense of encouragement to be active in their child’s life. As a result, these children that are neglected develop a sense of guilt and burden; they may believe that they have no importance in their parent’s lives. They develop independence, learn to provide for themselves over time, and will usually be mature beyond their years. Tired of this lifestyle and parents who were uninvolved, Enu independently decided to leave his natal family at the age of five.…

    • 1068 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Challenges of the Youth

    • 1009 Words
    • 5 Pages

    In times like these, when faith often proves in vain, many turn away from what is right. The toughest challenges that the youth face often begin at home. It is hard to say what truly drives human beings to be so careless and cruel, but we can say this for sure, all people have the potential to be monsters. The duty of a parent is to protect, to nurture, and to teach their children. Some parents simply toss this responsibility to the wind, and leave the future of a child to chance. I have seen and heard many stories of many children being abandoned, abused, and apprehended. Can children really be blamed for criminal actions? Is everything that they do really a reflection of who they are, or is it all nothing more than a voice crying out in desperation to be heard by someone? Sometimes actions are the only way people know how to communicate with each other. Many of the youth today, not only have to face the challenges of school, and work, but must also have to face the trials of their own home.…

    • 1009 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays