Human emotions affect every aspect of life. Especially when you are a child your emotions are easily affected by every interaction they accept. When these feelings are constantly beaten and destroyed, the common name is abusive. For example, Dee, a young, married woman, is being emotionally abused by her husband every day. He regarded her as a servant, not a wife, and in the end she hated her life. She was depressed and eventually wanted suicide. Until then she was being asked for help (YWCA Mohawk Valley, 2014).
Child abuse may have physical and emotional negative effects on children. In many cases these emotional effects will last forever. There are several types of child abuse, including physical abuse, emotional abuse, sexual abuse and general abuse. Detection and reporting of child abuse is one of the most important steps in saving lives of innocent children. Child abuse is a serious problem in the United States. Child abuse has not been discovered for many years. - Child child abuse is considered as one of the main causes of social life. The National Center for prevention of injury and prevention of child abuse informed that more than a million children were abused while other people lost their lives as a result of abuse. More than seven children died as a result of child abuse and developed a program to receive abuse.
Emotional abuse as defined by the National Youth Sports Safety Foundation (NYSSF) occurs when an individual handles children in a negative way and hurts the child's self-concept. Emotional abuse is the form of most difficult abuse in youth sports and the most common form of abuse. In 1993, the Minnesota Amateur Sports Commission conducted a young athlete's survey, 45% of respondents said they said they were insulting sports names, shouting, or during sports. 17% of respondents answered that they were beaten, kicked or hearing impaired when participating in sports, 21% answered that they were under pressure due to pressure and 8% deliberately I hurt others. These statistics are amazing, but it is more important to understand how children react to cries, snoring, and vows. Children are emotionally weak and do not respond to adult situations