After Jim steals her jewelry to buy heroin, Hazel’s immediate response is to slap him and scream “You’re dead to me!” Yet by the following scene, she is preparing his breakfast. This rapid cycle of punishment and reward—termed “intermittent reinforcement” in behavioral psychology—is known to strengthen maladaptive behaviors rather than extinguish them (Sutton & Barto, 2018). Jim learns that even his worst transgressions are survivable without structural change. 4. Cognitive Impulsivity: The Failure of Foresight Beyond emotion and action, Hazel exhibits cognitive impulsivity: a tendency to undervalue delayed outcomes in favor of immediate interpretive closure. She repeatedly misreads Jim’s deteriorating state (weight loss, needle marks, truancy) as “a phase” or “bad influences” rather than systemic addiction. Even when presented with clear evidence (e.g., a teacher’s report, a neighbor’s warning), she dismisses these inputs with hasty conclusions: “He’s just a boy being a boy.”
This emotional lability prevents consistent boundary-setting. Research on parenting and impulsivity (Crandall et al., 2015) indicates that children of emotionally dysregulated parents fail to develop stable internal models of consequence. Jim learns not that drugs are dangerous, but that his mother’s rage is temporary and survivable. Hazel’s inability to sustain a measured, planned intervention (e.g., rehabilitation, structured monitoring) reflects an impulsive preference for immediate emotional catharsis over long-term strategy. 3. Behavioral Impatience: Discipline as Reaction, Not Strategy Hazel’s disciplinary actions are uniformly reactive rather than proactive. When Jim returns home late or visibly high, she oscillates between locking him out (a drastic, momentary punishment) and allowing him entry minutes later (an equally impulsive reversal). Notably, she never implements graduated consequences, family contracts, or external support systems. impulsiveness hazel moore
Cognitive impulsivity often coexists with denial as a protective mechanism. For Hazel, acknowledging the full trajectory of Jim’s addiction would demand painful, resource-intensive actions (inpatient rehab, legal intervention). Her snap judgments—that Jim will “snap out of it” or that love alone will suffice—reflect an impulsive preference for simple narratives over complex, long-term solutions. 5. Impulsiveness as a Product of Environment It would be reductive to pathologize Hazel without context. She is a working-class widow in a high-crime neighborhood, with limited social support and no visible partner. In such environments, impulsivity can be adaptive: rapid emotional reactions may de-escalate immediate threats; quick decisions might be necessary when resources are scarce. Hazel’s impulsiveness, therefore, is not purely a personality deficit but a behavioral residue of chronic stress and scarcity. After Jim steals her jewelry to buy heroin,
Impulsiveness as a Fractured Compass: A Psychological and Narrative Analysis of Hazel Moore in The Basketball Diaries Even when presented with clear evidence (e