home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1968>
- <link 93TO0111>
- <title>
- June 28, 1993: Bringing Up Father
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 28, 1993 Fatherhood
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORY, Page 52
- Bringing Up Father
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The message dads get is that they are not up to the job. And
- a record number don't stick around to raise their kids--even
- as fathers are needed more than ever.
- </p>
- <p>By NANCY R. GIBBS--With reporting by Ann Blackman/Washington, Priscilla Painton/New York
- and James Willwerth/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> "I don't have a dad," says Megan, 8, a tiny blond child with
- a pixie nose who gazes up at a visitor and talks of her hunger.
- "Well, I do have a dad, but I don't know his name. I only know
- his first name, Bill."
- </p>
- <p> Just what is it that fathers do?
- </p>
- <p> "Love you. They kiss you and hug you when you need them. I had
- my mom's boyfriend for a while, but they broke up." Now Megan
- lives with just her mother and older brother in Culver City,
- California.
- </p>
- <p> What would you like to do with your dad?
- </p>
- <p> "I'd want him to talk to me." She's hurting now. "I wish I had
- somebody to talk to. It's not fair. If two people made you,
- then you should still be with those two people." And she's sad.
- "I'm not so special," she says, looking down at the floor. "I
- don't have two people."
- </p>
- <p> She imagines what it would be like for him to come home from
- work at night.
- </p>
- <p> "It would be just like that commercial where the kids say, `Daddy,
- are you all right?' " She smiles, dreaming. "The kids show the
- daddy that they care for him. They put a thermometer in his
- mouth. They think he's sick because he came home early. They
- are sitting on the couch watching TV, and it's like, wow, we
- can play with Dad!"
- </p>
- <p> Megan thinks her father is in the Navy now. "One day when I
- get older, I'm gonna go back to Alabama and try to find him."
- </p>
- <p> More children will go to sleep tonight in a fatherless home
- than ever in the nation's history. Talk to the experts in crime,
- drug abuse, depression, school failure, and they can point to
- some study somewhere blaming those problems on the disappearance
- of fathers from the American family. But talk to the fathers
- who do stay with their families, and the story grows more complicated.
- What they are hearing, from their bosses, from institutions,
- from the culture around them, even from their own wives, very
- often comes down to a devastating message: We don't really trust
- men to be parents, and we don't really need them to be. And
- so every day, everywhere, their children are growing up without
- them.
- </p>
- <p> Corporate America, for a start, may praise family life but does
- virtually nothing to ease it. Managers still take male workers
- aside and warn them not to take a paternity leave if they want
- to be taken seriously. On TV and in movies and magazine ads,
- the image of fathers over the past generation evolved from the
- stern, sturdy father who knew best to a helpless Homer Simpson,
- or some ham-handed galoot confounded by the prospect of changing
- a diaper. Teachers call parent conferences but only talk to
- the mothers. When father arrives at the doctor's office with
- little Betsy, the pediatrician offers instructions to pass along
- to his wife, the caregiver presumptive. The Census Bureau can
- document the 70 million mothers age 15 or older in the U.S.
- but has scant idea how many fathers there are. "There's no interest
- in fathers at all," says sociologist Vaughn Call, who directs
- the National Survey of Families and Households at the University
- of Wisconsin. "It's a nonexistent category. It's the ignored
- half of the family."
- </p>
- <p> Mothers themselves can be unwitting accomplices. Even women
- whose own progress in public life depends on sharing the workload
- in private life act as "gatekeepers" in the home, to use Harvard
- pediatrician T. Berry Brazelton's description. Dig deeply into
- household dynamics, and the tensions emerge. Women say they
- need and want their husbands to be more active parents but fear
- that they aren't always reliable. Men say they might like to
- be more involved, but their wives will not make room for them,
- and jealously guard their domestic power.
- </p>
- <p> Most troubling of all to some social scientists is the message
- men get that being a good father means learning how to mother.
- Among child-rearing experts, the debate rages over whether men
- and women parent differently, whether there is some unique contribution
- that each makes to the emotional health of their children. "Society
- sends men two messages," says psychologist Jerrold Lee Shapiro,
- father of two and the author of A Measure of the Man, his third
- book on fatherhood. "The first is, We want you to be involved,
- but you'll be an inadequate mother. The second is, You're invited
- into the birthing room and into the nurturing process--but
- we don't want all of you. We only want your support. We're not
- really ready as a culture to accept men's fears, their anger
- or their sadness. This is the stuff that makes men crazy. We
- want men to be the protectors and providers, but we are scared
- they won't be if they become soft."
- </p>
- <p> So now America finds its stereotypes crushed in the collision
- between private needs and public pressures. While some commend
- the nurturing nature of the idealized New Father, others cringe
- at the idea of genderless parenting and defend the importance
- of men being more than pale imitations of mothers. "If you become
- Mr. Mom," says Shapiro, "the family has a mother and an assistant
- mother. That isn't what good fathers are doing today." And fathers
- themselves wrestle with memories of their own fathers, vowing
- to do it differently, and struggling to figure out how.
- </p>
- <p> DISAPPEARING DAD
- </p>
- <p> Well into the 18th century, child-rearing manuals in America
- were generally addressed to fathers, not mothers. But as industrialization
- began to separate home and work, fathers could not be in both
- places at once. Family life of the 19th century was defined
- by what historians call the feminization of the domestic sphere
- and the marginalization of the father as a parent. By the 1830s,
- child-rearing manuals, increasingly addressed to mothers, deplored
- the father's absence from the home. In 1900 one worried observer
- could describe "the suburban husband and father" as "almost
- entirely a Sunday institution."
- </p>
- <p> What alarms modern social scientists is that in the latter part
- of this century the father has been sidelined in a new, more
- disturbing way. Today he's often just plain absent. Rising divorce
- rates and out-of-wedlock births mean that more than 40% of all
- children born between 1970 and 1984 are likely to spend much
- of their childhood living in single-parent homes. In 1990, 25%
- were living with only their mothers, compared with 5% in 1960.
- Says David Blankenhorn, the founder of the Institute for American
- Values in New York City: "This trend of fatherlessness is the
- most socially consequential family trend of our generation."
- </p>
- <p> Credit Dan Quayle for enduring the ridicule that opened the
- mainstream debate over whether fathers matter in families. In
- the year since his famous Murphy Brown speech, social scientists
- have produced mounting evidence that, at the very least, he
- had a point. Apart from the personal politics of parenting,
- there are larger social costs to reckon in a society that dismisses
- fathers as luxuries.
- </p>
- <p> Studies of young criminals have found that more than 70% of
- all juveniles in state reform institutions come from fatherless
- homes. Children from broken families are nearly twice as likely
- as those in two-parent families to drop out of high school.
- After assessing the studies, economist Sylvia Hewlett suggested
- that "school failure may well have as much to do with disintegration
- of families as with the quality of schools."
- </p>
- <p> Then there is the emotional price that children pay. In her
- 15 years tracking the lives of children of divorced families,
- Judith Wallerstein found that five years after the split, more
- than a third experienced moderate or severe depression. After
- 10 years a significant number of the young men and women appeared
- to be troubled, drifting and underachieving. At 15 years many
- of the thirtyish adults were struggling to create strong love
- relationships of their own. Daughters of divorce, she found,
- "often experience great difficulty establishing a realistic
- view of men in general, developing realistic expectations and
- exercising good judgment in their choice of partners."
- </p>
- <p> For boys, the crucial issue is role modeling. There are psychologists
- who suggest that boys without fathers risk growing up with low
- self-esteem, becoming overly dependent on women and emotionally
- rigid. "Kids without fathers are forced to find their own ways
- of doing things," observes Melissa Manning, a social worker
- at the Boys and Girls Club of Venice, California. "So they come
- up with their own ideas, from friends and from the gangs. Nobody
- is showing them what to do except to be drunk, deal drugs or
- go to jail." Then there are the subtler lessons that dads impart.
- Attorney Charles Firestone, for instance, recently decided it
- was time to teach his 11-year-old son how to play poker. "Maybe
- it will help if he knows when to hold 'em, when to fold 'em,"
- he says.
- </p>
- <p> THE ANTI-FATHER MESSAGE
- </p>
- <p> Given the evidence that men are so vital to a healthy home,
- the anti-father messages that creep into the culture and its
- institutions are all the more troubling. Some scholars suggest
- that fatherhood is by its very biological nature more fragile
- than motherhood, and needs to be encouraged by the society around
- it. And yet for all the focus on the New Father (the kind who
- skips the corporate awards dinner to attend the school play),
- the messages men receive about how they should act as parents
- are at best mixed and often explicitly hostile.
- </p>
- <p> Employers that have been slow to accommodate the needs of mothers
- in their midst are often even more unforgiving of fathers. It
- is a powerful taboo that prevents men from acknowledging their
- commitment to their children at work. A 1989 survey of medium
- and large private employers found that only 1% of employees
- had access to paid paternity leave and just 18% could take unpaid
- leave. Even in companies like Eastman Kodak, only 7% of men,
- vs. 93% of women, have taken advantage of the six-year-old family-leave
- plan.
- </p>
- <p> Those who do soon discover the cost. "My boss made me pay a
- price for it emotionally," says a prominent Washington executive
- who took leaves for both his children. "He was very generous
- with the time, but he never let me forget it. Every six seconds
- he reminded me what a great guy he was and that I owed him really,
- really big. You don't get a lot of points at the office for
- wanting to have a healthy family life." Men, like women, are
- increasingly troubled by the struggle to balance home and work;
- in 1989, asked if they experienced stress while doing so, 72%
- of men answered yes, compared with 12% a decade earlier, according
- to James Levine of the Fatherhood Project at the Families and
- Work Institute of New York City.
- </p>
- <p> Many men will freely admit that they sometimes lie to employers
- about their commitments. "I announced that I was going to a
- meeting," shrugged a Washington journalist as he left the office
- in midafternoon one day recently. "I just neglected to mention
- that the `meeting' was to watch my daughter play tennis." Now
- it is the fathers who are beginning to ask themselves whether
- their careers will stall and their incomes stagnate, whether
- the glass ceiling will press down on them once they make public
- their commitment as parents, whether today's productivity pressures
- will force them to work even harder with that much less time
- to be with their kids. In the higher reaches of management,
- there are not only few women, there are also few men in dual-income
- families who take an active part in raising their children.
- "Those who get to the top today," says Charles Rodgers, owner
- of a 10-year-old family-research organization in Brookline,
- Massachusetts, called Work/Family Directions, "are almost always
- men from what used to be the traditional family, men with wives
- who don't work outside the home."
- </p>
- <p> Many men insist that they long to veer off onto a "daddy track."
- In a 1990 poll by the Los Angeles Times, 39% of the fathers
- said they would quit their jobs to have more time with their
- kids, while another survey found that 74% of men said they would
- rather have a daddy-track job than a fast-track job. But in
- real life, when they are not talking to pollsters, some fathers
- recognize the power of their atavistic impulses to earn bread
- and compete, both of which often leave them ambivalent about
- their obligations as fathers.
- </p>
- <p> George Ingram, 48, lives on Capitol Hill with his sons Mason,
- 15, and Andrew, 10. He is the first to admit that single fatherhood
- has not helped his career as a political economist. "We're torn
- between working hard to become Secretary of State and nurturing
- our kids," he says. "You make the choice to nurture your kids,
- and people think it's great. But does it put a crimp on your
- career? Yes, very definitely. When I finish this process, I
- will have spent 15 years on a professional plateau." Ingram
- finds that his colleagues accept his dual commitments, his leaving
- every night before 6, or by 5 if he has a soccer practice to
- coach. In fact they are more accepting of his choices than those
- of his female colleagues. "I get more psychic support than women
- do," he says. "And I feel great about spending more time with
- my kids than my father did."
- </p>
- <p> MATERNAL GATEKEEPERS
- </p>
- <p> The more surprising obstacle, men say, arises in their own homes.
- Every household may be different, every division of labor unique,
- but sociologists do find certain patterns emerging when they
- interview groups of men and women about how they view one another's
- parenting roles. Men talk about their wife's unrealistic expectations,
- her perfectionism, the insistence on dressing, feeding, soothing
- the children in a certain way. "Fathers, except in rare circumstances,
- have not yet become equal partners in parenthood," says Frank
- Furstenberg, professor of sociology at the University of Pennsylvania.
- "The restructuring of the father role requires support and encouragement
- from wives. Presumably, it is not abnormal for wives to be reluctant
- to give up maternal prerogatives."
- </p>
- <p> Many men describe in frustration their wife's attitude that
- her way of doing things is the only way. "Dad is putting the
- baby to bed," says Levine. "He's holding his seven-month-old
- on his shoulders and walking around in circles. Mom comes in
- and says, `She likes it better when you just lay her down on
- her stomach and rub her back.' Dad gets mad that Mom is undermining
- his way of doing things, which he thinks works perfectly well."
- </p>
- <p> In most cases, it is still the mother who carries her child's
- life around in her head, keeping the mental daybook on who needs
- a lift to piano practice and who needs to get the poetry folder
- in on time. After examining much of the research on men's housework
- and child care, Sylvia Hewlett concluded that married men's
- average time in household tasks had increased only 6% in 20
- years, even as women have flooded the workplace. Psychologists
- Rosalind Barnett and Grace Baruch found that fathers were often
- willing to perform the jobs they were assigned but were not
- responsible for remembering, planning or scheduling them.
- </p>
- <p> Women often respond that until men prove themselves dependable
- as parents, they can't expect to be trusted. A haphazard approach
- to family responsibilities does nothing to relieve the burdens
- women carry. "Men haven't been socialized to think about family
- appointments and how the household runs for kids," notes Marie
- Wilson of the Ms. Foundation for Women, who constantly hears
- of the hunger women feel for their husbands to participate more
- fully at home. "They don't really get in there and pay attention.
- Mothers often aren't sure they can trust them--not just to
- do it as they do it, but to do it at a level that you can get
- away with without feeling guilty."
- </p>
- <p> Some women admit that their own feelings are mixed when it comes
- to relinquishing power within the family. "I can probably be
- overbearing at times as far as wanting to have it my way," says
- the 35-year-old wife of a St. Louis, Missouri, physician. "But
- I would be willing to relax my standards if he would be more
- involved. It would be a good trade-off." Here again the attitude
- is changing with each generation. Women under 35, researchers
- find, seem more willing than older women, whose own fathers
- were probably less engaged, to trust men as parents. Also, as
- younger women become more successful professionally, they are
- less fearful of relinquishing power at home because their identity
- and satisfaction come from many sources.
- </p>
- <p> THE NEW FATHER
- </p>
- <p> The redefinition of fatherhood has been going on in virtually
- every arena of American life for well over 20 years. As women
- worked to broaden their choices at home and work, the implicit
- invitation was for men to do likewise. As Levine has observed,
- Dr. Spock had carefully revised his advice on fathers by 1974.
- The earlier version suggested that fathers change the occasional
- diaper and cautioned mothers about "trying to force the participation
- of fathers who get gooseflesh at the very idea of helping to
- take care of a baby." The new version of Baby and Child Care,
- by contrast, offered a prescription for the New Fatherhood:
- "The father--any father--should be sharing with the mother
- the day-to-day care of their child from birth onward...This
- is the natural way for the father to start the relationship,
- just as it is for the mother."
- </p>
- <p> By the '80s, bookstores were growing fat with titles aimed at
- men: How to Father, Expectant Father, Pregnant Fathers, The
- Birth of a Father, Fathers Almanac and Father Power. There were
- books about child-and-father relations, like How to Father a
- Successful Daughter, and then specific texts for part-time fathers,
- single fathers, stepfathers and homosexual fathers. Bill Cosby's
- Fatherhood was one of the best-selling books in publishing history,
- and Good Morning, Merry Sunshine, by Chicago Tribune columnist
- Bob Greene, a journal about his first year of fatherhood, was
- on the New York Times best-seller list for almost a year. Parents
- can now pick up Parents' Sports, a new magazine dedicated to
- reaching the dad market with stories on the joys of soccer practice.
- </p>
- <p> Institutions were changing too. In his book Fatherhood in America,
- published this month, Robert L. Griswold has traced the history
- of a fast-changing role that today not only allows men in the
- birthing room (90% of fathers are in attendance at their child's
- birth) but also offers them postpartum courses in which new
- fathers learn how to change, feed, hold and generally take care
- of their infant. Some fathers may even get in on the pregnancy
- part by wearing the "empathy belly," a bulge the size and weight
- of a third-trimester fetus. Suddenly available to men hoping
- to solidify the father-child bond are "Saturday with Daddy Outings,"
- special songfests, field trips and potlucks with dads. Even
- men behind bars could get help: one program allows an inmate
- father to read children's stories onto cassette tapes that are
- then sent, along with the book and a Polaroid picture of Dad,
- to his child.
- </p>
- <p> "It's become cool to be a dad," says Wyatt Andrews, a correspondent
- for CBS News who has three children: Rachel, 8, Averil, 7, and
- Conrad, 5. "Even at dinner parties, disciplinary techniques
- are discussed. Fathers with teenagers give advice about strategies
- to fathers with younger kids. My father was career Navy. I don't
- think he ever spent two seconds thinking about strategies of
- child rearing. If he said anything, it was, `They listen to
- me.' "
- </p>
- <p> BRING BACK DAD
- </p>
- <p> These perceptual and behavioral shifts have achieved enough
- momentum to trigger a backlash of their own. Critics of the
- New Fatherhood are concerned that something precious is being
- lost in the revolution in parenting--some uniquely male contribution
- that is essential for raising healthy kids. In a clinical argument
- that sends off political steam, these researchers argue that
- fathers should be more than substitute mothers, that men parent
- differently than women and in ways that matter enormously. They
- say a mother's love is unconditional, a father's love is more
- qualified, more tied to performance; mothers are worried about
- the infant's survival, fathers about future success. "In other
- words, a father produces not just children but socially viable
- children," says Blankenhorn. "Fathers, more than mothers, are
- haunted by the fear that their children will turn out to be
- bums, largely because a father understands that his child's
- character is, in some sense, a measure of his character as well."
- </p>
- <p> When it comes to discipline, according to this school of thought,
- it is the combination of mother and father that yields justice
- tempered by mercy. "Mothers discipline children on a moment-by-moment
- basis," says Shapiro. "They have this emotional umbilical cord
- that lets them read the child. Fathers discipline by rules.
- Kids learn from their moms how to be aware of their emotional
- side. From dad, they learn how to live in society."
- </p>
- <p> As parents, some psychologists argue, men and women are suited
- for different roles at different times. The image of the New
- Fatherhood is Jack Nicholson surrounded by babies on the cover
- of Vanity Fair, the businessman changing a diaper on the newly
- installed changing tables in an airport men's room. But to focus
- only on infant care misses the larger point. "Parenting of young
- infants is not a natural activity for males," says David Popenoe,
- an associate dean of social studies at Rutgers University who
- specializes in the family. He and others argue that women's
- voices are more soothing; they are better able to read the signals
- a child sends before he or she can talk. But as time passes,
- the strengths that fathers may bring to child rearing become
- more important.
- </p>
- <p> "At a time when fatherhood is collapsing in our society," warns
- Blankenhorn, "when more children than ever in history are being
- voluntarily abandoned by their fathers, the only thing we can
- think of talking about is infant care? It's an anemic, adult-centered
- way of looking at the problem." Why not let mothers, he says,
- do more of the heavy lifting in the early years and let fathers
- do more of the heavy lifting after infancy when their special
- skills have more relevance? As children get older, notes William
- Maddox, director of research and policy at the Washington-based
- Family Research Council, fathers become crucial in their physical
- and psychological development. "Go to a park and watch father
- and mother next to a child on a jungle gym," he said. "The father
- encourages the kid to challenge himself by climbing to the top;
- the mother tells him to be careful. What's most important is
- to have the balance of encouragement along with a warning."
- </p>
- <p> This notion that men and women are genetically, or even culturally,
- predisposed to different parenting roles strikes other researchers
- as misguided. They are quick to reject the idea that there is
- some link between X or Y chromosomes and, say, conditional or
- unconditional love. "To take something that is only a statistical
- tendency," says historian E. Anthony Rotundo, "and turn it into
- a cultural imperative--fathers must do it this way and mothers
- must do it that way--only creates problems for the vast number
- of people who don't fit those tendencies, without benefiting
- the children at all." While researchers have found that children
- whose fathers are involved in their early rearing tend to have
- higher IQs, perform better in school and even have a better
- sense of humor, psychologists are quick to say this is not necessarily
- a gender issue. "It has to do with the fact that there are two
- people passionately in love with a child," says Harvard's Brazelton.
- </p>
- <p> The very fact that psychologists are arguing about the nature
- of fatherhood, that filmmakers are making movies based entirely
- on fatherlove, that bookstores see a growth market in father
- guides speaks not only to children's well-being but to men's
- as well. As much as families need fathers, men need their children
- in ways they are finally allowed to acknowledge, to learn from
- them all the secrets that children, with their untidy minds
- and unflagging hearts, have mastered and that grownups, having
- grown up, long to retrieve.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-