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- <text id=90TT2978>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1990: The Great Experiment
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 08, 1990 Special Issue - Women:The Road Ahead
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE CHANGING FAMILY, Page 72
- The Great Experiment
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Today's parents are raising children in ways that little
- resemble their own youth. The question that haunts them: Will
- the kids be all right?
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-Dewitt--Reported by Deborah Edler Brown/Los
- Angeles and Michele Donley/Chicago, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> In Houston a stay-at-home dad kisses his pregnant wife
- goodbye as she heads for the office, and then turns back to the
- task of getting their four children fed, washed and ready for
- the day ahead. In Long Branch, N.J., parents work alternate
- shifts--she during the day at a hospital accounting office;
- he at night, as a security guard--so that their three kids
- won't be left with strangers. In Lincoln, Neb., a divorced
- mother of four--one of the nation's 9.3 million single parents--depends on her eldest daughter to fill in while she is at
- work. In cities from Providence to Portland, both parents dash
- to work in the morning, handing their kids off to a variety of
- nannies, sitters, schools, day-care centers, neighbors and
- relatives.
- </p>
- <p> These families generally have three things in common. The
- parents are not raising their children the way they themselves
- were raised. None have any idea how it will all turn out. And
- all live in perpetual fear that some piece of their carefully
- crafted child-care structure will fall out of place and bring
- the fragile edifice of their lives tumbling down like a
- toddler's tower of blocks.
- </p>
- <p> Child care in America has become a kind of vast social
- experiment. Not only has the archetypal nuclear family of the
- 1950s (working father, stay-at-home wife) given way to a myriad
- of customized arrangements, each as unique as a baby's toeprint,
- but this historic shift has been accompanied by a new awareness
- of the importance of attachment and family ties in the emotional
- development of a child. Parents today, primed by racks of
- best-selling child-care manuals, are haunted by questions about
- their changing roles. What kind of bonding takes place when a
- child is passed from one paid caretaker to another? What are the
- risks of growing up without a stable nuclear family or any real
- community support? How do values get passed from one generation
- to the next when the dominant cultural influences on children
- are television, pop music and Nintendo?
- </p>
- <p> Not that the workadaddy-housewife family is dead. Homemaking
- mothers married to breadwinning fathers still make up the
- largest category of families with young children. The "Ozzie and
- Harriet" arrangement represents one-third of the nation's 14.8
- million families with preschool children, although dual-income
- households (28.8% as of 1987) are rapidly catching up. Also
- gaining is the single-parent family, because of divorce and the
- explosive rise in births to unwed mothers: up from 5% of all
- births in 1960 (and 22% of all black births) to 22% in 1985 (60%
- of blacks).
- </p>
- <p> But a family of any type is subject to sudden change. Social
- historian Barbara Dafoe Whitehead, writing in the journal Family
- Affairs, points out that just as today's at-home mother may be
- tomorrow's working mom, today's career woman may soon be
- pregnant and thinking about remaining at home. "One day the
- Ozzie and Harriet couple is eating a family meal," says
- Whitehead. "The next day, they are working out a joint-custody
- arrangement."
- </p>
- <p> As a result, no parent is immune to the uncertainty and
- guilt that make the child-rearing dilemma the No. 1 topic of
- conversation among young mothers today, and of more than passing
- interest to fathers. The job is a tangle of double binds. Should
- a mother stay at home, providing the values, discipline and
- security her children need, and let her hard-earned job skills
- go fallow? Or should she take a chance that her kids will be
- O.K. and pursue a life that brings more personal satisfaction
- and economic advantages? "It's very hard," says Stephanie
- Burchfield, a Los Angeles public-relations executive and mother
- of an 8-month-old. "I see her only an hour in the morning and
- an hour in the evening. I don't have a single friend who has
- worked full time who doesn't regret how little time she's spent
- with her children."
- </p>
- <p> Nor does it help that in subtle ways--a look across the
- grocery aisle, a comment at the nursery school--the two kinds
- of moms exacerbate each other's guilt. Debbie Ippolito of
- Lakewood, N.J., seethes whenever a working mother makes a
- comment about all the "free time" she has. "People think you're
- eating bonbons all day," she rails. "I had a baby, not a
- lobotomy!" Heightening the rivalry, some of those who gave up
- the fast track pursue full-time parenting with a competitive
- drive honed in the business world. "It's not O.K. to just have
- an average child; you must have an improved child," complains
- psychologist Shari Thurer, of Boston University.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the turmoil felt by parents in the '90s derives from
- the fact that so many are children of the '50s. Their image of
- an ideal family comes from TV shows like Father Knows Best;
- their notion of the ideal mother is the one played by Jane
- Wyatt: never rattled, always at home. The irony is that this
- "family of nostalgia," as Madeleine Stoner at the University of
- Southern California calls it, was largely an aberration that
- flourished for only a couple of decades after World War II.
- </p>
- <p> In colonial America, according to Maris Vinovskis, professor
- of history at the University of Michigan, the job of raising
- children was shared by the two parents. Mothers swaddled the
- baby and put food on the table, but fathers were responsible for
- the child's intellectual and moral upbringing. The majority of
- women have worked throughout U.S. history, first in the home,
- then in the shop and factory. With wave after wave of cheap
- immigrant labor available during the late 19th and early 20th
- centuries, even middle-class families had nannies. Nor is there
- anything new about day-care centers. In the 1820s 40% of all
- three-year-olds in Massachusetts were going to "infant
- schools," though such institutions fell out of favor within a
- decade.
- </p>
- <p> The deeper change, according to Penelope Leach, author of
- the popular parenting manual Your Baby and Child, stems from the
- Industrial Revolution, which forced a split between the home and
- the workplace. "Home and its surrounding community used to be
- everybody's operating base, with work and play and family pretty
- much intermixed," she says. "Now work has moved into
- geographically separate production centers and takes the form
- of specialized jobs that cannot be shared, swapped or carried
- on with a baby strapped to your back." Home has been left an
- impoverished place, little more than a dormitory, a spot for a
- shower and a change of clothes. And as mothers have
- increasingly departed for the office or factory, children's
- isolation from the adult world has accelerated dramatically.
- </p>
- <p> How will these marginalized kids turn out? Experts caution
- that it is difficult to generalize, but a study by the American
- Academy of Pediatrics describes some pitfalls. Children from
- single-parent homes face an array of risks, ranging from mild
- cognitive delays in preschoolers to withdrawal and depression
- in older kids. Children pressured by aggressive scheduling often
- show signs of chronic stress. "With the amount of anxiety and
- juggling," suggests San Francisco clinical psychologist Jeree
- Pawl, there is a risk that the next generation could grow up
- "thinking that they're nuisances. An unhandy bundle, a shelf for
- which is not always easy to find."
- </p>
- <p> America's two most famous pediatricians, T. Berry Brazelton
- of Harvard and Benjamin Spock, worry about the disappearance of
- discipline, particularly when both parents work. "Parents don't
- want to spend what little time they have with their children
- reprimanding them," says Spock. "This encourages children to
- push limits and test parental authority." Brazelton is also
- concerned that working mothers are so overwhelmed by guilt that
- they "detach from the baby, because it's the only way they have
- of coping."
- </p>
- <p> The feminist movement has always insisted that women's
- liberation must go hand in hand with changing roles for men,
- particularly at home. Such changes are coming about, though
- women still do the lion's share of the den keeping. Not only are
- fathers present in the birthing room (90% are there, as opposed
- to 10% twenty years ago) and willing to change diapers, but
- their entire job has been reinterpreted from passive bill payer
- to activist player. "It's no longer seen as unmasculine to be
- caring for young children," says Hanne Sonquist, a family
- therapist in Santa Barbara, Calif.
- </p>
- <p> There is also a movement afoot to extend to American parents
- the kind of government support--in day care, parental leaves
- and tax deductions--that their European counterparts have long
- enjoyed. Sweden, for instance, provides parents 90% salary
- reimbursement for the first nine months after birth. But the
- battle in the U.S. for even limited family programs remains an
- uphill march: industry lobbied so hard against legislation that
- would have required most businesses to provide 12 weeks of
- unpaid parental leave that President Bush vetoed it last June.
- </p>
- <p> Though that veto was lamented by many parents, the debate
- over government policies does not necessarily touch what Barbara
- Whitehead calls "the emotional core of family concerns." These
- are centered, she says, not on the material needs of parents,
- but on the moral education of their children. Parents fear that,
- in the absence of more benevolent influences, children are
- adopting the values of the aggressively materialistic,
- consumerist culture portrayed on TV. "In their eyes," says
- Whitehead, "children are no longer acquiring an identity at
- home, as much as they are attempting to buy one in the
- marketplace."
- </p>
- <p> What's to be done? Subsidized child care and tax credits
- would ease the pressure on parents to leave home before they
- want to. What is more difficult is finding a way to undo the
- damage to the family done by a century of economic and social
- upheaval. As Penelope Leach puts it, the most important question
- for parents is "not what day care to choose or when to go back
- to work, but how to reintegrate our children into our world."
- That is a challenge that is likely to be with the nation when
- today's children are preparing to have kids of their own.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-