Parenting: Babies Through Adolescents
Making the decision to have a baby
At some point in your marriage, you and your spouse will decide
if you want to have a baby. Some couples know going into a marriage that they
do not want children. Parenting is one of the most challenging phases of the
family life cycle.
The decision to have children is one that affects your individual
development, the identity of your family, and your marital relationship.
Children are so time-consuming that skills not learned in previous stages will
be difficult to pick up at this stage. Your ability to communicate well,
maintain your relationships, and solve problems are often tested during this
stage.
Introducing a child into your family results in a major change in
roles for you and your spouse. Each parent has three distinct and demanding
roles: as an individual, a spouse, and a parent. As new parents, your
individual identities shift along with how you relate to each other and to
others. If you have not learned compromise and commitment in the previous
stage, you may not possess the skills you need to transition well into this
stage.
Along with the joy that comes from having a child, you may feel a
great deal of stress and fear about these changes. A woman might have concerns
about being pregnant and going through childbirth. Fathers tend to keep their
fears and stress to themselves, which can cause health problems.
Discussing your emotional or physical concerns with your
family physician,
obstetrician, or counselor can help you deal with
these and future challenges.
Parenting young children
Adapting children into other relationships, including your
marriage, is a key emotional process of this stage. You will take on the
parenting role and transition from being a member of a couple to being a
parent. While you are still evolving as individuals, you and your spouse are
also becoming decision makers for your family. Continuing to express your
individuality while working well together as a couple results in a strong
marriage.
Your child's healthy development depends on your ability to
provide a safe, loving, and organized environment. Children benefit when their
parents have a strong marriage.
Caring for young children cuts into the amount of time you might
otherwise spend alone or with your spouse. If there were skills you didn't
learn in previous phases, such as compromise for the good of the family, your
marriage may suffer. Divorce and extramarital affairs often occur during the
raising of small children when the parents have not learned proper life skills.
However, for those who have the proper tools, this can be a very
rewarding, happy time, even with all of its challenges. Optimally, you develop
as an individual and as a member of a couple and a family.
Specific goals when young children join your family are:
- Adjusting your marital system to make space for
children.
- Taking on parenting roles.
- Realigning your
relationships with your extended family to include parenting and grandparenting
roles.
Parenting adolescents
Parenting teenagers can be a rough time for your family and can
test your relationship skills. It's also a time for positive growth and
creative exploration for your entire family. Families that function best during
this period have strong, flexible marriages developed through good
communication, problem solving, mutual caring, support, and trust.
Most teens experiment with different thoughts, beliefs, and
styles, which can cause family conflict. Your strengths as an individual and as
part of a couple are critical as you deal with the increasing challenges of
rearing a teenager. Strive for a balanced atmosphere in which your teenager has
a sense of support and emotional safety as well as opportunities to try new
behaviors. An important skill at this stage is flexibility as you encourage
your child to become independent and creative. Establish boundaries for your
teenager while at the same time encouraging exploration.
If you properly developed your individual identity in earlier
stages of your life, you will be much more secure about the changes your child
is going through. However, if you did not fully develop the needed skills at
earlier stages of life, you may feel very threatened by your child's new
developments.
Flexibility in the roles each person plays in the family system
is a valuable skill to develop at this stage. Responsibilities such as the
demands of a job or caring for someone who is ill may require each person in
the family to take on various, and sometimes changing, roles.
This is a time when one or more family members may feel some
level of
depression or other distress. It may also lead to
physical complaints that have no physical cause (somatization
disorders such as stomach upsets and some headaches) along with other
stress-related disorders.
Nurturing your marriage and your individual growth can sometimes
be ignored at this stage. Toward the end of this phase, a parent's focus shifts
from the maturing teen to career and marriage. Neglecting your personal
development and your marriage can make this shift difficult.
You also may begin thinking about your role in caring for aging
parents. Making your own health a priority in this phase is helpful as you
enter the next stage of the family life cycle.
Specific goals during the stage of parenting adolescents include:
- Shifting parent-child relationships to allow
the child to move in and out of the family system.
- Shifting focus
back to your midlife marital and career issues.
- Beginning a shift
toward concern for older generations in your extended family.