They Say: Staying Together For The Kids? Don’t
Posted by JeanneSager at 8:30 AM on June 4, 2009
How many times have you heard someone in marital distress say they’re just trying to make it through for the kids? Might want to give them a hug next time and tell them they shouldn’t worry about it.
A new study has found what plenty of kids of bitter, bickering parents already knew: staying together for the kids doesn’t work.
Looking at teens from almost two thousands households and tracking them through to their early thirties, the study out of Cornell University in New York linked “exposure to parental conflict in adolescence . . . with poorer academic achievement, increased substance use and early family formation and dissolution, often in ways indistinguishable from living in a stepfather or single-mother family.”
Again, not totally surprised here. But it’s an important finding FOR parents who have long sought comfort as they navigate the difficult road of divorce. The dissolution of a relationship is almost never easy, and blame is quite often the name of the game. When kids are involved, the ante is upped as couples have to factor in more than just the two people in the marriage itself.
Studies have already found that divorce does not change the way a person parents. If you’re doing a good job before the split, there’s no reason to think you’ll fall down on the job after the decree becomes final.
Parents should also take a long, hard look at their kids pre-split. Poor behavior that parents have often associated with post-divorce stress has been found to be something parents were overlooking in the midst of their marital discord. It was already there. The good news? Researchers say it doesn’t actually get worse.
At the end of the day, I could never tell someone, “hey, yeah, get divorced.” That’s a very personal decision. But knowing you’re worrying about your kids in the process means you’re already far ahead of a lot of parents.
Image: OrlandoNest
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