CULTURE | TRUE OR FALSE
Having Kids Makes You Happy?
By Lorraine Ali | NEWSWEEK
July 7-14, 2008 issue
When
I was growing up, our former neighbors, whom we'll call the Sloans,
were the only couple on the block without kids. It wasn't that they
couldn't have children; according to Mr. Sloan, they just chose not to.
All the other parents, including mine, thought it was odd—even tragic.
So any bad luck that befell the Sloans—the egging of their house one
Halloween; the landslide that sent their pool careering to the street
below—was somehow attributed to that fateful decision they'd made so
many years before. "Well," the other adults would say, "you know they
never did have kids." Each time I visited the Sloans, I'd search for
signs of insanity, misery or even regret in their superclean home, yet
I never seemed to find any. From what I could tell, the Sloans were
happy, maybe even happier than my parents, despite the fact that they
were (whisper) childless.
My
impressions may have been swayed by the fact that their candy dish was
always full, but several studies now show that the Sloans could well
have been more content than most of the traditional families around
them. In Daniel Gilbert's 2006 book "Stumbling on Happiness," the
Harvard professor of psychology looks at several studies and concludes
that marital satisfaction decreases dramatically after the birth of the
first child—and increases only when the last child has left home. He
also ascertains that parents are happier grocery shopping and even
sleeping than spending time with their kids. Other data cited by 2008's
"Gross National Happiness" author, Arthur C. Brooks, finds that parents
are about 7 percentage points less likely to report being happy than
the childless.
The
most recent comprehensive study on the emotional state of those with
kids shows us that the term "bundle of joy" may not be the most
accurate way to describe our offspring. "Parents experience lower
levels of emotional well-being, less frequent positive emotions and
more frequent negative emotions than their childless peers," says
Florida State University's Robin Simon, a sociology professor who's
conducted several recent parenting
studies, the most thorough of which came out in 2005 and looked at data
gathered from 13,000 Americans by the National Survey of Families and
Households. "In fact, no group of parents—married, single, step or even
empty nest—reported significantly greater emotional well-being than
people who never had children. It's such a counterintuitive finding
because we have these cultural beliefs that children are the key to
happiness and a healthy life, and they're not."
Simon
received plenty of hate mail in response to her research ("Obviously
Professor Simon hates her kids," read one), which isn't surprising. Her
findings shake the very foundation of what we've been raised to believe
is true. In a recent NEWSWEEK Poll, 50 percent of Americans said that
adding new children to the family
tends to increase happiness levels. Only one in six (16 percent) said
that adding new children had a negative effect on the parents'
happiness. But which parent is willing to admit that the greatest gift
life has to offer has in fact made his or her life less enjoyable?
Parents
may openly lament their lack of sleep, hectic schedules and difficulty
in dealing with their surly teens, but rarely will they cop to feeling
depressed due to the everyday rigors of child rearing. "If you admit
that kids and parenthood aren't making you happy, it's basically
blasphemy," says Jen Singer, a stay-at-home mother of two from New
Jersey who runs the popular parenting blog MommaSaid.net. "From
baby-lotion commercials that make motherhood look happy and well
rested, to commercials for Disney World where you're supposed to feel
like a kid because you're there with your kids, we've made parenthood
out to be one blissful moment after another, and it's disappointing
when you find out it's not."
Is
it possible that American parents have always been this disillusioned?
Anecdotal evidence says no. In pre-industrial America, parents
certainly loved their children, but their offspring also served a
purpose—to work the farm, contribute to the household. Children were a
necessity. Today, we have kids more for emotional reasons, but an
increasingly complicated work and social environment has made finding
satisfaction far more difficult. A key study by University of
Wisconsin-Madison's Sara McLanahan and Julia Adams, conducted some 20
years ago, found that parenthood was perceived as significantly more
stressful in the 1970s than in the 1950s; the researchers attribute
part of that change to major shifts in employment patterns. The
majority of American parents now work outside the home, have less
support from extended family and face a deteriorating education and
health-care system, so raising children has not only become more
complicated—it has become more expensive. Today the U.S. Department of
Agriculture estimates that it costs anywhere from $134,370 to $237,520
to raise a child from birth to the age of 17—and that's not counting
school or college tuition. No wonder parents are feeling a little blue.
Societal
ills aside, perhaps we also expect too much from the promise of
parenting. The National Marriage Project's 2006 "State of Our Unions"
report says that parents have significantly lower marital satisfaction
than nonparents because they experienced more single and child-free
years than previous generations. Twenty-five years ago, women married
around the age of 20, and men at 23. Today both sexes are marrying four
to five years later. This means the experience of raising kids is now
competing with highs in a parent's past, like career wins ("I got a
raise!") or a carefree social life ("God, this is a great martini!").
Shuttling cranky kids to school or dashing to work with spit-up on your
favorite sweater doesn't skew as romantic.
For
the childless, all this research must certainly feel redeeming. As for
those of us with kids, well, the news isn't all bad. Parents still
report feeling a greater sense of purpose and meaning in their lives
than those who've never had kids. And there are other rewarding aspects
of parenting that are impossible to quantify. For example, I never
thought it possible to love someone as deeply as I love my son. As for
the Sloans, it's hard to say whether they had a less meaningful
existence than my parents, or if my parents were 7 percent less happy
than the Sloans. Perhaps it just comes down to how you see the candy
dish—half empty or half full. Or at least as a parent, that's what I'll
keep telling myself.
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