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Biased Data
I get so much
conflicting data regarding the effects of divorce on children.
Some experts say children adjust and function well
and others say children suffer well into adulthood and it affects
their later relationships.
I am so confused
as to what to believe. I came across your website yesterday,
and it is wonderful to read something that finally makes sense
to me. I have remained in an unhappy marriage for years. I am
afraid to end the marriage because I dont want to damage
my children for the rest of their lives.
I constantly
remind myself that some children who grow up in happily married
homes dont necessarily turn out to be outstanding adults.
I also remind myself that it is more detrimental to raise children
in a dysfunctional home than a divorced home.
Its like
I need assurance that my children wont suffer into adulthood
because of a choice I made.
~ Jane |
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Jane, some people claim the
divorce rate is high because self-centered individuals divorce
for frivolous reasons. Our experience is otherwise. Though we
occasionally get letters from someone seeking a divorce on flimsy
grounds, the usual writer is someone who cant take it anymore.
There are three
reasons to believe people dont divorce willy-nilly. First,
divorce ranks at the top of the list of life stressors, and people
avoid stress. Second, nearly everyone chooses the status quo
over change. And third, when people make an emotional investment
in anything, they prefer to hold on hoping things will improve.
A study by Judith
Wallerstein is the one most often cited to support the dire effects
of divorce on children. Wallerstein looked at 60 divorcing families
from an atypical community in the U.S. Half the adults in the
study were clinically depressed, and as many as 20 percent may
have been mentally ill.
Rather than comparing
these people to a comparable group which stayed married, Wallerstein
compared them to a group with above average marriages. Wallersteins
study was widely publicized by those opposed to divorce, but
her study does not meet the requirements for valid statistical
inference.
A widely respected
study is one done by E. Mavis Hetherington. Hetherington followed
1400 families for as long as three decades. She found much less
severe effects on children and a number of positives for divorce
in dysfunctional families. Hetheringtons research is rarely
mentioned in the popular press.
At least three
recent studies suggest divorce does not increase behavior problems
in children. For example, Richard Li of the Rand Corporation
looked at 6,300 children before and after their parents
divorce and found no statistically significant change in behavior.
Our biology tells
us to imitate, imitate, imitate. Mimicry is natural to us. Thats
why there are programs like Big Brothers and Big Sisters--to
provide good role models for kids. The problem with staying in
a dysfunctional relationship is that it begins to feel familiar
to a child and something to replicate.
We wont
offer advice on what you should do, but we will leave you with
a story. Andy Grove and Gordon Moore were the guiding lights
behind Intel. The company began as a manufacturer of memory chips,
but as time went on they were losing money on their core product.
They didnt know what to do.
One day Grove
had an idea. He turned to Gordon Moore and asked, if the board
of directors kicks us out, what would a new CEO do? Moore replied
the new CEO would get the company out of memory chips and into
microprocessors. Andy Grove immediately realized that was their
solution. And it was. Intel soared.
It often pays
to ask, if fresh eyes looked at my problem, what would the advice
be? Ask yourself if you have the kind of marriage you would want
for your children, because that is the kind of marriage you are
showing them.
~ Wayne &
Tamara
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Authors and columnists
Wayne and Tamara Mitchell can be reached at www.WayneAndTamara.com.
Send letters
to: Direct Answers, PO Box 964, Springfield, MO 65801 or email:
DirectAnswers@WayneAndTamara.com.
Direct Answers
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Direct
Answers Archive 2009 |
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