Is staying together best for the kids?

Jenni - posted on 06/11/2011 ( 3 moms have responded )

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34

Oh yes. This old debate, apparently it has been brought to my attention that 'new studies' show kids are better off with parents who fight all the time but stay married than those who experience divorce. The only studies I've been able to find are ones promoted by the Catholic Church (big surprise) and other traditional family activists.
Of course ideally, the best scenerio would be for the parents to seek marriage councelling and resolve their issues but what if they can't? What's best for the kids staying in an unhappy marriage or divorce?

Here's an article that supports my opinion on the subject, too bad it's Fox News... but, what are you gonna do. :P

"In marriages with a lot of conflict, "staying together for the kids" might do more harm than good, a new study suggests.

Children of parents who fight a lot yet stay married experience more conflict in their own adult relationships than children of parents who fight and do get a divorce.

"The basic implication is, 'Don't stay together for the sake of the children if you're in a high conflict marriage,'" said study researcher Constance Gager, of Montclair State University in New Jersey.

Relationship surveys

Some studies have shown children of divorced parents are more likely to get a divorce themselves, but it was not completely clear whether it was the divorce itself or the parents' conflict that had the greater impact on a child's relationships.




Gager and her colleagues analyzed the results of a national survey involving nearly 7,000 married couples and their children in the United States.

The parents were first surveyed in 1987. They were asked questions to gauge their level of marital conflict, including how often they disagreed over money, household tasks, the in-laws and other topics that might spur an argument.

Then between 1992 and 1993, both parents and children were surveyed. Children had to be at least 10 to be included, with 1,952 participants meeting the criteria. The researchers also assessed how the parents' conflict changed between the two surveys, including whether the couple got a divorce.

The children, now adults aged 18 to 34, were again surveyed between 2001 and 2002. The participants, who were either married or cohabiting, were asked about their level of happiness and conflict in their current relationship.

Divorcing decisions

Children who grew up in high conflict families fared better in their adult relationships if their parents got a divorce.

The results held even after the researchers took into account other factors that could have influenced the children's relationships when they were older, such as the whether the participants acted out as a children or had trouble getting along with others.

That isn't to say divorce doesn't affect children in the short-term, the researchers say.

"There is research to show in the short-term, kids go through a one- to two-year crisis period when their parents divorce, but that they are resilient, and they come back from that divorce," Gager said.

Constant exposure to their parents' strife is likely what causes children's future relationships to suffer, the researchers say.

"If they're constantly exposed to conflict, and the parents stay together, that means there's many more years they're exposed to conflict by their parents," Gager told LiveScience. "Whereas if their parents get divorced, at least there's a chance the parents will have less conflict after the divorce," she said.

In contrast, parents' happiness did not appear to affect the children's adult relationships - children of happily married parents did not necessarily grow up to have happy partnerships themselves.

The researchers presented the study last year at the Annual Meetings of the Population Association of America and are currently preparing the work for publication in a scientific journal.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/health/2010/07/01...

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3 Comments

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Casey - posted on 06/11/2011

35

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I must say I agree with the article. When children are raised around constant conflict, they learn that it is "normal" and have a harder time learning positive conflict resolution (just as children who are raised in abusive/domestic violence situations learn that abuse is "normal"). That being said, I also think that before jumping to divorce, parents/couples should do whatever they can to resolve their conflict sources/issues. Every marriage is different and unique. There is really no one right answer. You do what is healthiest and best for your kids and yourselves.

Lady Heather - posted on 06/11/2011

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Divorce. Is. Better. Now, one would hope it would be a somewhat amicable divorce. Obviously if the parents just end up fighting over the kids and spreading their nasty thoughts about each other through the family as happens in some cases, that isn't going to be any better than staying together. But if two parents really can't be together anymore, fucking get your shit together, move on and don't use the kids as your pawns. It's the best way to go. My husband watched his parents stay together and fight for years and all it taught him was that marriage sucks. Took him 6 years to realize it wouldn't have to be that way with us. Some people never figure it out.

Lacye - posted on 06/11/2011

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I call major bullshit. My parents would fight and argue all the time before they split up, I don't remember this because I was so young but my sisters have told me what had happened. I think I turned out better than both of my sisters that were raised around the two of them being together. My oldest ended up marrying a man who was abusive towards her (she wanted to get married to get out of the house). Both of my sisters had to watch and care for me because they were so much older than me and my parents spent most time fighting. I had actually asked my oldest sister one time how did I come around if they had hated each other so much. She said it was new year's eve and they were both drunk. So no, parents arguing and staying together is not always best.