Helpful Dads Can Hurt Mom's Self-Esteem

Topics and discussion geared towards lifestyle, personal finance/economics, and consumer affairs.
Post Reply
User avatar
5829
Posts: 1726
Joined: Sun Jan 22, 2006 11:09 pm
Location: The Village
Contact:

Helpful Dads Can Hurt Mom's Self-Esteem

#1

Post by 5829 »

http://www.livescience.com/culture/supe ... 00318.html

Helpful Dads Can Hurt Mom's Self-Esteem

By Jeanna Bryner, LiveScience Managing Editor

posted: 18 March 2010 08:19 am ET

Dads are helping out with childrearing more and more these days. The result can be both a boon and a letdown for super-moms, whose self-competence can take a hit when paired with husbands who are savvy caregivers, new research finds.

The findings reveal the fallout as women have entered the workplace in droves over recent decades, many of them leaving young children at home. One result is mothers have less time for care-giving. Past studies have shown working moms are torn between full-time careers and stay-at-home duties. And lately more diligent dads are helping out with the diaper-changing and other household duties.

But since mothers pride themselves on being just that – moms – their self-esteem can take a blow.

"While mothers are encouraged to join the workforce, socially constructed ideals of motherhood requires mothers to be primary caregivers," said study researcher Takayuki Sasaki of the Osaka University of Commerce in Japan. "Thus, employed mothers may feel pressured to do more care-giving to ensure the survival of their feelings of self-competence, even though they may wish for fathers' increased participation to lessen their burden."

While some couples have been able to find a division of childcare that suits them, many struggle to hit the right balance.

Sasaki also stressed, "We by no means assert that women should take the blame for the inequality in division of child care. Some fathers vigorously resist collaborative effort in child care in favor of beliefs in traditional fathers' roles."

Parenting skills

Sasaki and colleagues from the University of Texas at Austin interviewed 78 dual-earner couples with 8-month-old infants in their homes in the United States. Interview questions measured two types of self-esteem – self-liking and self-competence (the degree to which individuals feel capable of and effective in accomplishing goals).

During home visits, parents were also asked to talk about their spouse's strengths and weaknesses. Coders then watched video recordings of the discussions and rated each participant's perceptions of his or her spouse's parenting, which included the spouse's emotional engagement (kissing and hugging the baby), physical involvement (such as feeding and diaper changing), responsibility and overall parenting skills. Total scores ranged from the worst score of 4 to the highest of 28.

As the researchers expected, women spent nearly three times as much time taking care of their babies by themselves compared with their husbands.

And husbands took notice, giving stellar parenting marks to their wives. For instance, on average husbands gave their wives nearly a 24 for parenting skills, while the average score wives gave to husbands was around 21, a statistically significant difference.

Even so, wives often said their husbands were good parents.

"Many wives would say care-giving by their husbands is helpful but at the same time wives give their husbands negative feedback because their husbands' care-giving style is different from their own," Sasaki told LiveScience. "For example, a wife appreciates when her husband feeds their baby but also tells her husband that after all it makes more work because the way the husband feeds is messy."

There was also a gender difference regarding standards used to judge their partner's parenting skills.

"Husbands are often told by their wives that they are good parents when they are involved in care-giving that their wives normally do, such as feeding, changing diapers, and soothing," Sasaki said. "In contrast, husbands do not tell their wives that they are good parents even when their wives exhibit such behavior probably because it is taken for granted."

Mom's self-esteem

When mothers perceived fathers to be competent caregivers, the more time those dads spent solo with children, the lower was mom's self-competence rating. But when mothers considered spouses relatively incompetent caregivers, increased father-only time with kids was unrelated to mothers' self-competence.

As for why a mother's self-competence took a hit from perfect dads, Sasaki suggests pressure to keep up with societal norms plays a role.

"In American society, women are expected to take a main role in parenting despite increasingly egalitarian sex roles," Sasaki said. "Thus, we believe that employed mothers suffer from self-competence losses when their husbands are involved and skillful because those mothers may consider that it is a failure to fulfill cultural expectations."

Sasaki added, "Husbands do not suffer from self-competence losses even when their wives are involved and skillful because that is consistent with cultural expectations."

The results don't suggest a stay-at-home mom is the answer. For one, the study showed work hours can boost a woman's perception of self-competence. And a father's care-giving was linked with a mother's marital satisfaction.

Here are some tips for working moms on how to juggle work and home.

The research is being published in the journal Personal Relationships.
Study: Women Are in Charge at Home
5 Myths About Women's Bodies
Video – A Mother's Touch
Nudes are played out.
Send me a video of you reading out loud so I know you are not dumb and your profile picture is actually you.

Free Rice - feed the world - play for free
National Domestic Violence Hotline - 1-800-799-7233
National Rape, Sexual Assault Hotline - 1-800-656-4673
Love Is Respect - 1-866-331-9474

~~~ accept everything - Believe Whatever - TRUST NOTHING ~~~~

There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
Never tell all you know...

Disclaimer: The opinions are my own. Nobody else wants them.

BBcode:
Hide post links
Show post links
User avatar
AYHJA
392
Posts: 37990
Joined: Fri Sep 17, 2004 2:25 pm
Location: Washington, D.C.
Contact:

Re: Helpful Dads Can Hurt Mom's Self-Esteem

#2

Post by AYHJA »

Awesome article, I think I have some experience with this first hand...

BBcode:
Hide post links
Show post links
User avatar
jdog
Posts: 3318
Joined: Tue Feb 15, 2005 5:59 pm

Re: Helpful Dads Can Hurt Mom's Self-Esteem

#3

Post by jdog »

I think it's funny when women think they are superior because they can create and give birth to a child.

Guess what? You didn't asexually reproduce. You created that child with the help of a man. They couldn't do shit without the help of a man.

The cars they drive (and wreck in parking lots)? Invented by man. The electricity they use to blow dry their hair? Invented by man. The cell phones they blab and text on? Invented by man. The water pipes they use to take 2 hour long showers? Invented by man. The buildings that they go to work at and waste the day away gossiping with other women? Invented by man. The computer or laptop that they use to do 30 minutes of actual work and then 7 hours of goofing off all day at work? Invented by man. The roads they drive on? Invented by man. The credit card that a woman loves to abuse? Invented by man.

With the exception of lack of breast milk (which is easily replaced by another man invention: formula) we men are better mothers than women are.
If any links are down, please send me a PM!

BBcode:
Hide post links
Show post links
User avatar
Dietrich
Posts: 1176
Joined: Tue Nov 03, 2009 5:36 am
Location: about an hour north of Sam Clam's Disco, where I left my harp

Re: Helpful Dads Can Hurt Mom's Self-Esteem

#4

Post by Dietrich »

Men and women are different. In today's politically correct world, saying anything other than "men and women are equal" gets interpreted as another way of saying "women are not as good as men." (The "anything you can do, I can do better" assertion is also popular.) Since gender discrimination is widely looked down upon (disregarding its real-life prevalence), any statement/opinion that can be interpreted as "women are not as good as men" is not allowed, and this obviates constructive discussion. It seems to me that feminists have been able to entrench their assertions solidly enough in the collective consciousness that only the unapologetically bigoted dare contest them.

BBcode:
Hide post links
Show post links
Post Reply