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Licensed Marriage
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Stresses for Children in the World in Which They Live
By: Susan
Adams, M. Ed l0/l9/09
Objective: The objective of this article is to help family and
friends be aware of the stresses that children experience so that they
can help to mitigate them where possible.
Summary: Children are affected by their society and by the
smaller world of their family and school groups. All of
these experiences lead children to decide what to expect of
themselves. There are many hardships that affect our children. This
article identifies many of these and makes some suggestions to alleviate
stress where possible.
Children learn and grow not only through educational activities but also
by taking in the feelings and the values of adults who matter in their
lives. Therefore, when the surrounding adults feel stress, the stress
is reflected in their children.
Examples of such stresses include hardship caused by poverty. These
stresses also include unsafe, unhealthy, or hazardous situations.
Racial and ethnic discrimination continues to plague children of
minority groups. Crowding, fear of street crime, and gangs,
insufficient police protection, poor housing conditions, and inadequate
transportation create external pressures in varying degrees. Changing
employment patterns and no employment affect children who live with the
over-stressed adults.Regardless of age or social position, children el
great pressure when the family is short of money. This calls for
conversations in the family about how the adults will take care of the
children both emotionally and economically as the family works through
the hardships. The conversation in families is critical to sharing
information and absorbing children's concerns so that they children are
not left to worry on their own.
Another major issue in considering stress on today's children, is the
increasing number of marriages that end in separation or divorce and the
growing number of single-parent families. Divided custody and
visitation rights, remarriage and the need for the child to fit into a
new family, adjusting to step-parents and step-siblings, all create
heavy pressures.
Children may worry about whether they caused their parents' divorce.
Also, a child may bear the brunt of conflicting pressures from divorced
parents, or, there may be pressures in a home made unhappy by parents'
differences in values and methods of child rearing. When parents
separate or divorce, a child who lives with a working parent may not get
as much attention and guidance from the working parent as before.
There is now a tend toward smaller families. In many only-child
families the pressure may be enormous to perform and succeed. There may
also be enormous pressure to be successful with friends because there
are no peers at home. If there is a secret to share or need someone to
be your ally against the grownups, not having a brother or a sister may
be a pressure in and of itself. The child could feel overpowered.
Many many women have joined the workforce. Some do it out of necessity
and some do it because they wan careers. In many instances the money
earned by the woman means a much more comfortable lifestyle.
When women work outside the home, good daycare can be very hard to find
and it is very expensive. It is essential. Working mothers can wind up
feeling great burdens in an effort to solve these problems. If the
working mother is overburdened, this may get communicated to the
children and can make children feel that they are obstacles in the
lives of their parents. Again, having the explicit conversations with
children that explain the stresses and reaffirm the importance of the
children is essential.
Besides all the social changes in today's world, many adults have had
little preparation for parenthood. They may have only limited
understanding of how children develop and what to expect at different
ages. They may not know how to help children become more
self-disciplined, how to set limits, and make expectations clear for
children. If children don't know what is expected of them, they may try
too hard to be too good. They may devise their own guidance systems too
early and these systems may be too strict or rigid which creates
hardship for the makers. Still other children who grow up without limits
set by parents may become mischievous and demonstrate a need for firmer
boundaries. In either case, the lack of parental guidance acts as a
pressure.
Children experience inner pressures as well. They must learn as they
age to delay the desire for instant gratification. They are pressured
for toilet training, eating with good manners, learning to communicate
desires, learning to share toys, taking turns, and to appreciate the
feelings of others. These pressures are derived from the parents but
integrated into each child's personality. The child learns first to
imitate the parents at home and later expands to other adults in his
world. Copying the roles and behaviors of those around the child,
enhances the child's own internal pressure to grow up. Adults can help
this process by helping children to decide how to make decisions by
considering the consequences of all the choices available. The adults
can help by easing childhood tensions with praise rather than criticism.
It is also helpful to children to build self-confidence by letting
children do the things of which they are capable. Doing everything for
children robs them of their sense of independence and accomplishment
and creates children who fear trying new things. By the same token, too
hurried a trip through early developmental stages is more apt to create
disorders than to increase coping skills. Forced development and
premature, inappropriate independence are likely to lead to greater
dependency later and undercut a child's sense of security and trust in
his or her own abilities.
The expectations of classmates and friends can serve as healthy
motivators for the child. If the child either can't or doesn't want to
live up to these it becomes a burden as well. Different cultures,
different families, and different peer groups exert outside pressures
on children. One family may push for outstanding academics while
another pushes for sports. The child who is "average" may suffer in a
family of high achievers.If the parents are worried about the child the
child feels it and may decide that something is wrong with him or her.
Even if the parents don't discuss the worries in front of the child, the
child can sense it. Then the energy to be motivated and accomplish
goals can get used up in the child's worry about himself.
Outside pressures are not always success-oriented. Sometimes they are
related to rigid conformity such as, "no one would marry outside of our
religion". It is important for parents to share their values with their
children. It is just as important that they present them as THEIR
values, suiting their needs and their times, not as decrees from which
there can be no deviation.
Siblings also put pressure on other siblings. This is rather common as
siblings struggle in competition with each other. It is well-advised
for parents to find a special activity in which each child can excel and
that the activity be unique to each child in the family. It serves well
to have some private time with each child in the family before bed so
that the joys and pressures of the day can be discussed and solutions
sought. This is a time when parents can make explicit that the values
and beliefs that they share are THEIR values and suit THEIR needs and
THEIR times and that they are not decrees from which there is no
deviation.
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