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Time With Kids Carries Extra Strain For Moms

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Time With Kids Carries Extra Strain For Moms by Susan Kelley-Cornell

Although parents enjoy the time they spend with their children, parenting carries more strain for mothers, a new study shows.

That is likely, the researchers find, because moms spend more time with their kids while doing more onerous chores like basic childcare, cooking, and cleaning, whereas dads spend more time with children in enjoyable, low-stress activities like play and leisure.

Moms

Mothers also do more solo parenting, experience more sleep disruptions, and have less leisure time, which are all associated with lower levels of well-being.

“It’s not that moms are so stressed out with their kids, but relative to fathers, they’re experiencing more strain,” says coauthor Kelly Musick, associate professor of policy analysis and management at Cornell University. The paper appears in the American Sociological Review.

“Couples can try working together to change how they parent, but that’s not really the solution.”

“Mothers are doing different things with their children than fathers are, things that we know aren’t as enjoyable,” Musick says. “Playing with their kids is a particularly enjoyable experience for parents. And dads are doing more play as a share of the total amount of time they spend with their kids.”

And much of the time that fathers spend with children is family time, when the mother is also present, Musick says, so, men don’t have sole responsibility for the children as often as mothers.

She points to a soccer analogy from the late sociologist Suzanne Bianchi, who compared mothers to “sweepers” in soccer; they do what they must to defend the goal.

“They’re going to play when they have time to play, but they’re going to make sure they have everything else covered,” she says. “Dinner is made, the kids are bathed, laundry is folded. They do play with their kids, but when you take account of all the things they’re doing, it’s just a smaller share of their time.”

Small moments

Analyzing time-use diaries from the American Time Use Surveys from 2010, 2012, and 2013, the researchers looked at reports from 12,000 parents about how they felt and what they were doing during three random periods during a 24-hour day.

For each period, the parents rated how happy, sad, stressed, and tired they felt and how meaningful they considered the activity they were doing. The researchers then compared how the parents felt doing activities with their children to how they felt doing the same kinds of activities without their kids.

“A lot of how parents feel about parenting is based on incidental moments with kids,” she says, “like hanging out on the couch or going grocery shopping. There’s a lot of parenting involved in those small moments.”

Different standards

Musick hypothesizes that perhaps mothers do more of the onerous parenting work because the expectations are higher for them than for fathers. Differences in society’s parenting standards for moms and dads in turn make it difficult for mothers to demand less of themselves as parents.

“As a sociologist, I wish we, as a society, could let go of some of the assumptions and constraints we place on the mother and father roles. The mom and the dad are interacting within a societal framework that is out of their control to a great extent,” she says.

“Couples can try  working together to change how they parent, but that’s not really the solution. The solution is that we collectively rethink what we expect of fathers and what we expect of mothers.”

Source: Cornell University

Original Study DOI: 10.1177/0003122416663917

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