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Children of married parents have highest self-esteem, says new research
Daily Mail (UK) ^ | 02:03 EST, 30 May 2016 | Vanessa Allen

Posted on 05/30/2016 12:44:44 AM PDT by Olog-hai

Children whose parents are married have significantly higher self-esteem, according to research unveiled yesterday.

Teenagers of married couples were more confident than those in single-parent families or youngsters whose parents lived together in a stable long-term relationship, it found.

Overall, boys with married parents had the highest self-esteem, while girls with cohabiting parents had the lowest. […]

The study, from the Marriage Foundation, was based on data from 3,822 children polled in British Household Panel Survey. Harry Benson, research director at the foundation, said: “Conventional wisdom has it that child outcomes depend on parents staying together rather than marital status. This new finding shows that assumption to be false. In terms of self-esteem, teenagers living with parents who are together but not married are no better off than children living with lone parents. Family income makes no difference. Marriage alone provides the boost. A number of studies have shown that self-esteem is closely related to how secure people feel in their relationships.” …

(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...


TOPICS: Religion; Society
KEYWORDS: family; marriage; psychology
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To: kearnyirish2
In Daniel Patrick Moynihan's day, the illegitimacy (non-marital childbearing) rate in the African American community was one-out-of-four, which Mloynihan called unprecedented, pathological, disastrous, all of which were true.

Now it's one-out-of-four in the white community; Latinos two-out-of-three, Blacks, three-out-of-four.

What was disastrous then, is, today, catastrophic.

21 posted on 05/30/2016 7:14:03 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o ("God bless the child that's got his own." -- Billie Holiday)
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To: Mrs. Don-o

It is catastrophic for taxpayers (individual & corporate) who are required to feed, clothe, house, and school the “golden ticket welfare bastards”, but a windfall for the “poverty sector” (cops, teachers, social workers, bodegas, Section 8 landlords, etc.) that receive that redistributed income...


22 posted on 05/30/2016 7:21:29 AM PDT by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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To: Olog-hai

How nice to see, that a study confirms what so many of us instinctively feel, that children and families do best, when children are raised by their own biological parents, within intact families.


23 posted on 05/30/2016 7:54:00 AM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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To: Olog-hai

Article claiming this “disadvantages” children of unmarried parents in 10 . . . 9 . . . 8


24 posted on 05/30/2016 8:58:24 AM PDT by RansomOttawa (tm)
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To: Olog-hai

bump


25 posted on 05/30/2016 9:03:40 AM PDT by Albion Wilde (In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. --George Orwell)
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To: Olog-hai

No sh!t, Sherlock.


26 posted on 05/30/2016 9:04:05 AM PDT by dfwgator
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To: johniegrad

My mother was an alchoholic and ended up in a sanitarium twice, the first time when I was three years old. My smashed lumbar vertabra (which did not knit back together normally) occurred at that time and no one knows how it happened. BUT when I tried to talk to mom about it, her face expressed the look she was lying.


27 posted on 05/30/2016 9:47:33 AM PDT by SatinDoll (A NATURAL BORN CITIZEN IS BORN IN THE USA OF TWO USA CITIZENS)
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To: SatinDoll
Who your parents are really does matter in the individual case. I'm sorry for what you experienced and understand your reaction (as best as I can).

I'm very fortunate to have had good parents.

My experience with circumstances like yours comes second handedly from my career as a psychiatrist.

Now that I'm retired and ordained a permanent Catholic deacon I see similar situations doing expert witness evaluations for annulments in the marriage tribunal.

Your post strikes home as I provided an opinion in a situation reminiscent of what you described just this morning.

God bless you. I hope you have had the opportunity for healing or reconciliation.

28 posted on 05/30/2016 10:07:47 AM PDT by johniegrad
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To: SatinDoll
That really, REALLY depends on your parents.

I must agree. But then, I was born so long ago that many social values and practices may have changed. Self-esteem was not a big priority for parents before the 60s. The word "parenting" rarely, if ever, was used. There was widespread use of the terms "mother", "father", "mothering" and "fathering", however.

29 posted on 05/30/2016 10:30:22 AM PDT by Albion Wilde (In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. --George Orwell)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear
Parents who are married make the children feel secure. Even if they fight the feeling on the children's side is that they will stay together. Even with a long term shack up that security does not exist.

With co-habiting parents, the underlying example to children is not only that one or both parents does not value the idea of commitment, but that one or both view the other as inherently unworthy. Yet, both are part of the child; hence, the parts that child identifies with in one or both "unworthy" parents are also ipso facto unworthy of love and commitment.

30 posted on 05/30/2016 10:34:42 AM PDT by Albion Wilde (In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. --George Orwell)
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To: johniegrad

Mom is dead. I am 64 years old. To be totally on the level, I started reading books on psychology when I was 11-years old and determined, on my own, that my mother’s mental problems were not caused by myself but stemmed from her childhood.

This was later verified by my dad when he told me that mom’s childhood was a miserable one. Her mother had been given to a convent at a very young age and the French nuns beat her. Poor woman grew to adulthood believing herself to be of no value, basically worthless and treated all her children the same.

I forgave my mother everything when she rejected alcohol. On her deathbed she said I had been a good daughter but there was no expression of love. THAT is the toughest thing to overcome: I was a national award winning artist before I graduated high school; poetry I wrote in college is included in a volume of the Best Twentieth Century Poetry; I’m a Navy vet; I worked in nuclear engineering; but none of it mattered to my folks. What is tough on a person is overcoming the feelings of being worthless in the eyes of your parents.

I believe that we, all of us, are what we strive to be. Blaming someone else for the way we are is a detour from reality - we make it happen for ourselves and no one else.

Thanks for you comments; I truly appreciated the wisdom.


31 posted on 05/30/2016 11:57:47 AM PDT by SatinDoll (A NATURAL BORN CITIZEN IS BORN IN THE USA OF TWO USA CITIZENS)
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To: SatinDoll

I will be 63 in August and served in the Navy as well. Naval Hospital Portsmouth, Virginia 1979-83 and again 1986-1987 and Naval Hospital Roosevelt Roads, Puerto Rico 1983-1986. Fair winds and following seas to you, as they say.


32 posted on 05/30/2016 12:33:26 PM PDT by johniegrad
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To: SatinDoll

I identify in my own life with much of what you’ve said...very well said, in multiple areas.


33 posted on 05/30/2016 1:12:37 PM PDT by M1903A1 ("We shed all that is good and virtuous for that which is shoddy and sleazy... and call it progress")
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To: Trillian

Absolutely agree.


34 posted on 05/30/2016 6:15:44 PM PDT by punknpuss
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To: Albion Wilde
Yes, there was some celebrity who went around saying that the reason he didn't marry the mother of his children was that he was not sure he could stay faithful and he "didn't want to make a promise that he might not be able to keep."

There were people praising him for being "honest".

I said he was a jerk.

There is no way you can not keep your promise of fidelity. It is not like catching a cold.

He was surprised a few years later when his shack up honey decided that since he was not willing to commit she was going to leave.

He was also surprised to find out that in law she was considered his common law wife and therefore was entitled to alimony and child support.

IIRC he decided that maybe he should marry her after all.

35 posted on 05/30/2016 11:03:11 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Proud Infidel, Gun Nut, Religious Fanatic and Freedom Fiend)
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