Marriage and Kids




An article by Stephanie Coontz in the NYTimes reports that more than 25 separate studies have found that marital quality drops dramatically once a couple has a child. While half a century ago it was believed by many that having a child was the best way to build a happy marriage, these days it’s viewed by researchers to be more like “three’s a crowd.”

Does that mean we’re all doomed to an unhappy marriage once children come along? Not necessarily. According to the article, two researchers at the University of California at Berkeley, Philip and Carolyn Cowan, have detailed in an upcoming paper that while studies DO find a large drop in marital quality after childbirth, they are not considering the various routes couples take to get the there. The article says:

Some couples plan the conception and discuss how they want to conduct their relationship after the baby is born. Others disagree about whether or when to conceive, with one partner giving in for the sake of the relationship. And sometimes, both partners are ambivalent.

The Cowans found that the average drop in marital satisfaction was almost entirely accounted for by the couples who slid into being parents, disagreed over it or were ambivalent about it. Couples who planned or equally welcomed the conception were likely to maintain or even increase their marital satisfaction after the child was born.

The Cowans also reportedly found that marital quality declines when the couple slips back into more “traditional” roles, such as “breadwinner” for the man, and “homemaker” for the woman. The wife ends up resenting the man for not being involved, and the husband ends up resenting the wife for not being more appreciative of his monetary support.

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  1. I agree that having a little one does change your marriage. We planned and were both in agreement as to when we were ready to start a family. My husband participated in all of the classes and went to all the DR appointments. He was as involved as a husband could be with the exception of reading “What to Expect” though he did use it as a reference book to look things up.
    Once our son was born, he was involved from the moment he came out and has been ever since. We do have alot less time as a couple and so we have to put the effort in to make sure we have time together. We make it a point to sit down together for dinner each evening after the baby is asleep. We talk on the phone as we both drive to work. We will plan an evening or an afternoon on the weekend when my parents will take the baby and we just get out together. There may be less time, but we both make the effort to make those “stolen moments”, moments of quality. Both people have to make the effort for the marriage to be a happy one with or without children,but children for us have made it even greater. We look at our son and enjoy every minute of him noticing how alike he is with my husband or myself at every turn. We enjoy those times together too. In the end, it is about being in the moment whether it is with your child, being together as a family, your husband or even by yourself.

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