Parenthood changes the
bodies and minds of men as well as women
At ages 31 and 32, Katie and Cameron Toone
are young compared to most parents of a teen. The Tremonton, Utah, couple got pregnant during high school. As soon as
they realized it, they formed a tight family unit, every decision designed to
help their family — their baby, now 14 — survive. They were focused on
logistics, not yet knowing the physical and mental changes that would impact
them both as they became parents.
While
a man and a woman may each “expect” their first child, much more is understood
about how a woman's body changes, from her burgeoning belly to hormonal shifts
and new priorities. But men's bodies change in multiple ways, too, beginning at
the time of the pregnancy and extending into parenthood.
Parenthood's
impact on men and women creates “parental synergy,” according to a new report,
“Mother Bodies, Father Bodies: How Parenthood Changes Us from the Inside Out.”
"Why
is this the moment to share and reflect on these findings?" the report
asks, then answers: "Today it is perhaps more confusing and more daunting
than ever to be a parent. In recent decades, profound changes have upended
accepted notions of mothering and fathering, providing new opportunities but also
often leaving many new mothers and fathers feeling as though they must figure
out how to do their parenting jobs largely on their own."
Changing
hearts and parts
"What
I love about this is that we approach this exploration looking at parenthood
from the inside out, beginning with our bodies," said Dr. Kathleen Kovner
Kline, a psychiatrist now affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania who co-wrote the report. "Part of our body is
our brain. Hormones and neurochemicals that go through one go through the
other."
The
report sprang from an unusual collaboration between natural and social
scientists at a 2008 conference at the University of Virginia, where participants shared research about pregnancy and parenting. The
proceedings were published last year in a book, “Gender and Parenthood: Natural
and Social Science Perspectives,” edited by W. Bradford Wilcox, director of the
National Marriage Project at UVA, and Kline. They were principal investigators
and wrote the "Bodies" report, released today.
It is
a fresh way, she said, to look at a revolution that started in the 1960s
centered on social roles — "who men and women are, what they are capable
of and what they should be doing," she said, adding the researchers
involved all know women can be chief executive officers and men can be good
nurturers. Balancing responsibilities is the challenge.
The
transition to parenthood occurs differently for men and women, with life focus
shifting more for women, Wilcox said, as they veer toward motherhood and the
child. The first child is a shock to a marriage in some ways, and couples can
sometimes experience a shift in marital quality. Dad may feel left behind by
Mom's focus on the baby.
Among
women working full time, part time or at home, most want to work part time,
according to surveys. “Not because we don’t love our work and not because we
don’t love our children. They are two big, important jobs and we find value in
both of them,” Kline said.
Men,
on the other hand, change in many ways, but even as they begin to understand
themselves as fathers, their worker identity doesn't change.
In
the case of the Toones, Katie finished school and focused on her babies —
Kapri, now 14, and Kinley, 10 — making her decisions through the lens of
motherhood. When they first got pregnant, Cameron was a "big baseball
player" but decided he needed to forego his season and "get busy
earning a living to support my new family. My response was I had to grow up and
take care of the decision we had made. I went to work, to school, came home,
worked ’til 10 or 11 that night, then started over the next day."
Biology
helps the identity shift into parenthood, particularly if the partners are game
to let it occur, as the Toones were. Some chemical changes associated with
bonding and affiliation increase when the couple are around each other, the
report said, but the details are not well understood, though they know
pheromones and other chemicals are involved.
Testosterone
drops when a man becomes a dad. A father tends to work harder than childless
peers and consequently earns more. He engages in an active way that seems to
improve his life emotionally.
That's
"one of the great things" that has happened in our culture in the
family, Wilcox said. We expect more of men, of dads. The engaged-father model
has important benefits for kids and men both.
Wilcox
said the changes men experience when they are physically close to a mate and
children lead them to be less aggressive and more interested in settling down.
Their own biology primes them to be better caretakers in the wake of becoming
dads. But those who don't live with their kids are less likely to enjoy these
benefits of parenthood.
"The
changes in the expectant dad seem to be mediated by contact with the expectant
mom. He doesn't just automatically get it. It's being around her, mirroring,
touching, hopefully in a positive relationship," Kline said.
Psychologist
and zoologist Charles T. Snowdon found in mammalian fathers that both exposure
to the mother and caring for offspring change animal dads in ways suggestive
for human dads. They show hormone changes in males during a mate’s pregnancy,
and among those who cared for previous offspring, changes occur earlier in
pregnancy. Several studies credit animal mothers with enhanced boldness,
food-finding ability and problem-solving after the birth — traits enhanced in
nurturing males, too.
Even
marmosets get the message. Cell structure changes in the brain of experienced
marmoset dads, and the neuroreceptors for a hormone associated with affiliation
increases. They become less distracted by single-girl marmosets.
Parenting
today
In
the natural sciences, an explosion of research describes the biochemistry of
parenthood, but social scientists didn't recognize the science on the natural
side, said David Blankenhorn, president of the Institute for American Values
and co-host of the 2008 conference. Besides gathering both together to examine
the "whole-parent experience," he said, conference sponsors wanted to
get some distance from the “polarizations and simplicities that often accompany
discussions of this, depending on where one stands on the conflict of the day.
'Everything is biology.' 'Nothing is biology.’ ”
Family
life in America has changed. Couples delay marriage five years on
average compared to 1970, and longer among the college-educated.
That's
not the only difference between classes that increasingly divide along not just
economic but educational lines, with the educated forming an upper class that
is more traditional in terms of family life.
The
story of those with less education includes more out-of-wedlock births,
cohabitation and divorce. One study in the report said when women are less
educated, about 42 percent of their oldest children spend part of their first
decade in a family that is neither stable nor married. With college-educated
moms, that's true for only 17 percent of oldest children.
Blankenhorn
noted a “crisis of father absence and weakening of family structure among the
70 percent who are not upscale.”
Parenting
is also both more intense and more costly, the report said. Parents spend 50
percent more time with their kids than did folks in 1975. The Department of
Agriculture's annual reckoning says it costs the average family $226,920 to
raise a child to age 18 — about $41,000 more than in 1960.
Still,
the authors call parenthood "transformative" and
"meaningful."
Intricate
interactions
Blankenhorn
likens parenthood to a pair of dancers engaged in a complex routine. It is hard
for a mother alone or a father alone to provide a child with all he or she
needs, he said, but when they are together, "the child tends to get the
whole thing. Not everything is gendered, but a fair amount is."
He
describes this scene: Junior and Jillie are running around a playground,
laughing and trying new things. Mom yells, "Be careful." Dad says,
"See if you can climb to the top."
The
roles are not always that way, but research says it's a common pattern.
"The
wonderful thing about that is that 'be careful' is a very, very fine piece of
advice," said Blankenhorn. And 'can you climb to the top' is a very, very
fine challenge. Both are pretty darned important and it's not like you have to
choose which one is correct. Together, they are great!"
Affection
between partners brings chemicals that mediate feelings of reward. Touch,
physical intimacy and verbal communication all trigger those chemical changes,
said Kline.
“Of
course, sex can be pleasurable and is requisite for reproduction. But this
intense attraction to one another over time serves perhaps an even larger
purpose. Blankenhorn notes it is the couple’s ongoing emotional entanglement
and interest in one another that helps to create the couple that will raise the
child,” the report said.
The
father
Recent
research has put a lot of emphasis on fathers. They aren't more important than
mothers, said Blankenhorn, but they are less likely to live with their
children. As many as 40 percent of kids go to sleep in a home where their
father doesn’t live. Blankenhorn calls it “arguably our most urgent social
problem.”
Wilcox
is taken with the “generative power of fatherhood for men, in the biological,
emotional and social sense. Men who live in close proximity to their kids and
engage intellectually, emotionally, socially and athletically see their
children flourish,” he said. “Fatherhood is transformative for men.”
Because
couples are different, they will do things differently, the report said.
"Attention, affection and discipline are similar but they engage kids
differently.
"There
is significant variety in the range of adaptations married couples choose in
work and family decisions," the authors said. "Families benefit when
women and men are able to approach motherhood and fatherhood in the ways that
best suit themselves and their mates."
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