Thursday, April 26, 2012

A Twenty-something Mess

This is the research argument assignment that I have slaved over for nights and night on end! Honestly, towards the end I was just bull-pooping it, but the paper turned out to be actually kind of eye opening for me. It came to a conclusion I didn't expect. So ta-da! P.S. Sorry if there are typos, I didn't have time to proof read it.




A Twenty-something Mess

            The relationship between parent and child has been changing since the dawn of time, but one thing that will never change is that children grow up. Physically our bodies become ready for adulthood in our teens, and along with that our minds start to learn to make decisions on our own about that same time. However, in current culture we have trended toward a period of “finding yourself” in the late teen years and throughout our twenties, and during that time a lot of young adults stay dependent on their parents in some way. In American culture, staying dependent on parents in early adulthood is deemed socially acceptable, even normal, because more and more people are trending towards starting their careers, marriages, and lives later and later in life and depending upon parents makes that significantly easier. For the young adults who remain significantly dependent upon their parents through college, or through a time of self-discovery, this becomes a difficult task. One of the cliché phrases we know parents to say is, “As long as you live under my roof you will abide by my rules!” In the Declaration of Independence it is said, “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, among which are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, that to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men.” Often times these rights are lost to a young adult who remains dependent on their parents, especially those who are raised in a strict religious, specifically Christian, household. Should that dependency give Christian parents the right to push their own beliefs as ultimate truth without allowing for question or even complete disagreement and inflict the strict rules and discipline that usually come along with those beliefs? In attempt to discover what rights Christian parents have in regards to supporting adult children we will discuss: what is responsible for the tendency for young adults to take a time of self-discovery in their twenties, the roll of a parent of an adult child, the effects of supporting adult children on parents, the effects of a parent-child relationship on adult children, and what the Bible says about raising children in a Christian home.
            Jean M. Twenge, a professor of Psychology at San Diego State University and author of Generation Me: Why Today’s Young Americans Are More Confident, Assertive, Entitled, -- And More Miserable Than Ever Before, compares a group of psychologist’s study of mothers in Muncie, Indiana in 1924 with the same study conducted in 1988. When they asked mothers what traits they wished their children to have in 1924, they answered that they wanted good manners, loyalty to the church, and complete obedience from their children. On the contrary, in 1988, mothers said that they wished their children to be independent and tolerant (Twenge, 24). Twenge later observes that as children, today’s young adults have been taught to think that they are special. They are surrounded by a selfish culture that teaches them that no one will love them until they love themselves, so they put themselves first (Twenge, 44-46). This shift is likely to be what started the trend towards a “finding yourself” period in early adulthood. According to the article of research team members of the Australian Institute of Family Studies: Suzanne Vassallo, Diana Smart, and Rhys Price-Robertson, The proportion of adults in their twenties living with their parents rose from 21% in 1976 to 30% in 2001… Explanations for this trend focus on the increasing number of young people pursuing higher education; a decline in the availability of low-skilled but well-paid jobs for school leavers; financial pressures; and the convenience and enjoyment of living within the parental home,” (Vassello, Smart, and Price-Robertson, 8).  Christine Millard, also a research team member of the Australian Institute of Family Studies, agrees in her article, “Later Life Parents Helping Adult Children,” when she recalls a study by the ABS Family Survey. Millard asserts that 43% of adult children ages 20-24 live with parents, as well as, 12 percent of adult children ages 25-29 (Millard, 40).
            The push in self-esteem from parents in the last generation has inspired today’s young adults, who alone aren’t fully capable of reaching the goals they have set for themselves, to cling to their parents for support until they reach these over-zealous goals. The illusion that parents and teachers give young children that everyone is special is creating and epidemic of selfish, mooching monsters. Look at the term, “everyone is special.” The definition of special is unusual, better, or set apart. For that reason, it is impossible for every child on the planet to be special. Yet, Children are raised to think the sky is the limit! If children work hard enough, they can do whatever they want with their life, but how can this be true? Does anyone dream of being a garbage man or a plumber when they are little? How, then, do trash bags get collected and drains unclogged? The answer in simple, children cannot always be whoever and whatever they want because there are dirty jobs that someone has to do. Hence, what the adult children of today were told growing up is unrealistic and untrue. If they knew the truth about what they were capable of all along, adult children could have been be happier with the lives they have instead of wasting time chasing nearly impossible dreams and then unhappily settling. Those young adults who cannot handle a full time college career or acquire the financing to pay for college would simply learn a trade and start their life. Instead, young adults move in with their parents and impractically go to college anyway. It seems that twenty-something years ago the legitimate role of a parent was forsaken, leaving a twenty-something mess of self-centered adult children.
            There are many studies and opinions concerning the actual role of a parent. Professor of Gerontology and Family Studies, Rosemary Blieszer and Professor of Child and Family Development, Jay A. Mancini mentioned the Rossi scheme for analyzing the development of parenthood. Rossi claims that there are four stages to any development: training stage, adjustment stage, plateau stage, and disengagement stage. However, Parenthood is unique because of its “fewer opportunities for anticipatory socialization and gradual assumption of responsibilities.” (Blieszer and Mancini, 177). In other words, developing into a parent is unlike any other kind of development because one cannot easily stop being a parent simply because they are unsatisfied.
            In a study by the Australian Institute of Family Studies, 630 parents were asked how much of financial, practical, and emotional aid they gave their adult children. The results seemed to indicate that the least common type of help given was financial, followed by practical, leaving the most common type to be emotional (Millard, 39). However, “…help was more likely to be given to a co-resident child. While there were no differences in levels of emotional support, a greater proportion gave financial assistance to resident children than to non-resident ones. More parents also gave practical aid to resident children than to non-resident ones,” (Millard, 40). Vassello, Smart, and Price-Robertson go a little deeper when explaining the findings of their own study emphasizing that most parents think it is their roll to pass their beliefs and values onto their adult children, take care of them if they are ill, as well as give them advice of various forms. Likewise, most parents do not believe it is their role to provide food, clothes, and other necessities for their adult children provide help with everyday chores (Vassello, Smart, and Price-Robertson, 10).
             In the early years, parents nurture, support and guide their children’s development. As young people move through adolescence into adulthood, the nature of this relationship typically changes; moving from a dependent relationship between a parent and a child, to a more equal, mutually supportive relationship between two adults. Underpinning this change is a shift in the way parents and young people view each other. Ideally, parents learn to accept that their son or daughter is no longer a child, but an autonomous individual,” (Vassello, Smart, and Price-Robertson, 8). This change of view is becoming more difficult to achieve with the cohabitation trend growing and can create hostility in that parent-child relationship.            
            With “tough love” ceasing to exist, young adults are behind in their development, which puts parents behind in their development as well. When parents are ready to let them go, child are not nearly ready to be on their own, therefore the parents are forced to continue raising their adult children until they are. Fortunately, Blieszer and Mancini found that parents simply want affection, respect, and honest communication from their adult children. They also suggest that most parents of adult children do not rely on their children for identity and entertainment (178). Vassello, Smart, and Price-Robertson also detect that parents who co-reside with their adult children are likely continue the parenting relationship that they had throughout that child’s life (14). Therefore, when adult children remain at home in their twenties there is little effect on the parents simply because they maintain the relationship that they are used to.           
            The effects of parent-child cohabitation on young adults are unfortunately more substantial. In a case study preformed by professors of Psychology: William T. Dalton III, Donna Frick-Horbury, and Katherine M. Kitmann discovered that young adults who claimed to be satisfied with the parenting they experienced growing up reported to have better current relationships with parents and a romantic partner, and had more faith in their ability to form close relationships with others (13). This seems to demand parental responsibility for the state of future relationships for their children. Sociology professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, Belinda L. Needham agrees (895), but also takes it a step further alleging that likelihood of depression later is an adult child’s life is directly associated with the presence, or lack there of, of parental support (900).  Freek Bucx, Quinten Raaijmakers, and Frits Van Wel of the Department of Interdisciplinary Social Sciences of Utrecht University observe, “Young people who live with parents may have more frequent interactions with their parents, increasing opportunities for mutual influence.” Agreeably, Professors of Communication Studies: Paul Schrodt, Andrew M. Ledbetter, and Jennifer K. Ohrt continue that theory, articulating that positive conformity influence of a parent onto a young adult is directly connected with high resiliency in situations with other people, (42). The findings of these experts stress the influence a parent has on a child’s ability to handle future situations. Parent child relationships are directly related to the ability to form healthy relationships, the state of mental health, education and belief about morality, as well as the ability to stand firm to their beliefs if they are questioned. Basically, the quality of a child’s life is in their parent’s hands, and the longer they cohabitate the more influence they have.
            The problem is the legal and social norm is that children become adults at age 18. With the prolonged development of these adolescents, they are still behaving as children and depending on their parents as children do, but the world is telling them that they are adults. For that reason, the parent-child relationship can become hostile. Children who are told that they are adults do not want to be treated like children and will lash out in protest. This makes a period of self-discovery while living with their parents under strict Christian influence potentially detrimental to the social, mental, and moral well being of an adult child.
            So, what can be done? Obviously, parents cannot start throwing their adult children out on the street! After all, it was the parents who unknowingly raised the young adults to be in this situation in the first place. The only option, then, is to re-establish the proper parent-child relationship. Biblically, the expectation on parenting, as well as a child’s response to parenting is very clear. Dave Redick, Minister of Highway 20 Church of Christ, wrote a powerful sermon concerning the subject. He begins quoting Ephesians 6:1-4, “Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. ‘Honor your father and mother’—which is the first commandment with a promise— ‘so that it may go well with you and that you may enjoy long life on the earth.’ Fathers, do not exasperate your children; instead, bring them up in the training and instruction of the Lord.” This is a two-sided commandment. One cannot happen without the other.
            “Honor your father and mother,” which could be elaborated: respect your parents, take what they have taught you to heart, and do not make a fool of them. Apparently, when this was commanded there were no child rights; a father had power of life and death over his children (Redick). Therefore, this commandment was for a child’s own good and it came with the promise of a long life on the earth. With proper parenting and at a certain maturity level, this will become a simple task.
            In regards to parents, Redick describes, “Do not exasperate your children,” as breaking a child’s spirit so that they give up trying to please him. Redick continues by explaining how a father might do such a thing: failure to provide discipline, failure to provide instruction, inflicting overly harsh discipline, inconsistent discipline, anger motivated discipline, with-holding love as means of discipline, hypocrisy, over protection, and criticism without encouragement.             Unfortunately, father’s, especially within the church, struggle with many of these exasperating tactics, which makes honoring their parents nearly impossible for a child, adult or not. Only in the case of exasperation is an adult child enslaved by parental dependence. The parents of “Christian” households are breaking the very morals they long to protect. If this unproductive style of parenting were to cease, the parent-child relationship should develop into a more equal and mutually supportive one.
            Still, his does not mean children, adult or adolescent, should be allowed to completely make decisions for themselves. Let us not forget the second half of the command toward parents, “…instead, bring them up in the training and instruction of the Lord.” Until a child is completely independent, they should be given guidance in the training and instruction of the Lord. Joan H. Liem, a professor of psychology at the University of Massachusetts Boston, seems to agree,”… authoritative parenting helps shape emerging adults’ perceptions of themselves as worthy and efficacious.”  
            Thus, raising children with moral instruction is biblically commanded and personally beneficial, however, the instruction needs to match the maturity level in order to avoid exasperation. There is a delicate balance. Young adults will learn from making mistakes, and require the freedom to make them just as much as guidance support. For that reason, parents are required to give them that freedom in order to achieve and maintain the relationship that facilitates a healthy existence for their child in independent adulthood.



Works Cited
Blieszner, Rosemary, and Jay A. Mancini. "Enduring Ties: Older Adults' Parental Role And Responsibilities." Family Relations 36.2 (1987): 176. Academic Search Premier. Web. 21 Mar. 2012.
Bucx, Freek, Quinten Raaijmakers, and Frits Van Wel. "Life Course Stage In Young Adulthood And Intergenerational Congruence In Family Attitudes." Journal Of Marriage & Family 72.1 (2010): 117-134. Academic Search Premier. Web. 5 Apr. 2012.
Dalton III, William T., Donna Frick-Horbury, and Katherine M. Kitzmann. "Young Adults' Retrospective Reports Of Parenting By Mothers And Fathers: Associations With Current Relationship Quality." Journal Of General Psychology 133.1 (2006): 5-18. Academic Search Premier. Web. 5 Apr. 2012.
Liem, Joan H., Emily Cohen Cavell, and Kara Lustig. "The Influence Of Authoritative Parenting During Adolescence On Depressive Symptoms In Young Adulthood: Examining The Mediating Roles Of Self-Development And Peer Support." Journal Of Genetic Psychology 171.1 (2010): 73-92. Academic Search Premier. Web. 5 Apr. 2012.
Millward, Christine. "Help And Support In Families." Family Matters 51 (1998): 60. Academic Search Premier. Web. 17 Apr. 2012.
Needham, Belinda L. "Reciprocal Relationships Between Symptoms Of Depression And Parental Support During The Transition From Adolescence To Young Adulthood." Journal Of Youth & Adolescence 37.8 (2008): 893-905. Academic Search Premier. Web. 5 Apr. 2012.
Redick, Dave. "Fathers--Don't Exasperate Your Children." Preacher Study. Preacher Study, 2008. Web. 17 Apr. 2012. <http://preacherstudy.com/members/xexasper.html>.
Schrodt, Paul, Andrew M. Ledbetter, and Jennifer K. Ohrt. "Parental Confirmation And Affection As Mediators Of Family Communication Patterns And Children's Mental Well-Being." Journal Of Family Communication 7.1 (2007): 23-46. Academic Search Premier. Web. 5 Apr. 2012.
Twenge, Jean M. Generation Me: Why Today’s Young Americans Are More Confident, Assertive, Entitled, -- And More Miserable Than Ever Before. New York: Free Press, 2006. Print.
Vassallo, Suzanne, Diana Smart, and Rhys Price-Robertson. "The Roles That Parents Play In The Lives Of Their Young Adult Children." Family Matters 82 (2009): 8-14. Academic Search Premier. Web. 21 Mar. 2012.

                        

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