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Two Fathers, With One Happy to Stay At Home
The New York Times ^ | January 12, 2004 | GINIA BELLAFANTE

Posted on 01/13/2004 9:32:44 AM PST by erasmus605

Two Fathers, With One Happy to Stay at Home By GINIA BELLAFANTE

INNEAPOLIS — Right before Christmas, Jamie McConnell arrived at the Lake Country School here, as he does most days of the week, to pick up his son, Ben, 3. Hardly short on spunk, Ben made his way out to the snowy playground, and Mr. McConnell, as parents have done since the dawn of swings and monkey bars, trailed behind.

Mr. McConnell had plenty of time to watch Ben romp and to invite one of his classmates and his mother home for peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.

For years, Mr. McConnell ate very different lunches. He was a corporate litigator at Dorsey & Whitney, among the country's most prestigious law firms. But since he and Dr. Bill Atmore, an anesthesiologist, adopted Ben as an infant, taking care of the child has been his full-time job. Dr. Atmore, his partner of eight years, works full time.

In assuming those roles, demographers say, the two are part of an emerging population of gay men who are not only raising children but are also committed to the idea that one parent should leave the workplace to do it. Of 9,328 same-sex couples with children whose census returns were randomly selected for analysis by the Census Bureau, 26 percent of the male couples included a stay-at-home parent, said Gary Gates, a demographer with the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan research organization in Washington. That figure is one percentage point more than for married couples with children and four percentage points higher than for female couples, said Mr. Gates, who performed the analysis for this article.

The percentage of men who stay at home is significantly smaller among married heterosexual couples, Mr. Gates said.

The obstacles of finding surrogate mothers and of discriminatory adoption laws that favor heterosexual couples have led some gay men to pursue parenthood with fervor.

"Being a planned gay father is such a project in itself," said Judith Stacey, a professor of sociology at New York University and a senior scholar at the Council on Contemporary Families, a research organization. Often, Professor Stacey said, gay fathers or those aspiring to be "remain very judgmental of parents who don't stay home."

To some gay men, the idea of entrusting the care of a hard-won child to someone else seems to defeat the purpose of parenthood.

Ray Friedmann, of Portland, Ore., gave up an accounting job at a credit union after he and his partner adopted their daughter, Ceriwen, now six months old. Unable to join his partner's medical plan because it does not provide for domestic partners, Mr. Friedmann, like many other gay fathers, pays for his own health insurance.

"We never thought we'd even be able to have this child," Mr. Friedmann said. "When we had the opportunity to do it, we wanted to give her the best attention and love."

Four years ago, after Bernie Cummings and his partner, Ernie Johnston, a marketing executive at Warner Brothers, had a baby girl, Caelan, through a surrogate mother, Mr. Cummings left his job as a managing director at Ogilvy Public Relations. Since then, they have added twins to their family, also through surrogacy.

"I've taken myself out of an industry that moves pretty quickly," said Mr. Cummings, who lives in Los Angeles. "But if I were working, I'd miss that moment when Caelan was just getting up from her nap, grabbing and holding on to me."

Same-sex couples with a stay-at-home parent are doing this even though census figures show that their median household income, $35,000, is lower than the $45,000 for a heterosexual married couple with a stay-at-home parent, Mr. Gates of the Urban Institute said.

The 2000 census found that there were some 60,000 male couple households with children in America, and close to 96,000 female couple households. Those figures are about 20 percent of all male couples and a third of all female couples.

Rob Calhoun and his partner refinanced their home in suburban Atlanta when Mr. Calhoun quit his job as a social worker to stay home with their baby daughter. "We really couldn't afford it," Mr. Calhoun said.

Sociologists, gender researchers and gay parents themselves say that because gay men are liberated from the cultural expectations and pressures that women face to balance work and family life, they may approach raising children with a greater sense of freedom and choice.

They may also not fear stigmatization in these new roles, said Ellen Lewin, chairwoman of the women's studies department at the University of Iowa. Professor Lewin is the author of "Lesbian Mothers" (Cornell University Press, 1993) and is working on a study of gay fathers.

Conversely, feminism's legacy may leave lesbians more ideologically committed to equality in their relationships, said Christopher Carrington, a professor of sociology at San Francisco State University and the author of "No Place Like Home" (University of Chicago Press, 2002), which examines how gay and lesbian couples divide household labor.

That staying at home constitutes the just and noble course of parenthood was a sentiment echoed again and again in more than a dozen interviews with gay fathers.

Mike Farina, 40, left his job as an engineer in Anaheim, Calif., after adopting twins with his partner in 1998.

"In the beginning, I was even pig-headed about it," said Mr. Farina, who now has four children with his partner. "I wanted the kids to bond with us. I didn't want any help. In those first few years, I didn't even get baby sitters. I thought, `That's my job.' "

Though many gay fathers may enter into domesticity with few conflicts or reservations, the pressures of starting a new life stripped of professional status can mirror those faced by nonworking mothers. The transition may be even rockier, given that male identity is largely defined by achievements outside the confines of nurseries, mud rooms and kitchens.

Professor Carrington said some of the domestically oriented men he observed struggled with self-esteem. "Men who make these choices really grapple with how to portray their lives to their friends, families, to service people and repairmen," he said.

For Tom Howard, a stay-at-home father of three adopted children, all younger than 4, the consequence of his decision struck two years ago, just before April 15. "I was filling out our tax returns for the first entire calendar year I was not working, and my occupation went from `professor' to `homemaker.' I felt like someone had put a knife in my stomach and twisted it."

For the preceding 10 years, Mr. Howard, who has a doctorate in microbiology, had worked at the University of Southern California, first as a researcher at its virology laboratory and then also as a professor at its medical school. "I can truly empathize with the women's movement now," Mr. Howard said. "I know that I've committed career suicide."

After the birth of his first child, Emma, Mr. Howard, now 47, took a three-month paid paternity leave from the university, returning to work in February 2000. At the same time, his partner of 17 years, Ken Yood, 40, was working his way to a partnership at a Los Angeles law firm. "We realized pretty quickly that Ken's pay scale was going to support the family," he said.

No matter how fair-minded the intentions of partners may be, the myriad obligations of home stewardship invariably fall to the partner who remains at home.

After Tom Seid, 47, and his partner, Howard Ronder, the creative director of Gaiam, a lifestyle company in Boulder, Colo., adopted their son, Matthew, four years ago, Mr. Seid left his career as a feature-film editor. Their shift to a single income meant that they could no longer afford a housekeeper. Now, Mr. Seid's day consists of shopping, cleaning and dropping off and picking up his son from school.

The choice leaves many facing a loss of financial independence that may result in a suddenly dismal credit rating or strong feelings of guilt about buying a CD or sweater.

"I have a problem asking for money, and I have to ask for money every time we're paying the bills," said Bill Koch, who stays home with his 4-year-old son, Frankie, while his partner of eight years, Paul Lennander, works as an investigator at a children's social service agency here.

Mr. Koch, who previously worked in internal technology at General Mills, said that a lack of income had left him feeling invisible.

"After I'd been home a few months, we went to lease a car," Mr. Koch recalled. "We'd sold my car to come up with the money, and the whole time the salesman is only talking to Paul. The guy just looked right through me. Only Paul's name could appear on the lease, and I was just sitting there the whole time twirling my pearls, so to speak."

Still, Mr. Koch, like many of the other gay fathers interviewed, did not betray any eagerness to return to the work world soon.

As Peter Vitale, a gay stay-at-home father in the Twin Cities, put it, "If I were honest, I'd say that I want to do an excellent job at this because I know the world has me under a microscope."


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: adoption; child; childhood; children; father; gay; gays; heather; homosexual; homosexualadoption; homosexualagenda; morality; mother; trauma; wheresmommy
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Just like to know what people think about this.
1 posted on 01/13/2004 9:32:51 AM PST by erasmus605
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To: erasmus605
"In the beginning, I was even pig-headed about it," said Mr. Farina, who now has four children with his partner. "I wanted the kids to bond with us. I didn't want any help. In those first few years, I didn't even get baby sitters. I thought, `That's my job.' "

Wish some heterosexuals would have this opinion more often.
2 posted on 01/13/2004 9:34:34 AM PST by cyborg
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To: cyborg
I know! I have a really hard time condemning this. If two people are this committed to raising children, how can that be bad? I know they need a mother...but many women are not this involved with their kids.
3 posted on 01/13/2004 9:36:50 AM PST by erasmus605 (Huh?)
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To: erasmus605
Being gay is a sin, I don't have a problem condemning it.
4 posted on 01/13/2004 9:40:37 AM PST by jerri
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To: erasmus605
I'm actually quite conflicted about this issue. Sure sounds like these guys are good dads. But, homosexuals, either by nature or by choice, are not supposed to be parents, biologically-speaking.
5 posted on 01/13/2004 9:42:05 AM PST by RoughDobermann (Nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.)
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To: erasmus605
I have a bit of a problem believing that folks who are supposedly "wired wrong" so they have abnormal sexual feelings/instincts can have "perfectly normal" parenting feelings/instincts.

Stories like this (IMO) are more designed to break down the wall of resistance to the Gay Agenda and a tool to help the evil one subvert the Almighty One. Just another oil slick on the ramp which society seems to be sliding down...

6 posted on 01/13/2004 9:42:37 AM PST by trebb
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To: erasmus605
Pure propaganda. I'll be back later.
7 posted on 01/13/2004 9:44:24 AM PST by independentmind
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To: independentmind
Of 9,328 same-sex couples with children whose census returns were randomly selected for analysis by the Census Bureau, 26 percent of the male couples included a stay-at-home parent, said Gary Gates, a demographer with the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan research organization in Washington. That figure is one percentage point more than for married couples with children and four percentage points higher than for female couples, said Mr. Gates, who performed the analysis for this article.

Verbatim from an article that appeared in a San Diego newspaper yesterday. Now I see how news spin works.

8 posted on 01/13/2004 9:46:10 AM PST by independentmind
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To: independentmind
Of 9,328 same-sex couples with children whose census returns were randomly selected for analysis by the Census Bureau, 26 percent of the male couples included a stay-at-home parent, said Gary Gates, a demographer with the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan research organization in Washington. That figure is one percentage point more than for married couples with children and four percentage points higher than for female couples, said Mr. Gates, who performed the analysis for this article.

Verbatim from an article that appeared in a San Diego newspaper yesterday. Now I see how news spin works.

9 posted on 01/13/2004 9:46:22 AM PST by independentmind
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To: erasmus605
Hope you're wearing a 10X flame suit for evemn saying you have a hard time condemning this. Frankly I could care less whether two competant,loving gay men or women adopt children. It's all good. There are plenty of kids to adopt around the world, so all those who don't like it can go adopt their own. Africa and Haiti has LOTS of orphans to adopt BUT I don't see anyone tripping over themselves to go adopt over there.
10 posted on 01/13/2004 9:50:26 AM PST by cyborg
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To: erasmus605
Poor kids.

Although I think it's great that these men are being primary caregivers instead of dumping their children at daycare, it's not natural for homosexual couples to have children. Kids raised by gay parents have a whole lot of hurdles that kids in the traditional family just don't have to jump over.
11 posted on 01/13/2004 9:54:06 AM PST by Rubber_Duckie_27
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To: erasmus605
Am I crazy, or has there been an explosion of "wonderful gay parent" articles in the press in the last week? I'm beginning to think there is some sort of organized plan in the media to push "gay parents are wonderful" stories right now.

My own small town liberal rag ran a lead story Sunday feature article on a pair of lesbian parents in our town. Of course, the two women both have their doctorate and are college professors. They are articulate and very effective in making the case that they are doing a great job raising their adopted 2 year old daughter.

Of course, the article avoids all of the nasty parts of the issue, like your 16 year old adolescent having to explain the 2 mommys to their Prom date, or daddy #1 explaining why daddy #2 just died of AIDS.

12 posted on 01/13/2004 9:54:40 AM PST by Senator_Blutarski
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To: erasmus605
Gay men having children is nothing but child abuse, which will create some pretty messed up kids. I pity these children.
13 posted on 01/13/2004 9:58:18 AM PST by ohioman
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To: Rubber_Duckie_27
Kids raised by gay parents have a whole lot of hurdles that kids in the traditional family just don't have to jump over.

Does anyone have any articles/data about this? I'm sure it's out there, I just haven't seen it. I'm sure the media isn't quick to publicize that type of thing.
14 posted on 01/13/2004 10:00:29 AM PST by erasmus605 (Huh?)
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To: erasmus605
How can you NOT have a hard time condemning “this?” Are you that ill-informed or unable to exercise critical thought? Beyond exposing innocent children to the moral degeneracy of the “gay lifestyle,” there are significant health risks to the child, both physical and psychological.
We have laws requiring children to be strapped into an appropriate child safety seat in the rear of a car for their health. Most states prohibit the sale of alcohol and tobacco to children for the child’s moral and physical heath. Some states have laws concerning second hand smoke around children for health reasons. All states prohibit unrestricted child labor for the child’s health and safety. It is complete idiocy, or perhaps, more appropriately, the ultimate hypocrisy, to create these and other laws for the safety of children and then expose them to the risks of the “gay lifestyle.”
According to scientific studies, the median age of death for homosexuals is virtually the same nationwide--and, overall, less than 2% survive to old age. If AIDS is the cause of death, the median age is 39. For those gays who die of something other than AIDS, the median age of death is 42, and 9% die old.
Two and eight-tenths percent (2.8%) of gays die violently. They are 116 times more apt to be murdered; 24 times more apt to commit suicide; and have a traffic-accident death-rate 18 times the rate of comparably-aged white males. Heart attacks, cancer and liver failure are exceptionally common. Twenty percent of lesbians die of murder, suicide, or accident--a rate 487 times higher than that of white females aged 25-44. The age distribution of samples of homosexuals in the scientific literature from 1989 to 1992 suggests a similarly shortened life-span. The risk of leaving these children as orphans with all of the attendant psychological trauma that entails is highly significant.

Beyond the risk of making these children orphans, those who are housed with AIDS patients are also at risk. Dr. Max Essex, chair of the Harvard AIDS Institute, warned congress in 1992 that "AIDS has already led to other kinds of dangerous epidemics...If AIDS is not eliminated, other new lethal microbes will emerge, and neither safe sex nor drug free practices will prevent them."

AIDS has not been eliminated, nor is there any vaccine or cure on the immediate horizon. More than 80% of all AIDS cases in this country are homosexuals. How can you not condemn exposing innocent children to this potential threat?
15 posted on 01/13/2004 10:03:37 AM PST by Lucky Dog
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To: cyborg
We all are in sin until we recieve the forgiveness handed to us by God through Jesus Christ.
I will pray that these men see the light that is in the world to remove this burden that is there.
We must also be vigilant in our protection of the children in our society so that we do not slouch toward Gommorah in our desire to be "tolerant". Throughout history societies,nations and culural regions have been destroyed after a generation of the "tolerant" have taken over and allowed the do your own thing, none of my business and whatever feels good to become the laws of the land.
16 posted on 01/13/2004 10:11:59 AM PST by liberty or death
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To: erasmus605
Well, now we know who "the catcher" is.
17 posted on 01/13/2004 10:12:09 AM PST by PBRSTREETGANG
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To: Lucky Dog
Beyond the risk of making these children orphans, those who are housed with AIDS patients are also at risk.

I have never heard that a person can get AIDS from living with an AIDS patient. AIDS is spread by sexual contact and intravenous drug use. Besides, I don't think adoption agencies would place a child with someone sick with AIDS.
18 posted on 01/13/2004 10:13:16 AM PST by erasmus605 (Don't shoot me, I'm just asking questions.)
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To: trebb
Stories like this (IMO) are more designed to break down the wall of resistance to the Gay Agenda and a tool to help the evil one subvert the Almighty One. Just another oil slick on the ramp which society seems to be sliding down...

IMHO,it's more designed to subvert the attitude most have that religion as an institution which is based upon helping humanity stay the strait and narrow course and replace it with a much more compassionate institution which is more objective and caring....Government.

That slope is getting mighty slick these days.

19 posted on 01/13/2004 10:13:30 AM PST by EGPWS
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To: erasmus605
If two people are this committed to raising children, how can that be bad?

I know several people committed to raising kids. Unfortunately, they don't set a very good example for the kids.

20 posted on 01/13/2004 10:14:44 AM PST by AppyPappy (If You're Not A Part Of The Solution, There's Good Money To Be Made In Prolonging The Problem.)
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