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A Paradigm Shift in Parenting
National Review Online ^ | 30 November 2004 | Stanley Kurtz

Posted on 11/30/2004 2:28:45 PM PST by Lorianne

Mary Eberstadt’s Home Alone America: The Hidden Toll of Day Care, Behavioral Drugs. and Other Parent Substitutes is a culture-changing book. But don’t take my word for it. Listen to The Economist: “Eberstadt’s passionate attack on the damage caused by the absence of parents suggests that we may be approaching some sort of turning point in social attitudes, where assumptions about family life and maternal employment start to change. It has happened before — it could happen again.”

Rich Lowry has already done a great job of recounting some of the core claims of Home Alone America. I want to talk about what makes this book so powerful — over and above its important arguments about day care, behavioral drugs, teen sex, specialty boarding schools, etc.

From the very first page of the book, we’re in a different world. Eberstadt begins with a gentle pledge to break our social taboo on attending to the effects of working motherhood on children. And Eberstadt keeps her promise — so much so that she needs to create a new word, “separationist,” for a certain kind of feminist. (The London Times is now touting Eberstadt’s “separationist” coinage as the latest hot buzzword.) Instead of talking about “feminism,” which gets us debating how to balance the interests of women against the interests of men, Eberstadt talks about “separationism,” which gets us debating how to balance the interests of children and adults. What we usually call “divorce,” Eberstadt calls “the absent father problem.” Eberstadt’s language sends a powerful message: It’s not about adults. It’s about what separates or unites adults and children, and what that means for them both

NO REACTIONARY Not that Eberstadt is calling for a return for the ‘50s. Eberstadt doesn’t demand a ban on divorce, nor does she call on women to stop working outside the home. But Eberstadt does ask us to balance the needs of parents and children in a fundamentally new way. Decisions about divorce and working motherhood can only be made by individual parents. But to strike the right balance between the needs of children and adults, parents need to break the taboo set up by “separationist” feminists — the taboo on looking at the real costs and consequences of parent-child separation.

When Eberstadt considers our current way of balancing work and family, she doesn’t see a well-established and smoothly functioning social system. Instead she sees an “ongoing, massive, and historically unprecedented experiment in family-child separation.” An unresolved “experiment” — that’s how Eberstadt understands our society’s way of rearing its children. And she’s right. We’ve barely begun to look at the real effects of the profound social changes that followed in the wake of the ‘60s. That’s why Home Alone America is not another book about the stresses and trials of working mothers or divorced parents. Above all, Home Alone America is a book about children.

RAISING THE MORAL BAR A number of thoughtful observers have pointed out that, for all our wealth and technology, Americans don’t seem to be any happier nowadays than we were in the past. Eberstadt thinks she knows why. Life is better for American adults, who are financially, legally, and morally freer than they’ve ever been. But life is not better for American children, says Eberstadt, “no matter how much more pocket money they have for the vending machines, and no matter how nice it is that Dad’s new wife gave them their own weekend bedroom in his new place.” In fact, it’s actually wealthier children who are more likely to labor under some of the disabilities of our new family dispensation. According to Eberstadt, well-to-do children come home more often to neighborhoods so emptied of adults (and therefore unsafe for outdoor play) that they simply throw the deadbolt and “get no exercise more strenuous than walking from the video game to the refrigerator.”

Eberstadt’s chapter on day care is a great example of what makes this book so interesting. While Eberstadt does bring some important new information to bear on the day-care debate (check out her discussion of biting), the real originality lies in her point of view. For example, even the most “separationist” feminists concede that children in day care are more likely to get sick. The interesting thing is the difference between what the separationists and Eberstadt do with that fact.

Eberstadt lays out the “creepy” rationalizations given by Susan Faludi and her colleagues for the high rate of day-care-borne infections: “[Children] soon build up immunities”; “they’re hardier when they are older.” Then Eberstadt lowers the boom: “Now step back from this discussion for a moment and ask yourself: If we were talking about anything but day care here, would anyone be caught cheering for the idea that some little children get sick twice as often as others?”

Eberstadt’s discussion of day care manages to shift the moral stakes of the debate. She turns the issue away from the long-term effects of day care and onto the immediate unhappiness that many children suffer when put in day care for too long. Feminists who champion the benefits of parent-child separation have set the moral bar far too low. Essentially, says Eberstadt, the feminist position amounts to: “If it doesn’t lead to Columbine, bring it on.” Eberstadt wants to raise that moral bar.

WHO’S PROBLEM? Consider the way Eberstadt transforms the work of Harvard professor Jody Heymann. Writing from the adult point of view, Heymann talks about how difficult it is for parents to balance the intense demands of work and child-rearing. Sometimes, when it’s impossible to miss a day of work, even a child with a fever has to be deposited in day care (against the rules). Concentrating on the child’s point of view, Eberstadt stresses that this not only spreads disease, but prevents day-care workers saddled with a sick child from attending to the well ones. Whereas Heymann calls for more and better government-funded day care, Eberstadt shows that this is unlikely to solve the underlying problem.

But the real question is, Who’s problem are we talking about? Up until now, public discussion of issues like day care has been dominated by feminist journalists and academics who take their own career decisions for granted and call on society to make their lives easier: How can I be equal to a man if society won’t give me better day care? Eberstadt strides into this situation and asks a totally different series of questions: Are children any happier in day care than they are with their mothers? If not, should that effect a woman’s career decisions? Are unhappy children who bite and get aggressive or ill in day care growing tougher, stronger, and more ruggedly individualist, or is it we adults who are being coarsened to needs of our children? Although I’m inclined to believe the latter, the important point is that until now, the choice between these two points of view hasn’t even been posed. The separationists who’ve controlled the public debate up to now have excluded Eberstadt’s sort of questions altogether. That’s why this book is so impressive and important. Over and above the statistical issues, on just about every page, Eberstadt breaks a taboo, shifts a perspective, and forces us to look at the lives of children in new and more vivid ways.

DEFINING DEVIANCY One of the cleverest reversals in the book comes in the chapter on children’s mental health. Increasingly, we’re medicating children for mental illnesses that barely existed in the past. Take “separation anxiety disorder” (SAD), defined as “developmentally inappropriate and excessive anxiety concerning separation from home or from those to whom the individual is attached.” This syndrome is now said to affect about 10 percent of the nation’s children. One of its symptoms is “refusal to attend classes or difficulty remaining in school for an entire day” — in other words, what used to be called “truancy.”

Are 10 percent of the nation’s children really in need of treatment for SAD, or are most of these children actually behaving more normally than mothers who have little trouble parting from their children for most of the day? Is it surprising that children get SAD in the absence of their parents? As Eberstadt suggests, maybe we need to define a whole new range of disorders: “There is no mental disorder...called, say, preoccupied parent disorder, to pathologize a mother or father too distracted to read Winnie the Pooh for the fourth time or to stay up on Saturday night waiting for a teenager to come home from the movies. Nor will one find divorced second-family father disorder, even though the latter might explain what we could call the ‘developmentally inappropriate’ behaviors of certain fathers, such as failure to pay child support or to show up for certain important events. There is also nothing...like separation non-anxiety disorder to pathologize parents who can separate for long stretches from their children without a pang.”

TOWARD A NEW SOCIAL CONSENSUS Despite her playfully brilliant reversal of our questionable tendency to pathologize children who miss their parents, Eberstadt does not in the end reverse the pathological finger-pointing. Eberstadt clearly acknowledges that some mothers have no choice but to work and that some marriages suffer from gross abuse. She knows that the pressures and constraints on parents today are many, and often severe. Yet Eberstadt makes a passionate and persuasive case that, when it comes to the welfare of children, we have fallen out of balance. We may not want or need to return to the ‘50s, but that cannot and should not mean that anything goes. The traditional family is not infinitely flexible, and changes do have consequences. Despite its real benefits, our new-found individualism has been pushed too far. That’s because we have taken our eyes off — or because separationist ideologues have forcibly shifted our eyes away from — the consequences of our actions for our children.

So what does Eberstadt want? Quite simply, she wants a change of heart — a new social consensus: “It would be better for both children and adults if more American parents were with their kids more of the time....it would be better if more mothers with a genuine choice in the matter did stay home and/or work part-time rather than full time and if more parents entertaining separation or divorce did stay together for the sake of the kids.” This new consensus may be difficult to achieve. Yet it is easy to understand, and it would not demand a wholesale reversion to the pre-‘60s era.

I’ve tried to give just a taste of what Home Alone America has to offer. The battle will rage over the statistics, the causal arrows, and such. But the power and originality of this book go way beyond all that. Its strength comes out on every page, as Eberstadt casts aside orthodoxies and forces us to look at ourselves and our children with new eyes. (And I haven’t even talked about the music chapter, my favorite.) I can’t pretend neutrality, since I was privileged to see Home Alone America in manuscript, and am thanked by the author for my comments. I’m honored by that mention, because I agree with The Economist that this book has the potential to change the way our society thinks about the family. In the same way we now look back to the “Dan Quayle Was Right” article as a transformative moment in our family debates, we may someday look back on the publication of Home Alone America. We’ll be the richer for it if we do — as you will be if you read this wonderful book.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Front Page News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bookreview; children; daycare; disorders; eberstadt; family; homealoneamerica; morality; parenting; richlowry; stanleykurtz; women
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To: Lorianne
2000 years ago, a prophet said that as history advances "the love of many will grow cold, and lawlessness will increase."

Many moms work outside the home because they must, in order to feed and clothe the children. Good for them.

But many also do it in order to be "happy", or "fulfilled". This is nothing other than love growing cold.

When you have a child, you no longer have a right to choose your own "happiness" over the child's needs.

141 posted on 12/01/2004 8:18:10 AM PST by Taliesan (The power of the State to do good is the power of the State to do evil.)
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To: Fury
Without trying to pass critical judgment on anyones current situation, this is my opinion of Pre-K.

Many years ago the understanding was that starting children to school to early actually hurt those children. It used to be that you could not start a child in a Texas school until they were seven.

My observations and opinion only is that Pre-K is nothing more than another tool so government entities and some unions can employ more teaching bodies there by expanding their power base.

I have a child in Pre-K and he hates going to school. I have another child in K and she loves every minute of school and doing home work.

My wife who is also a medical doctor believes in Pre-K. I personally have doubts about the good over coming the loss of being home with a parent. That is if a parent can afford to stay home with the child.

Don't get me wrong I am not condemning couples where both parents work. However I have noticed over the last few years that more and more a mom or dad is choosing to stay home with a younger child. I can not say that any of the children I see from both situations are any more adjusted than the other.
142 posted on 12/01/2004 8:21:30 AM PST by OKIEDOC (LL THE)
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To: PayNoAttentionManBehindCurtain; Calpernia

You can't say categorically that *every* mother who works is "wanting everything right now." Some men really don't make enough money to support a family at a modest middle-class level. Some families really do have additional expenses that aren't "frivolous." There's an awful lot of judgement on these forums about people and situations that don't really merit it. Yes, there are people who throw money around like water, and who spoil their children. There are other people who don't. I know several families right now where the mom is working to pay college tuition, or where mom is working for the medical benefits (because dad doesn't have them through work.)


143 posted on 12/01/2004 8:22:13 AM PST by valkyrieanne (card-carrying South Park Republican)
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To: buccaneer81

Good Comments.


144 posted on 12/01/2004 8:22:58 AM PST by OKIEDOC (LL THE)
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To: valkyrieanne

Thank you very much.

Bump!


145 posted on 12/01/2004 8:30:17 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: Melas
Only holds true for spouses with mcjobs. $10hr and under. Doesn't hold true at all for professional couples where both make a decent wage.

Exactly. My wife makes almost as much as I do. Cutting our income in half so she can stay home with the kids is not a viable option.

146 posted on 12/01/2004 8:32:50 AM PST by Modernman (Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy. --Benjamin Franklin)
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To: OKIEDOC; All

I'm not sure what form pre-K takes in other places, but at our parish school it is only 3 half-days per week. It's fairly expensive, and almost all of the families who use it, have a stay-at-home parent. The awkwardness of the schedule is too much for most families with 2 careers.

I'm not a big proponent of pre-K, having homeschooled our oldest. But our kids *love* this program, I attribute that to the woman who runs it. Also, they think they are "big" because their older sibs are at "real school" right next door.


147 posted on 12/01/2004 8:42:48 AM PST by BizzeeMom ("We cannot do great things. We can only do small things with great love" Bl. Teresa of Calcutta)
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To: BizzeeMom

That type of Pre K I support. It is more like a play group with structure.

My children attended Pre K for 3 1/2 days per week.

The Pre K that everyone is bashing (including me) is the full time 5 days per week Pre K notion.


148 posted on 12/01/2004 9:06:11 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: Hermann the Cherusker
It constantly amazes me that people will pay $200,000 for a "townhouse" in the suburbs, when the same thing in the city in a nice neighborhood, labeled a "rowhouse" goes for $80,000

Interesting. The exact opposite is true in DC. The most expensive housing is generally closer in while the cheaper housing is further out. A decent single-family home in Arlington runs in the $600,000 plus range. You get a lot more for your money if you're willing to move out to Fairfax County, but then you add at least another hour to your commute every day.

149 posted on 12/01/2004 9:06:18 AM PST by Modernman (Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy. --Benjamin Franklin)
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To: Hermann the Cherusker
Hordes of adopted children are not "growth" for our nation because they aren't of "common descent" with us

So being an American is somehow genetic? Why would you think that a kid raised by American parents in American society from a very young age cannot be an American simply because they were born in another country?

There is no gene for being an American.

150 posted on 12/01/2004 9:11:57 AM PST by Modernman (Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy. --Benjamin Franklin)
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To: PayNoAttentionManBehindCurtain
I disagree with this. It's not the cost of living, it's the cost of wanting everything right now that forces moms to work.

Not everyone lives in a part of the country where a family of 4 can live off of $40,000 per year.

151 posted on 12/01/2004 9:13:13 AM PST by Modernman (Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy. --Benjamin Franklin)
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To: EdReform

read later


152 posted on 12/01/2004 9:16:40 AM PST by EdReform (Free Republic - helping to keep our country a free republic. Thank you for your financial support!)
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To: BizzeeMom
"But our kids *love* this program, I attribute that to the woman who runs it."

That has a lot to do with with all grades in any school.

My son spent his first three years in a Spanish speaking environment. He speaks now in English but understands instruction's in Spanish.

He go's to school five half days a week. Yes it is a chore to take him to school and pick him up on this schedule. It is also a chore that I look forward to each day with much gratitude. I feel lucky to be able to do what a lot of household's with two working parents can not do.

I think that parents must make the best choice for the child. If pre-K works then do it. If it becomes to much of a burden on the child then make another choice.

Even though not a Catholic by faith, I have looked into enrolling my children in the local parish school. This school is very strict and the test scores on state mandated test are quite a bit higher.
They also have an hour of religious education each day.
Our local public school is 100% PC and has totally cut out any reference to God or Jesus Christ. The other day I asked the assistant principal about Christmas Holidays and whether or not we would have the children in a Christmas play. I was told that we no longer celebrate Christmas Holidays but now have Winter Holiday Vacation. I was also rudely informed that the mention of Christs name on school grounds was strictly forbidden as it might offend the three non Christian students.

I lost my cool for an instance and retorted that she should think about the possibility of spending her eternity celebrating all her vacation's in a very hot environment.
153 posted on 12/01/2004 9:30:34 AM PST by OKIEDOC (LL THE)
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To: Modernman
The exact opposite is true in DC. The most expensive housing is generally closer in while the cheaper housing is further out. A decent single-family home in Arlington runs in the $600,000 plus range. You get a lot more for your money if you're willing to move out to Fairfax County, but then you add at least another hour to your commute every day.

You are comparing suburban townhomes to rowhomes in upper class/upper middle class white areas of DC and Arlginton - not a fair comparison. DC no longer has a working class/middle class white residential area. So think of the price of a rowhome in a middle class black neighborhood in DC, and you'll get the picture better. Elsewhere, think of northeast or south Philly, the northwest of Chicago, northern Baltimore, northside or southside of Pittsburgh, etc.

154 posted on 12/01/2004 9:31:12 AM PST by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: Lorianne
Thanks for the post. My daughter is grown and I have no grandchildren, but I see the effects outlined in this book every day at work. I think there will be a gradual change, but I feel sad for those who find that it's too late to make a difference.

Carolyn

155 posted on 12/01/2004 9:39:06 AM PST by CDHart
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To: Sam the Sham

This has nothing to do with taxes.

The advent of the two income family coincided with the explosion of the cost of the nice house in the suburbs with the good school district as middle class whites poured out of cities in the 70's. That house costs two paychecks. Period.

You hit the nail on the head. My wife is actually due today with our first child. She's on 12 weeks maternity leave. Unfortunately, living in Boston, we have no chance of affording our house without her full-time job. Moving to the suburbs is all well and good, but the houses are just as expensive. We're going the au pair (SP?) route.


156 posted on 12/01/2004 9:40:23 AM PST by strider44
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To: Modernman
So being an American is somehow genetic? Why would you think that a kid raised by American parents in American society from a very young age cannot be an American simply because they were born in another country?

There is no gene for being an American.

If there is no gene for being an American, than there is no American nation, just a bunch of disparate ethnic groups living in a multicultural society under a common government ... hmmm .... that sounds like liberal propaganda to me.

America was founded by Europeans of common Germanic descent from the northwest corner of Europe (England, Scotland, Ireland, northern France, western Germany, Holland, Scandanavia). When people think of a typical American, they think of someone like President Bush who is Anglo-Saxon, not someone who like Gov. Blagjoegovich from Illinois, who is of Serbian descent, or ex Gov. Dukakis of Massachusetts, who is of Greek descent. The only exception to this would be the Black American nation - the descendants of the slaves, who are their own little nation unto themselves and which is why America is always seen as White or Black.

Other people living in America who fail to meld culturally and racially/genetically into the dominant Anglo-Germanic-Irish group are typically viewed as outsiders or ethnic/racial particularists who refuse assimilation - the hyphenated Americans.

In fact, it is the amalgamation of the people from the British Isles, and from the northwest of the continent that created the unique American nation racially (just as the melding of Celt, Roman, and German in Briton created the English nation, or of Celt and Norse in Ireland created the irish nation), and it is that amalgamation that makes us not be Britons or Germans or Irish anymore. Similarly, the amalgamation of different African groups in America created the unique Black American nation, which with its colony in Liberia, clearly stands apart from their African brethren.

Perhaps sometime you will go to Concord, Massachusetts, and read the inscription at the North Bridge.

157 posted on 12/01/2004 9:50:28 AM PST by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: strider44
Unfortunately, living in Boston, we have no chance of affording our house without her full-time job. Moving to the suburbs is all well and good, but the houses are just as expensive. We're going the au pair (SP?) route.

Why not move? If not to New Hampshire, then a whole other region where someone else is not raising your children.

158 posted on 12/01/2004 9:51:56 AM PST by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: Dems_R_Losers

The feminists talked women into trading in one job for 1 1/2 or 2, depending on their man. It's amazing they got away with selling that bill of goods.


159 posted on 12/01/2004 9:52:59 AM PST by colorado tanker (The People Have Spoken)
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To: Hermann the Cherusker

I love people that spit out just move. Here's where I've lived: Massachusetts, Vermont, North Carolina, Alabama, Virginia, Germany (3-years), California, and Kentucky. That's what 8 years of active duty and 3 years working at Procter and Gamble do to you. My entire extended family (we're talking over 50 people) live in Massachusetts. Is it strange of me and my wife to want to live close to family? Do you think that has a positive effect on my future son?

I own my own business with a partner. We put our heart and soles into the company ans also plenty of money. We're established in Massachusetts. My wife had a job where she worked 3 weeks in a row, then had a month or two off. It was a consulting position. Fairly good situation to have kids. Her company went under. We have a mortgage. We needed her income. Does that make us evil? We both drive cars over 6 years old, bought used.

We're going to do what we can to make things work. a Live-in is better than day care 5 days a week. My son will be around his grand parents, aunts, uncles, and cousins all the time. We all help each other out. I'm sorry, but moving to South Dakota or Mississippi is not a solution for us. Get real.


160 posted on 12/01/2004 10:14:49 AM PST by strider44
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