Toronto Star

Kid-first parenting takes toll on spouses

As children increasing­ly rule the roost, couples have less time for their relationsh­ip

- DANIELLE BRAFF CHICAGO TRIBUNE

First comes love, then comes marriage, then comes the baby and the end of the fairy tale.

Relationsh­ips suffer for about two out of three couples within the first three years of having a child, according to research by the Seattle-based Gottman Institute.

Most couples regularly respond to the needs of their children first, neglecting their partners. As time goes on, the relationsh­ip balance can continue to unravel, said Michael McNulty, master trainer at the Gottman Institute.

“It’s a real common challenge,” McNulty said. “Every couple is challenged with, ‘How do I cover all my bases with my life and my partner with my new child.’ ”

The basis of any strong relationsh­ip is a good strong friendship, which involves feeling appreciate­d and turning toward each other for help, McNulty said.

“It becomes trickier when couples are parents and the challenge is figuring out how to work together on sleep deprivatio­n, how to figure out how to have a strong friendship and have a physical connection,” he said.

There’s extra pressure for parents to spend more time with their kids nowadays, and working and stay-athome mothers spent more than 14 hours a week with their children in 2010 compared with the 10 hours they spent with them in1965, according to the Pew Research Center. The result: even fewer hours to devote to relationsh­ips.

But since children need their parents more than partners need each other, it’s tricky for most parents to tear themselves away from their children.

“I think there is a general feeling nowadays that kids rule the roost, and I think that this is terribly out of balance,” said Jennifer Landa, an OB-GYN and author of The Sex Drive Solution for Women.

What began as putting children first has spiralled out of control, leaving parents feeling depleted and empty, stressed out and exhausted.

“These high stress levels and low self-care habits frequently lead to irritabili­ty, and that commonly is tak- en out on those closest to us, especially our spouses,” Landa said. “This can destroy relationsh­ips slowly over time.”

As parents continue to give more of themselves to their children, they have less to give to each other, and these less satisfying romantic relationsh­ips appear to be suffering, says Jean Fitzpatric­k, a licensed relationsh­ip therapist in New York who works with couples at all stages including pre-baby and postpartum.

This appears to be a recent phenomenon.

In past generation­s, it was often expected that mothers would devote themselves to child rearing and fathers would focus on work, and they would organize couple time in a more formal way.

“Today’s couples are likely to have less gendered relationsh­ips, and the research tells us that these are more satisfying,” Fitzpatric­k said. This can be positive because both partners are familiar with each other’s worlds.

“On the minus side, sometimes, they both feel overloaded,” she said.

If everyone is working and doing the chores and taking care of the children and essentiall­y having it all, then there’s not much time left to focus on the relationsh­ip and relationsh­ips need time and maintenanc­e, or else they’ll flounder.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? It’s tricky for most parents to tear themselves away from their children, but over time, that can unravel a marriage.
DREAMSTIME It’s tricky for most parents to tear themselves away from their children, but over time, that can unravel a marriage.

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