Opinion Let us now praise single moms - Lord help us all

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Let us now praise single moms​


By David G. Allan, CNN
Published 3:07 AM EDT, Sun May 14, 2023

CNN —
Roughly 24 million, or one-third of all American children under age 18, are living with an unmarried parent, according to a 2018 Pew Research Center analysis of US Census Bureau data. And 81% of those single parent homes are headed by a mom.

This has been a growing trend since the late 1960s. The number of kids being raised by mostly single moms has more than doubled between 1968 and 2017.
Yet despite growing up in the middle of this trend, in the 1970s and ’80s, when divorce was increasingly common and “Kramer vs. Kramer” felt like the documentary of our childhood, and despite being part of a generation of latchkey kids who came home from school while parents were still at work, I was, I confess, embarrassed to be raised by a single mom when I was growing up.

For the majority of my 12 years of Catholic school, I was the only student who lived with one parent. And for that reason, I was also, demonstratively, the poorest kid in my school. We lived off one paycheck, or paychecks when my mom held multiple jobs at once. The modest child support went to school tuition.
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Like most kids, I didn’t want to be different. I wanted to be “normal.” “Why can’t we just be normal?” I’d often lament to my mom.

I was embarrassed by our car, which broke down; embarrassed that we didn’t seem to go anywhere for vacation; that I didn’t have brand-name clothes (thank God for school uniforms that greatly leveled the playing field); or video games; or cable TV; or anything else that my classmates had. I was embarrassed that my dad, who lived in a neighboring state, never came to any school events.

And I was teased for it. “Why don’t you get a new car?” “Your gym shoes are fake Nikes.” “Do you even have a dad?” I was often angry. I got into a lot of fights. When the principal’s office called home because I got into it with another kid, it was always my mom who had to come in.

Of course, my mother, like all parents, only added to that embarrassment. She was, and still is, artistically inclined and health-conscious. We went to museums and art stores instead of amusement parks and toy stores. I went to a summer camp run by cloistered monks … in heavy brown robes. My mom performed in community theater and sometimes roped me into bit parts. We went to clown school … together. At Christmas, I often got books and clothes. And my mom shopped for groceries at health food stores, which was much more unusual back then and involved a lot of bulk foods, homegrown sprouts and warm, freshly ground peanut butter. I had an all-carob Easter one year. I was embarrassed by my un-tradable school lunches and embarrassed at meals when friends spent the night.

Sitting under a framed movie poster of Richard Attenborough’s “Gandhi,” my friend would stare at an unappetizing breakfast bowl of “natural” cereal I poured for him out of a bulk food bag. His breath would blow a few rice puffs out of the bowl and across the table. “We can drizzle honey on it!” I’d say, as if that would solve everything. And then he’d go home to eat his Honeycomb or Count Chocula or whatever.

“Why can’t we just be normal?”

The kids are all right​

There has been a lot of research over the decades that has shown children of single parents report more family distress and conflict and live at a lower socioeconomic status compared to those growing up in two-parent households. Two-parent families usually have more income and are generally able to provide more emotional resources to children, and that’s also a reflection of how little the United States in general does to support working mothers with parental paid leave and access to more health services and quality education.

And of course, it’s difficult to compare single parenting outcomes to hypothetical alternatives. For many, a single mom can create a much safer or more stable environment than living with an abusive parent and spouse. Just growing up in an unhappy marriage has an effect on children.

A 2017 study, however, looked at the long-term effects of single parenthood on kids and found that it had nearly no impact on their general life satisfaction. The authors also found no evidence “supporting the widely held notion from popular science that boys are more affected than girls by the absence of their fathers.” What mattered most in terms of thriving, they concluded, was the quality and strength of the relationship between children and parents.

A separate 10-year study on single parenting that collected data from 40,000 households in the UK came to a similar conclusion last year. “There is no evidence of a negative impact of living in a single parent household on children’s wellbeing, with regard to self-reported life satisfaction, quality of peer relationships, or positivity about family life,” the report states. “Children who are living or have lived in single parent families score as highly, or higher, against each measure of wellbeing than those who have always lived in two parent families”

Being raised by a single parent required an Emersonian amount of self-reliance. I got myself to school in the morning, figured out how to apply to college, paid my way through that education and embarked on a career with no shortcuts or introductions. Our poverty made me class-conscious even as I earned my way into the middle class myself. My role model for what women are and should be was smart, strong, independent and deserving of all respect.

Even my childhood embarrassment was character-building, giving me a deeper sense of self-worth that is dependent neither on material things nor the opinion of those I don’t admire.

I’m not embarrassed now. Being raised by a single mother means the opposite to me today: I have a pride in her for enduring so much (including the indignity of a son perpetually embarrassed by our situation).

But even as a kid, I thought of her as a role model of resilience and resourcefulness. She imparted integrity, a love of the arts and a sense of occasion for the things I loved, like “Star Wars” and Orioles baseball. Before the age of 10, I was exposed to classical music, classic film, anti-nuclear activism, boxing (as participant) and yoga (long before it was a thing people did at gyms). And her exuberant creativity meant she was also a lot of fun growing up. We once invented a board game about the holidays of the world’s religions. On weekend mornings, we went to a park near a music conservancy to hear musicians practice while we ate our granola breakfast.

Nothing about the financial and logistical stress of our years together kept her from raising a responsible, decent, curious, creative and accomplished son with very high life satisfaction. She gets more credit for that than any other individual, except maybe me. I’m not embarrassed, I’m grateful.

Let us now praise single mothers. All of them. The “weird” ones. The struggling ones. The driven ones who choose to parent alone. The widowed, who didn’t. The brave ones who divorced for the well-being of their kids and/or themselves. They are all raising about 19 million children right now, and they need all the support they can get.
 
Roughly 24 million, or one-third of all American children under age 18, are living with an unmarried parent
That is not the same thing as a "single mom".

We should not be normalizing disadvantage because some coping faggots got walked on on by daddy.

Next thing you know this loser is going to be advocating and celebrating hobbling children.
Being raised by a single parent required an Emersonian amount of self-reliance.
Maybe if your mom is a drunk.
 
There is a difference between "single mom" - my husband died in Iraq and I have two small kids, and "single mom" - I birth 20 negroids all of different fathers and don't expect them to stay and help.
 
More stronk indahpendent wahmen who aint be needin no man!

...They gets the gubmint to be their sugar daddy.
 
To the mothers -and fathers- that lost their spouse and had to pick up the pieces for the sake of their children and soldier on, those need to be praised. To the mothers -and fathers- who were able to escape an abusive spouse with their children and are now working on rebuilding their lives deserve praise.

To the women that decided to fuck every John, Dick, and Harry and don't expect them to step up and be fathers - go fuck yourself. To the mothers that decided to suddenly pack up the kids and disappear for 6+ months so they can file that their husband abandoned the family - you deserve prison and to never be around children again. To the mothers -and fathers- that fuck with the children to hurt their former spouse, you deserve a special spot in hell.
 
A 2017 study, however, looked at the long-term effects of single parenthood on kids and found that it had nearly no impact on their general life satisfaction. The authors also found no evidence “supporting the widely held notion from popular science that boys are more affected than girls by the absence of their fathers.” What mattered most in terms of thriving, they concluded, was the quality and strength of the relationship between children and parents.

A separate 10-year study on single parenting that collected data from 40,000 households in the UK came to a similar conclusion last year. “There is no evidence of a negative impact of living in a single parent household on children’s wellbeing, with regard to self-reported life satisfaction, quality of peer relationships, or positivity about family life,” the report states. “Children who are living or have lived in single parent families score as highly, or higher, against each measure of wellbeing than those who have always lived in two parent families”
I'm sure these studies aren't a load of crap.
 
As somebody who was raised by a single mom for some time(dad left her when my oldest brother became 18).

Fuck single moms! i love my mother, but I would have been lost with no older brother to beat sense into me.
boys not only need somebody to teach, they also need somebody to beat them into shape and a weekend dad can teach but cant beat...
 
There is a difference between "single mom" - my husband died in Iraq and I have two small kids, and "single mom" - I birth 20 negroids all of different fathers and don't expect them to stay and help.
I hate this trend where any mother with an absent spouse/father of children is called a "Single Mother". It's like, whatever happened to:
- DIVORCED mother
- WIDOW (for those whose spouse died)

Neither of these are "single mothers" in the sense of that old Ace of Base song.

Those that ride the cock carousel, should never have had kids. Cluster B clusterfucks/narcissists/histrionics that do this shit should have their kids taken away.
 
And of course, it’s difficult to compare single parenting outcomes to hypothetical alternatives. For many, a single mom can create a much safer or more stable environment than living with an abusive parent and spouse. Just growing up in an unhappy marriage has an effect on children.
It's not that hard, last time I checked (it has been years by now), the American Psychology Association stated the Nuclear Family is the gold standard for raising children. Don't fucking lie to me.

A 2017 study, however, looked at the long-term effects of single parenthood on kids and found that it had nearly no impact on their general life satisfaction. The authors also found no evidence “supporting the widely held notion from popular science that boys are more affected than girls by the absence of their fathers.” What mattered most in terms of thriving, they concluded, was the quality and strength of the relationship between children and parents.
I'm really curious about this study; because "long-term effects" can vastly vary by where you are. Growing up rural in a single parent household meant we were left alone and in our more rebellious teenage years, yes it was cool; but at the same time, especially as I've gotten older, I realize I would've preferred to have someone home instead of being by myself. I'm also aware of the numbers showing fatherless homes have more sons/young men getting in trouble; but society doesn't care about their boys, so they don't count.
 
There is a difference between "single mom" - my husband died in Iraq and I have two small kids, and "single mom" - I birth 20 negroids all of different fathers and don't expect them to stay and help.
The former is called a widow, when people call some hoe a single mom they always refer to the latter.
 
To the mothers -and fathers- that lost their spouse and had to pick up the pieces for the sake of their children and soldier on, those need to be praised. To the mothers -and fathers- who were able to escape an abusive spouse with their children and are now working on rebuilding their lives deserve praise.
These are the only parents I would have no problem that they get any kind of help, either economic support, tax exceptions, social or mental support, for them and the child. Anything to help them be better parents.

But as soon as you start with the bed-hopping, you lost it all. Some would say this is the government trying to push their morals into people, but it's not. You are not banned from fucking Tyrone, Denzel, and Jamal and get pregnant by the three of them at the same time, just that the government isn't obligated to support those babies.
 
As somebody who was raised by a single mom for some time(dad left her when my oldest brother became 18).

Fuck single moms! i love my mother, but I would have been lost with no older brother to beat sense into me.
boys not only need somebody to teach, they also need somebody to beat them into shape and a weekend dad can teach but cant beat...
Same here. I would be a much worse person without my grandpa stepping in to act like a father.

Boys need to see how men talk; how they act and carry themselves. They need to be exposed to that so they can learn from it and become men themselves.

Single moms raise violent and emotionally stunted men and hyper insecure slutty women. There's nothing to praise.
 
Not about to praise anybody who had a kid in the past century.
 
I wonder if there are any differences between single fathers and single mother led homes.

I would suspect the former produces drastically better outcomes.

If its a case of "dad died when you were two and mom bust her ass to raise you" then sure you might turn out fine, as opposed to 'negress raises 10 welps to get more welfare checks".
 
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