Maxx Family Life

Free College Financial Aid Single Moms Section


 

Free College Financial Aid Single Moms Navigation


|

Main Home Page
Family Life Blog
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Single Parent Dating |
Single Parent Free Grants For College |
Single Parent African American |
Single Parent Women In The Work Force |
Single Parent Internet Dating Service |
Student Aid For Single Moms |
Being A Single Parent |
Money For Single Moms |
Of Single Parent Families |
Businesses For Single Mom At Home |
Assistance For Single Moms |
Housing Assistance For Single Parents |
Loans For Single Moms |
Single Parents Dating |
Single Parents Raising Kids SPARK |

List of Single-Parenting Articles
List of Single-Parenting Links


Free College Financial Aid Single Moms Best seller

Get Your Marriage Back To Newlyweds Again: Read More ...

Pregnancy and Childbirth: Step by Step: Read More ...

Modern Guide To Raising Kids: Read More ...

Live a Longer, Healthier & Happier Life: Read More ...



Best Free College Financial Aid Single Moms products

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Main Free College Financial Aid Single Moms sponsors

Free College Financial Aid Single Moms
 



 

Welcome to Maxx Family Life

 

Free College Financial Aid Single Moms Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Free College Financial Aid Single Moms. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Children Of Single Parents And Crime Rates

from: Maxx Family Life



The hardest thing to face as a single parent is the intense emotions associated with being both a mother and a father to a child. This is further magnified when the other parent is absent or is deliberately not doing anything to fulfill his part in the caring for the children. More often than not, the single parent's psychological well being bogs down.

Single parents might try to cope with this strain by either trying to compensate by adopting both mom and dad roles, or by scouring the social scene for a partner to help him or her in the rearing of the child. The pressure is definitely high.

However, if truth be told, none of the above will help. If anything, they might even cause you to become more stressed. And when you end up being more stressed than ever, chances are this will reflect and magnify on your child.

If you're a single parent, ask yourself how your behavior and general outlook toward life affects your kid. Upon closer scrutiny, you might just find out that your child's constant tantrums and bouts of unexplained anger might just be the result of your continuing negativity. It's for these reasons that you should be careful.

Several studies show that children coming from single-parent households are more susceptible to destructive or rebellious behavior, not just because society imposes the need for a two-parent structure, but also, more often than not, the custodial parent is either too guilty that he or she smothers his child, or too busy to make ends meet to show how much he or she cares.

According to one study, about 90% of the change in crime rates between 1973 and 1995 had been accounted for by children born into single-family setups and those who'd been born outside of marriage.

While this isn't entirely true for all cases of that cover single parent households, we can't discount the fact that a majority of reports conducted in lieu of single parenthood and crime rates show they are, indeed, linked.

Children born into two-parent, or 'intact' homes, are also susceptible to committing a crime, so it would be impulsive to generalize that all kids under one-parent households are likely to become criminals.

Sure, two-parent settings place some sort of balance to a child's psychological well-being. However, it should also not be discounted that kids who grew up under an unhappy but intact home are also prone to some form of destructive behavior.

If you're a single parent, the best thing you can do to prevent this from happening is to be there for your child. You don't really need to be available 24-7 and spend so much just to show him or her that you care. The mere fact that you make it clear, on the occasions that you can, that your child's well-being is your utmost priority is enough.

Never forget to tell your child you love him or her. Do away with discussing the negative, especially if it's against the other parent, no matter how distressed you are with him or her.

If you're having trouble reaching out to your kid, particularly if you're realizing this need just now and your child is already a teen, seek counselling. Or have a one on one talk with your child so that both of you will understand each others feelings openly. Honesty is key in a single parent setting. If both parent and child are honest about what they think and feel, the less likely a rebellion would occur.

While you do feel somehow guilty for being a single parent (you may sometimes even think it's your fault that your kid is exhibiting rebellious behavior), you should immediately try to take it out of your system. Guilt will only magnify the ill effects on your child and might even push him or her further into ill behavior.

Simply put, a positive attitude will do wonders. A happy household, whether in a two-parent or single parent setting, is still a happy household. And this is all that matters.



Other Free College Financial Aid Single Moms related Articles

Ethnic Single Parenting
Stress And Single Parenting
Psychological Well Being Of Single Parents
Challenges Of Single Parenting
Facts About Single Parenting

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Free College Financial Aid Single Moms News

Unwed parenting on the rise nationally, locally

  On most days, it’s just Brittany Honer and her 5-year-old daughter, Kaitlin Ansell. They color. They go to the park. They play with toys or read until the 22-year-old single mom takes Kaitlin to an evening day care so she can work the late shift at a Casey’s General Store in Cedar Rapids. Their [...]

Read more...


Community Calendar

Submit your event at least two weeks in advance by going to events.savannahnow.com. You can also mail to Community Calendar, P.O. Box 1088, Savannah, GA 31402. Announcements are printed daily in the Accent section as space allows.

Read more...


BRIEFLY: May 18

Read about what's happening in and around Plymouth.

Read more...


A different kind of insecurity

I cried when I watched the 60 Minutes segment "Homeless Children: The Hard Times Generation" in March of 2011. Maybe you saw it; maybe you cried too.

Read more...