Strong families have a mother and a father working together for the good of each child, according to Jenet Jacob Erickson at The Deseret News. Strong families are needed for strong communities, states, and nations.
According
to research completed by the author, “oxytocin is a ‘bonding hormone’ that
floods mothers in childbirth and breastfeeding” is also instrumental in the “bonding
processes of fathers.” However, the hormone works differently in the two
parents. For mothers, the hormone
involves lots of “cooing and cuddling,” but for fathers, the hormone acts as
lots of “tickling and tossing.” What is more, those reciprocal patterns …[go]
far beyond bonding.” Erickson gave the following explanation:
It goes without saying there is
significant overlap in how mothers and fathers influence children. Both parents
can provide nurturing, feeding, stimulation, teaching and guidance crucial for
children to become competent adults. But research also shows that mothers and
fathers have distinct physiological and psychologically influenced predispositions
that contribute to different strengths and styles and styles of interaction
with children. When combined, the distinctions create a oneness that uniquely
fosters the optimal development of children.
With Mother’s Day this weekend, and Father’s
Day next month, it’s worth bringing more attention to some of this. From birth,
infants are primed to seek out their mother to form a bond of emotional
communication, already knowing her smell, voice and heartbeat. Without any
specific training, mothers intuitively match their infants’ emotional state and
provide the optimal level of stimulation needed to lay the foundations of
personality, self-awareness, attention, empathy, regulation of stress, ability
to understand emotions and capacity for intimacy. Maternal sensitivity, a
measure of a mother’s responsiveness, attunement and nonintrusiveness, has been
identified as the strongest, most consistent predictor of a child’s cognitive,
social and emotional development.
The father-child bond is also important,
shaping brain development beginning in the toddler years. But fathers more
often use playfulness and stimulating physical activity to connect with their
children, orienting their children to the outside world, even in the way they
hold them like a football. This paternal orientation likewise addresses
important developmental needs in children.
In fact, a father’s influence on social-emotional
capacity complements a mother’s in critically important ways. Women tend to
express all emotions – other than anger – stronger than men, but also tend to
be better able to regulate emotions, which bolsters specific nurturing
capacities by, for instance, delaying personal gratification, which bolsters specific
nurturing capacities by, for instance, delaying personal gratification and
inhibiting aggressive responses.
Throughout their lives, children
consequently tend to go to their mothers for comfort in times of pain or
stress. When fathers respond to children’s emotional hurts, by comparison, they
are more likely to focus on fixing the problem rather than addressing the hurt
feeling.
This seeming “indifference” to the emotion
may not appear nurturing but becomes very useful – particularly as children
grow older. Indeed, children tend to seek out and share things with their dads
precisely because of their measured, problem-solving responses. The less emotional
response actually becomes a strategic form of nurturing in emotionally-charged
situations.
Erickson shared numerous other reasons why children need both a mother and a father. If you want to learn more, click here.
As
Erickson emphasized some point in her article, it takes both a mother and a
father to create a child. It only makes sense that it takes a mother and a
father to rear such a child. Strong families consist of both a mother and a father,
and strong families strengthen their communities, states, and nations.
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