CHAPTER 10 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 57
About This Presentation
Title:

CHAPTER 10

Description:

CHAPTER 10 FAMILY LIFE CYCLE Instructor: Wendy Crapo – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:227
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 58
Provided by: RaC86
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CHAPTER 10


1
CHAPTER 10 FAMILY LIFE CYCLE
  • Instructor Wendy Crapo

2
Used by permission of THE ACADEMY OF NURSING 2355
E. 3900 S. S.L.C., UT 84124 801-506-0064
3
FAMILY LIFE CYLCE
4
BEGINNING MARRIAGES
PREDICTION OF SUCCESS Until death do us part
Not a fact for most marriages.
  • What general age is best?
  • 20-25 Youthful marriages
  • Up to age 25, the older you are at marriage the
    greater likelihood of marital happiness.
  • Teens have higher divorce
  • After age 30 higher divorces

5
Prediction of Success
  • Education income, insight, status
  • Length of engagement
  • Childhood environment relationship with family
    of origin attachment.
  • Divorced parents may cause a shying away from
    marriage.
  • Loving each other did not have affect on whether
    or not they fought.
  • HONEYMOON EFFECT Overlooking problems

6
PREDICTION OF SUCCESS FACTORS
  • Communicate well
  • Resolve conflict in a constructive way
  • Realistic expectations of marriage
  • Like each other as people (opposites attract
    doesnt work)
  • Undesirable traits are magnified in marriage
  • Agree on religion ethical issues
  • Balance leisure activities with each other

7
ENGAGEMENT (More of a ritual than a binding
commitment)
  • How long should engagement be?
  • The longer you are engaged the more likely you
    are to discover compatibilities.
  • But it can go too long too.
  • 24 are pregnant when marry.
  • Purpose of engagement
  • Commitment to marry (try out how it feels).
  • Think about realities of married life.
  • Beginning of kinship (start making ties with
    in-laws).
  • Become a couple.

8
Feelings during engagement
  • Anxiety
  • Maturation dependency
  • Losses
  • Question partner choice
  • Gender role conflict
  • Idealization disillusionment
  • Get to know self (weaknesses strengths)

9
WEDDING RITUAL (65 church weddings)
  • Symbolized profound life transition step into
    adulthood
  • Give the bride away (when father received pledge
    of money he gave bride away)
  • Exchange of rings (From Egypt timelessness to
    give it back is symbolic gesture)
  • Not wearing a ring is symbolic statement about
    the marriage
  • Carrying bride over threshold (Greece Rome
    symbolic of abduction because bride would not
    willingly leave her fathers house)
  • Eating of cake (offering made to household of
  • Gods made union sacred)
  • Jumping the broomstick (African tradition)
  • Honeymoon (Pagan time of intoxication
  • to insure fertility)
  • Flower girls (carried wheat to symbolize
    fertility)

Activity
In groups brainstorm all expenses for a wedding
and estimate the cost.
10
HONEYMOON
  • HONEYMOON PURPOSES
  • Rest and Recreation
  • Time for being alone
  • Initial adjustment to marriage
  • GUIDELINES WHEN PLANNING
  • A HONEYMOON
  • Dont go into debt
  • May delay to a better time
  • Honeymoon not necessary for a happy marriage
  • NATIONAL SURVEYS SHOW
  • 50 of couples interviewed report their honeymoon
    was not happy at all.
  • People most unhappy with honeymoons are young
    women who have always lived at home.

11
ENDURING MARRIAGES
  • Couples who are happily in love.
  • Unhappy couples who continue marriage out of
    habit and fear.
  • Couples in between who are neither happy nor
    unhappy and accept the situation.
  • 20 were happy and 20 were unhappy.
  • Little correlation between happy marriages and
    stable ones.
  • In general, however, the quality of the marital
    relationship appears to show continuity over the
    years.

12
HAPPILY MARRIED Whats the Secret?
  • When they met they felt immediately at home with
    each other. Early on there is a strong physical
    and/or emotional attraction they feel a
    sweeping sense of connection.
  • Happy couples often experience themselves as
    being the same and different. Similar
    backgrounds but each wants to embrace the others
    differentness each wanted to be more like the
    other.
  • Happy couples establish and follow daily
    routines. This promotes confidence and trust.
  • Happy couples usually describe their mate as
    their best friend. They like each other very
    much, above all others. They spent a lot of time
    together.
  • Happy couples share a life dream. They work
    together to make the dream come true.

13
HAPPILY MARRIED cont.
  • Happy couples dont hold a grudge. High capacity
    to resolve conflict and move on.
  • Happy couples expect each other to do their best.
    They believe in their partner.
  • Happy couples roll with the changes. People do
    change and good marriages change for their
    partner and for the better.
  • Happy couples agree to have or not to have
    children. They usually share a dream of creating
    a family.
  • Happy couples understand the importance of sex
    romance. Friendship was more important than sex
    but sex was the strong force binding them
    together through the years.

14
HAPPILY MARRIED cont.
  • Happy couples see each others best self. They
    see each other clearly as they are but also what
    they can become.
  • Happy couples strongly believe in and practice
    monogamy. Fidelity was simply expected and an
    open marriage was not appealing to happily
    married couples.
  • Happily married couples share a complete absence
    of power struggle. Considered each other to be
    equal and their money, especially, was always
    theirs, not mine.
  • Happy couples support each other in all areas.
    Always support each others dreams, even when
    they dont agree or understand.
  • Happy couples feel a great deal of faith in each
    other even when one thinks the other is wrong.
    May not think they are making the right choice
    but they give their support.

15
ESCENTIAL CHARACTERISTICS
  • Marriage is 1, even over the kids
  • Fidelity
  • Commitment
  • Unselfishness
  • Time spent together
  • Talk listen
  • Touching
  • Be positive about mate marriage

16
STAGE 1 - INITIAL ADJUSTMENT TO MARRIAGE
  • Before marriage, you are afraid of losing each
    other.
  • After marriage, you are afraid of losing
    yourself.
  • Identity bargaining The process of role
    adjustments in a relationship
  • Identify with a role
  • Having the role validated by others
  • Negotiating with the partner to make changes in
    the role
  • Establishing Boundaries Adjusting the ties with
    family of origin

17
Stage 1 continued MARITAL ADJUSTMENTS
  • Family roles
  • Emotional support to partner
  • Adjust personal habits
  • Negotiate gender roles
  • Establish family employment priorities
  • Develop communication skills
  • Manage money
  • Establish kin relationship (cohabitating partners
    usually never accepted as kin)
  • Participate in larger community

18
Stage 1 continuedIDENTITY BARGAINING
  • Role adjustment in a relationship.
  • Identify negotiate.
  • Relationships help us discover ourselves.
  • An intimate relationship requires us to define
    who we are.

19
Stage 1 continuedIN-LAWS
  • Daughters who are close sometimes have a problem
    letting go.
  • But birth of child helps improve and change this
    relationship.
  • Need to establish new boundaries with in-laws

20
STAGE 2 - CHILDBEARING FAMILY
  • (From the birth of the first child until that
    child is 2 ½ years old)
  • Developmental Tasks
  • Adjusting to increased family size
  • Caring for an infant
  • Providing a positive developmental environment

21
STAGE 3 - FAMILIES WITH PRESCHOOLERS
  • (When the oldest child is between the ages of 2 ½
    and 6)
  • Developmental Tasks
  • Satisfying the needs and interests of preschool
    children
  • Coping with demands on energy and attention with
    less privacy at home

22
STAGE 4 - FAMILIES WITH SCHOOL AGE CHILDREN
  • (When the oldest child is between the ages of 6
    to 13)
  • Developmental Tasks
  • Promoting educational achievement
  • Fitting in the community of families with
    school-age children

23
STAGE 5 - FAMILIES WITH TEENAGERS
  • (When the oldest child is between the ages of 13
    and 20)
  • Developmental Tasks
  • Allowing and helping children to become more
    independent
  • Coping with their independence
  • Developing new interests beyond child care

24
STAGE 6 MIDDLE AGE MARRIAGES (LAUNCHING
CENTER)
  • May divorce at this time without children present
    (empty nest which is not always negative).
  • Boomerang generation Children return home due
    to high unemployment, housing cost, low wages,
    divorce and personal problems.

25
STAGE 7 - LATER LIFE MARRIAGES (EMPTY NEST)
  • (More satisfying)
  • Higher income
  • Although widows often have financial hardships
  • But happily married widows choose to remarry more
    often
  • Old age not poverty stricken or neglected
  • Sandwich generation Must raise dependent
    children dependent parents.
  • Intermittent extended family Take in other
    relatives in time of need.

Question
Does parenting end when children are grown
gone?
26
GRANDPARENTING
  • Grandparents distance is biggest factor in
    involvement
  • 25 of preschool children cared for by
    grandparents
  • Companionate relationships most common with
    grandchildren

27
INDIVIDUAL TASK
  • Stage 1 (18-21 yrs) Developing autonomy
  • Stage 2 (22-28 yrs) Developing intimacy
    occupational identification
  • Stage 3 (29-31 yrs) Deciding about commitment to
    work marriage
  • Stage 4 (32-39 yrs) Deepening commitments
    pursuing more long-range goals
  • Stage 5 (40-42 yrs) Searching for fit between
    aspirations and environment
  • Stage 6 (43-59 yrs) Re-stabilizing and reordering
    priorities
  • State 7 (60 yrs) Dealing effectively with aging,
    illness and death wile retaining zest for life

28
MARITAL TASK
  • Stage 1 (18-21 yrs) Shift from family of origin
    to new commitment
  • Stage 2 (22-28 yrs) Provisional marital
    commitment
  • Stage 3 (29-31 yrs) Commitment crisis
    restlessness
  • Stage 4 (32-39 yrs) Productivity children, work,
    friends, marriage
  • Stage 5 (40-42 yrs) Summing up success failure
    and future goals sought
  • Stage 6 (43-59 yrs) Resolving conflicts and
    stabilizing the marriage for the long haul
  • State 7 (60 yrs) Supporting enhancing each
    others struggle for productivity and fulfillment
    in face of aging

29
INTIMACY
  • Stage 1 (18-21 yrs) Fragile intimacy
  • Stage 2 (22-28 yrs) Deepening but ambivalent
    intimacy
  • Stage 3 (29-31 yrs) Increasing distance while
    partners make up their minds about each other
  • Stage 4 (32-39 yrs) Increase in intimacy in
    good marriages gradual distancing in bad
    marriages
  • Stage 5 (40-42 yrs) Tenuous intimacy as fantasies
    about other increase
  • Stage 6 (43-59 yrs) Intimacy is threatened by
    aging and boredom. Departure of children may
    increase or decrease intimacy.
  • State 7 (60 yrs) Struggle to maintain intimacy
    in face or eventual separation, usually plateaus

30
POWER
  • Stage 1 (18-21 yrs) Testing of power
  • Stage 2 (22-28 yrs) Establish pattern of
    conflict resolution
  • Stage 3 (29-31 yrs) Sharp vying for power and
    dominance
  • Stage 4 (32-39 yrs) Establish patterns of
    decision making and dominance
  • Stage 5 (40-42 yrs) Power in outside world is
    tested via power in the marriage
  • Stage 6 (43-59 yrs) Conflicts often increase when
    children leave and security appears threatened
  • State 7 (60 yrs) Survival fears stir up needs
    for control and dominance

31
MARITAL BOUNDARIES
  • Stage 1 (18-21 yrs) Conflicts over in-laws
  • Stage 2 (22-28 yrs) Friends and potential lovers
    work versus family
  • Stage 3 (29-31 yrs) Temporary disruptions
    including extramarital sex or reactive fortress
    building
  • Stage 4 (32-39 yrs) Nuclear family closes
    boundaries
  • Stage 5 (40-42 yrs) Disruption due to
    reevaluation drive versus re-stabilization
  • Stage 6 (43-59 yrs) Boundaries are usually fixed
    except in crisis
  • State 7 (60 yrs) Loss of family friends leads
    to closing in of boundaries, important to
    maintain ties with outside world

32
INDIVIDUAL STAGE
  • Stage 1 (18-21 yrs) Develop roots
  • Stage 2 (22-28 yrs) Provisional adulthood
  • Stage 3 (29-31 yrs) Transition at age 30
  • Stage 4 (32-39 yrs) Settling down
  • Stage 5 (40-42 yrs) Midlife transition
  • Stage 6 (43-59 yrs) Middle adulthood
  • State 7 (60 yrs) Old age

33
RETIREMENT
  • Earlier 75 choose to retire before age 65
    (WHY?)
  • More egalitarian marriages
  • Highest degree of marital satisfaction since
    early marriage
  • Improved health

34
Read Ann Landers Old folks are worth a fortune
Activity
35
CARING FOR AGED
How could an over abundance of support do more
harm than good? Can chronic illness help with
family cohesiveness?
Question
  • Caregiver Conflict
  • Earlier unresolved antagonisms and conflicts.
  • Caregivers inability to accept the relatives
    increasing dependence.
  • Conflicting loyalties between spouse or children
    and caring for the elderly.
  • Resentment towards the elderly relative for
    disrupting family routines.
  • Resentment of lack of involvement by other family
    members.
  • Anger if elderly relative tries to manipulate
    others.
  • Conflicts over money and inheritance.

36
COPING STRATEGIES
  • Plan for legal and financial incapacities
  • Manage income and expenses
  • Arrange for long term care
  • Assess capabilities of whole family unit
  • Divide responsibilities among whole family unit
  • Determine community backup services

37
Most common diseasesand causes of death
Question
What are the most common chronic diseases of
people over 75?
  • 1. Arthritis
  • 2. Hypertension
  • 3. Hearing impairment
  • 4. Heart disease
  • 5. Cataracts
  • 6. Deformity orthopedic impairment
  • 7. Diabetes

Question
What are the most common causes of death of
people over 75?
1. Heart disease 2. Cancer 3. Stroke 4. Lung
disease
38
CARING FOR FAMILY MEMBER WITH CHRONIC ILLNESSS
  • Strained family relations
  • Modifications in family activities and goals
  • Increased tasks and time commitments
  • Increased financial costs
  • Special housing requirements
  • Social isolation
  • Medical concerns
  • Grieving over disabilities,
  • limitations and restricted life opportunity

39
COPING STATEGIES
  • Make a place for the illness, and keep balance in
    life.
  • Keep communication open.
  • Cultivate sources of support.
  • Develop good working relationship with healthcare
    professionals.

Discuss in groups Should a health care
professional be detached? Do families interfere
with the efforts of practitioners to help
patients? Should healthcare professionals address
things beyond the physical such as economical,
emotional, psychological and spiritual issues?
Activity
40
DEATHWHY STUDY ABOUT DEATH?
  • Our society is unusual, we shut death in a closet
  • Death is a natural part of life
  • Death is often emotional and unpleasant
  • Death must be faced
  • Part of our society
  • We used to be more open about death
  • People used to die at home more often
  • Funerals and viewings were at home
  • Friends and family were there at moment of death
  • Illnesses were short

41
DEATH
  • DENIAL remove dead from home, not telling
    children.
  • EXPLOITATION Desensitized and deny the
    realities of death
  • ROMANITCIZATION Those lead to think of death as
    beautiful can be disillusioned.
  • Fear Fear of death keeps us alive.
  • Denial healthy, it keeps us from
  • dwelling on morbidity of death.
  • Acknowledging that death exists can
  • help us prioritize appreciate.

Activity
Do handout Will you live to be 100?
42
STAGES OF DEATH
  • A dying person should not be expected to behave
    in a certain manner, only his/her own way.
  • Denial isolation
  • Anger
  • Bargaining
  • Depression
  • Acceptance

43
GRIEVING PROCESS
  • Guilt is common, 1st year is hard at holidays.
  • Consoling Listen, dont avoid, give practical
    support.
  • Needs Death with dignity (respect as human
    being).
  • Hospice can help.

44
WHAT NOT TO SAY TO THE BEREAVED
  • Cheer up
  • Time to heal all wounds
  • Come on, you need to get over this
  • We want the old you back
  • Ill help you get rid of their things
  • Theyre better off
  • It was Gods will
  • Call me if you need me

45
WHAT TO SAY TO THE BEREAVED
  • Its OK to cry
  • I want you to know Im thinking about you
  • Im sad for you
  • I care about you
  • Im here if you want to talk
  • You dont have to be strong or apologize for
    crying.
  • Do accept them and their feelings
  • Let them cry when they want to
  • Let them talk about the dead person (They are in
    their thoughts often)

46
DEFINITIONS OF DEATH
  • LEGAL DEATH Court says it has irreversible
    cessation to total brain function
  • THEOLOGICAL DEATH Occurs when soul leaves the
    body
  • MEDICAL DEATH Occurs when functions of human
    life stop
  • UNRECEPTIVITY UNRESPONSIVITY Irreversible coma

47
DEFINITIONS OF DEATHcontinued
  • NO MOVEMENTS OR BREATHING No muscle movement or
    respiration for at least 1 hour
  • NO REFLEXES Pupils fixed and dilated will not
    respond to bright lights
  • FLAT ELECTROENCE PHALGRAM EEG no brain waves
    for a period of time

48
DEATH VOCABULARY
  • AUTOPSY Post mortem exam
  • BEREAVEMENT Being grieved by the loss of a
    loved one.
  • CASKET Small chest or box (coffin)
  • COFFIN A box or chest for burying a corpse
  • CREMATION To reduce a dead body to ashes by
    burning
  • CREMATORIUM A furnace for cremation

49
DEATH VOCABULARYcontinued
  • CRYPT A chamber or vault wholly or partly
    underground, a vault under the main floor of a
    church
  • DEATH CERTIFICATE A certificate that certifies
    the death of a person
  • DECEASED No longer living
  • EMBALM To treat a dead body so as to protect
    from decay
  • EPITAPH An inscription on or at a tomb or grave
    in memory of the one buried there

50
DEATH VOCABULARYcontinued
  • EULOGY A commendatory formal statement or set
    oration
  • EUTHANASIA The act or practice of killing
    individuals that are hopelessly sick or injured
    for reasons of mercy.
  • FUNERAL HOME An establishment with facilities
    for the preparation of the dead for burial or
    cremation, for the viewing of the body and for
    funerals.
  • HEARSE A vehicle for conveying the dead to the
    grave
  • INHERITANCE The act of coming into possession
    of something
  • INTERMENT The act or ceremony of depositing the
    dead body in the earth or the tomb.

51
DEATH VOCABULARYcontinued
  • MAUSOLEUM Large tomb usually a stone building
    for places of entombment for dead above the
    ground.
  • MORGUE A place where the bodies of persons
    found dead are kept until identified and claimed
    by relatives or are released for burial.
  • MORTICIAN Undertaker
  • MORTUARY Relating to the burial of the dead

52
DEATH VOCABULARYcontinued
  • OBITUARY A notice of a persons death with a
    short biographical account
  • PALLBEARERS People who help to carry the coffin
    at a funeral
  • PYRE A combustible heap for burning a dead body
    as a funeral vile
  • REINCARNATION Rebirth in new bodies or forms of
    life
  • SARCOPHAGUS A stone coffin

53
DEATH VOCABULARYcontinued
  • TOMB An excavation in which a corpse is buried
  • URN A vessel that is particularly an ornamental
    vase on a pedestal to preserve the ashes after
    cremation
  • VAULT A burial chamber
  • WAKE The watch held over the body of a dread
    person prior to burial and sometimes accompanied
    by festivity

54
CULTURES
  • Jewish 7 days of restrictions like shaving,
    working, sex, 11 months pray for parent daily
  • Mexico Dead honored with gifts of food, prayer,
    nightly vigils

55
VOCABULARY
  • 1. Bereavement The response to a loved ones
    death, including customs, and the grieving
    process.
  • 2. Boomerang Generation Adults who return to
    family home and live with parents.
  • 3. Caregiver role The one who provides the most
    physical care and decision making.
  • 4. Duration of Marriage Effect Accumulation
    over time of negative factors that affect marital
    satisfaction.
  • 5. Empty Nest When last grown child has left
    home, usually not associated with mothers
    depression.

56
VOCABULARY contd
  • 6. Family Life Cycle The families changing
    roles and relationships at various stages,
    beginning with marriage and ending with death of
    a spouse.
  • 7. Honeymoon Effect Tendency of newly married
    couples to overlook problems.
  • 8. Hospice A place or program caring for
    terminally ill, emphasizing patient care and
    family support.
  • 9. Identity Bargaining The process of roles
    adjustments in a relationship, involving
    identifying with a role, role validated by
    others, negotiated with partner

57
VOCABULARY contd
  • 10. Intermittent Extended Family Taking into
    the family other relatives in times of need
  • 11. Sandwich Generation Individuals who care
    for both their own children and aging parents at
    the same time.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com