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Title: Marriages and Families: Changes, Choices, and Constraints Seventh Edition


1
  • Marriages and FamiliesChanges, Choices, and
    ConstraintsSeventh Edition
  • Nijole V. Benokraitis
  • Chapter Sixteen
  • Remarriages and Stepfamilies

2
Dating after Divorce
  • If people are young and havent been married very
    long, then reentering the dating scene can be
    fairly easy.
  • As people age they become more concerned about
    their physical appearance and they are nervous
    about reentering the dating scene.
  • Often those who have not dated for a very long
    time may feel self-conscious because they have
    less self-confidence.

3
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4
Cohabitation after a Divorce
  • Many divorced people, and some who are widowed
    after age 50 or so, prepare for remarriage by
    living together.
  • They may be testing the relationship.
  • Half of all remarriages begin with cohabitation.
    In fact, living together after divorce is more
    common than before a first marriage.
  • Not all courtship ends in remarriage. Many
    stepfamilies are formed through remarriage, but
    others are cohabitating stepfamily households,
    some lasting longer than others.

5
Forming a Stepfamily
  • What is a stepfamily?
  • In the past, sociologists defined a stepfamily as
    a household in which at least one of the spouses
    had a biological child from a previous marriage.
  • However, the term is being defined more broadly
    nowa stepfamily is a household in which two
    adults who are biological or adoptive parents
    with a child from a previous relationship elect
    to marry or cohabitate.
  • This definition includes nontraditional families,
    so it is more broad than the old definition.

6
Forming a Stepfamily
  • How common are remarriage and stepfamilies?
  • Remarriage is so common that it has spawned a
    huge industry of services, magazines, and books.
  • The U.S. remarriage rate is the highest in the
    world.
  • Nearly 85 of Americans who divorce remarry. the
    median time between marriages is short and
    millions of Americans have been married more than
    three times!

7
Forming a Stepfamily
  • Cohabitation, divorce, remarriage, and
    stepfamilies have created a variety of family
    structures, but remarried couples and
    stepfamilies have some common characteristics.

8
Characteristicsof Remarried Couples
  • The average age of a first remarriage in the U.S.
    is 33 for women and 35 for men.
  • Remarriage rates are higher for both sexes age 50
    and older, but higher for men.
  • Older women, especially those who seek to
    remarry, may be attracted to older men because
    neither partner has children at home to cause
    conflict.
  • Generally, the older a woman, is the harder it is
    for her to find a partner for remarriage. The
    pool of available spouses expands for men as they
    age, but diminishes for women as they age.

9
Characteristicsof Remarried Couples
  • Overall, whites, especially white women, have the
    highest remarriage rates. In 2004 19 of white
    women had been married two or more times,
    compared with 11 of African Americans, 9 of
    Latinas, and 6 of Asian women.

10
Characteristicsof Remarried Couples
  • There are many interconnected reasons why this is
    the casefirst, African American people overall
    have the lowest marriage rates, which means that
    remarriage is less likely
  • African Americans have the highest cohabitation
    rates.
  • Latina and Asian Americans, especially recent
    immigrants, encourage marriage and discourage
    divorce and cohabitation.

11
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12
Characteristicsof Remarried Couples
  • Social Class
  • In general, the wealthier a divorced man is, the
    more likely he is to remarry.
  • Men in the marriage market tend to be financially
    better off than women, so they are able to
    attract new partners.
  • Men with higher educational attainment are more
    likely to remarry than are women with a similar
    education.
  • Women who have a higher socioeconomic level may
    not be willing to remarry because they have less
    to gain from it, however, they may have a larger
    pool of candidates from which to choose.

13
Characteristicsof Remarried Couples
  • Presence of Children
  • Many adults contemplating a new relationship are
    already parents, however, the presence of
    children from a previous marriage does affect
    parents decision to remarry.
  • Since men are less likely to have custody of
    their children, they are freer to date.

14
Characteristicsof Remarried Couples
Women may be seeking financial stability for her
children and a male role model, so she may be
more willing to remarry. The presence of
children generally lowers the likelihood of
remarriage, but that isnt always the case.
15
Characteristicsof Remarried Couples
Young children may encourage dating and
remarriage to replace an absent parent, and older
children who are not living with their parents
may want to see their parent find a new partner
in their later years.
16
Remarriage as a Process
  • Emotional Remarriage
  • This stage is often slow because partners have to
    build trust in each other. They may feel
    inadequate after a divorce and fear another
    failed relationship.
  • In addition, remarriages are emotionally
    intricate and confusing concerning the new roles
    each partner must play in many lives.

17
Remarriage as a Process
  • Psychic Remarriage
  • Peoples identity changes from being single to
    being married again. For men, a shift in marital
    status does not require an extreme change in
    personal identity.
  • The identity shift may be more difficult for
    women because the remarriage represents recovery
    of a valued identity as a wife. A nontraditional
    woman, on the other hand, may worry about the
    loss of her independence.

18
Remarriage as a Process
  • Community Remarriage
  • People often change their community of friends
    when they remarry. During the stage of
    remarriage they may sever close personal
    relationships that they established after a
    divorce when they relied more on friends.
  • In addition, people may often move to another
    community.

19
Remarriage as a Process
  • Parental Remarriage
  • Parents have to assume new roles based on their
    remarriage. Some may have to step up and be
    parents to their new spouses children, while
    some may find themselves deferring to the
    biological parent as a decision-maker.
  • When both partners have children from a previous
    relationship it can make things even more
    complicated and difficult.
  • Because marital and parental roles must be
    assumed simultaneously, parents may find
    themselves in conflict with one another or with
    the children involved.

20
Remarriage as a Process
  • Economic Remarriage
  • Remarriage establishes a marital household as an
    economic unit. The main problems in this stage
    may form from the presence of children from a
    previous relationship and the biological parent
    who does not have residential custody but may be
    paying child support.
  • Noncustodial parents may feel less responsible
    for their children financially after their
    ex-spouse remarries.

21
Remarriage as a Process
  • Legal Remarriage
  • The nonbiological parent does not have legal
    rights over their spouses children.
  • Most schools and other institutions typically
    dont recognize a stepparent as a legal parent.
  • What about college expenses? Questions of
    legality become complicated when stepparenting is
    involved.

22
How First Marriagesand Remarriages Differ
  • Family Composition
  • Remarriages often result in a myriad of new
    relationships. Children may gain stepbrothers or
    sisters or half siblings. They may have to share
    their biological parents time and physical
    space.
  • A child who travels between homes may feel left
    out of activities at one or both homes.
  • Parents may worry about dividing their time
    between biological and nonbiological children so
    that no one feels left out.

23
How First Marriagesand Remarriages Differ
  • Role Expectations
  • In first marriages, couples usually follow
    commonly accepted norms about enacting roles such
    as husband, wife, daughter, etc. The absence of
    norms regarding role expectations for
    stepfamilies creates perplexing questions.
  • Role expectations are especially fuzzy when it
    comes to extended family. Past and current
    in-laws and grandparents may be unsure how to
    treat their new instant family members.

24
How First Marriagesand Remarriages Differ
  • Changes across the Life Course
  • People who remarry sometimes find that they and
    their children are at different stages of the
    family life course. As a result, goals may
    conflict.
  • On one hand, an older man who marries a younger
    woman who has young biological children may enjoy
    being able to watch them grow up because he has
    more leisure time.

25
How First Marriagesand Remarriages Differ
  • Stress and Resources
  • People who remarry usually seek someone who is
    more successful, more supportive, or more
    attentive than the ex-spouse.
  • In most remarriages, partners must also cope
    with the stress of handling shifting resources.

26
How First Marriagesand Remarriages Differ
There is also a question about the remarried
couples financial responsibilities toward aging
parents. Remarriage also increases resources.
Children have more adults who care about them,
may experience less conflict between biological
parents, and have new stepgrandparents.
27
Couple Dynamicsin Stepfamilies
  • Myths about Remarriage
  • The Nuclear Family Mythbelievers of this fantasy
    expect family members to love and feel close to
    one another and children to be well-behaved.
    Even in long-lasting stepfamilies, tightly knit
    relationships are usually uncommon.
  • The Compensation Myththe new mate is expected to
    be everything the problematic old mate wasnt.

28
Couple Dynamicsin Stepfamilies
  • - The Instant Love Mythnew stepparents may
    presume an intimacy with stepchildren that just
    isnt there, especially at first.
  • - The Rescue Fantasystepparents think they will
    shape those kids up from the original
    neglectful or lenient noncustodial parent.

29
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30
Remarriage Satisfaction
  • The data on remarriage satisfaction are mixed.
    People in first marriages report greater
    satisfaction than do remarried spouses, but the
    differences are small.
  • For the first few years of remarriage, stress can
    come from all the new complex relationships and
    roles that the new couple must play.

31
Remarriage Stability
  • About 60 of remarriages, compared with 45 of
    first marriages, end in divorce. The average
    duration of second marriages is about the same,
    whereas third marriages that end in divorce
    typically last about five years.
  • People most likely to redivorce may see divorce
    as a quick solution to an unsatisfying marriage.

32
Types of Stepfamilies
  • When a couple forms a stepfamily, then a new
    family network emerges.
  • Three basic types of stepfamilies
  • 1. Mother-stepfather familyall the children are
    the biological children of the mother and
    stepchildren of the father.
  • 2. Father-stepmother familyall of the children
    are the biological children of the father and the
    stepchildren of the mother.
  • 3. Joint stepfamilya least one child is the
    biological child of both parents, at least one
    child is the biological child of only one parent
    and a stepchild of the other parent, and there
    are no other children present.

33
Types of Stepfamilies
  • In a complex stepfamily, both adults have
    children from previous marriages. In a joint
    step-adoptive family and a joint
    biological-step-adoptive family, at least one
    child is the biological child of one parent and a
    stepchild of the other parent, and one or both
    parents have adopted at least one child.

34
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35
Types of Stepfamilies
  • Gay and Lesbian Stepfamilies
  • They are similar to traditional stepfamilies and
    encounter many of the same problems.
  • They may encounter triple stigmatization, first,
    because they are gay or lesbian second, because
    gay and lesbian families are looked at as
    deficient compared to nuclear families in our
    society and third, because some in the gay and
    lesbian communities themselves stress the primacy
    of the couple relationship, not parenting.

36
Some Characteristicsof Stepfamilies
  • The structure of stepfamilies is complex.
  • A stepfamily must cope with unique tasks.
  • Stepfamilies often experience more stress and
    conflict than nuclear families.
  • Stepfamily integration typically takes years
    rather than months.
  • Important relationships may be cut off or end
    abruptly and others may spring up overnight.
  • There are continuous transitions and adjustments
    rather than stability.

37
Some Characteristicsof Stepfamilies
  • Stepfamilies are less cohesive than nuclear or
    single-parent households.
  • Stepfamilies need great flexibility in their
    everyday behavior.
  • Stepfamily members often have unrealistic
    expectations.
  • There is no shared family history.
  • There may be many loyalty conflicts.
  • Stepfamily roles are often ambiguous.

38
Stereotypes about Stepfamilies
  • The evil stepmother stereotype still abounds in
    our society. Ex-wives may still be angry about
    the divorce and refer to the stepmother as a
    witch in front of the kids.
  • Stepmothers have at times given up when they are
    given no rule-making ability concerning their
    stepchildren.
  • In contrast, the myth of instant love maintains
    not only that remarriage creates an instant
    family, but that stepmothers and stepfathers will
    automatically love their stepchildren.

39
Parenting in Stepfamilies
  • About 17 of American children live in a
    stepfamily.
  • Most stepfamilies face a number of issues when
    they attempt to merge two households after a
    remarriage. These include naming, sexual
    boundaries, legal issues, distributing economic
    and emotional resources, developing the
    stepchild-stepparent relationship, establishing
    closeness and cohesiveness, establishing
    discipline, and helping children adjust to this
    new family form.

40
Intergenerational Relationships
  • Ties across generations, especially with
    grandparents and stepgrandparents can be close
    and loving or disruptive and intrusive.
    Grandparents can provide an important source of
    stability for the kids during a divorce and
    remarriage.
  • Generally, intergenerational relationships depend
    on how much effort he remarried partners and
    steprelatives put into maintaining or forging
    relationships.

41
Some Effects of Stepfamilieson Children
  • How Children Fare
  • Some studies report that there are few, if any,
    emotional or behavioral differences between
    stepchildren and other children. Other studies
    show that stepchildren are at about a 20 risk
    for negative outcomes, a higher rate than
    children living with both biological parents.

42
Some Effects of Stepfamilieson Children
The most consistent findings on stepfamilies,
however, show that how children fare depends
greatly on the relationships among children,
their custodial and noncustodial parents, and
stepparents. Close relationships with
stepfathers, noncustodial fathers, and
noncustodial mothers are associated with better
outcomes. Children benefit the most when the
adults in all of the relationships get along.
43
Successful Stepfamilies
  • Seven characteristics are common to remarried
    families in which children and adults experience
    warm interpersonal relationships and satisfaction
    with their lives.
  • 1. Develop realistic expectations.
  • 2. Let children mourn their losses.
  • 3. The adults forge a strong couple relationship.

44
Successful Stepfamilies
  • 4. The stepparenting role proceeds slowly.
  • 5. When there are young children, the stepparent
    should take a discipline role slowly.
  • 6. Successful stepfamilies develop their own
    rituals.
  • 7. Work out satisfactory arrangements between
    the childrens households.

45
Rewards of Remarriageand Stepparenting
  • Many believe they learned valuable lessons in
    their first marriage that they bring into their
    second marriage.
  • Successful remarried couples say they try harder,
    are more tolerant of minor irritations, and tend
    to be more considerate of each others feelings.
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