Child development
Pitfalls of Parenthood
As your child develops, the challenges will change, and your thinking may evolve, but your approach should be consistent, firm and loving.
Prospective parents must realize parenting is serious business. They should approach it with the requisite sincerity and preparedness or they may ruin the child’s life and their own.
Children aren’t just extra mouths to feed. They need constant nurturing and demand sacrifices beyond time and money. Likewise, we should dispense with the view that parenthood is innately a joyful state, even as many parents cling to this notion as a psychological defence.
In 2011, researchers at the University of Waterloo found the cost of raising children brought significant mental discomfort to couples. Yet when prompted to focus on the delights of parenting, their anxieties dissipated. Fathers and mothers have, the study concluded, “collectively created a myth of parental joy.”
Regrettably, such a dewy outlook befogs the true breadth of this undertaking. Parenthood is no less a challenge than scaling the Himalayas. Anyone who believes the opposite may suffer from ignorance, willful or otherwise.
Without grasping the many challenges that await parents when rearing their young, crafting a navigational blueprint to sail through these murky waters is near impossible. Below, I list the common ones and suggest how to manage them.
Naturally, time management is your first and greatest test as a parent. The moment you alight from bed in the morning, a million things need your immediate attention. Besides a mother or father, you are a partner, a friend, an employee, even a boss.
While you may organize your daily tasks with such precision that slight detours don’t bring on bouts of hair-pulling, parenting adds many layers of complication. So, fussing when your clocklike schedule goes off the rails is pointless, more so if you’re caring for an infant. Instead, foresee it derailing now and again, and you’ll fare much better.
And since life intrudes when we least expect it, there may come a day when you must choose between an urgent business trip and attending your child’s first school play. When that happens, resist the urge to scold yourself. Just make it up to your child once you return. There is no perfect way to parenting; what’s necessary is doing your best.
The next challenge is spousal relationship. An oft-repeated maxim states parenthood completes a couple and enriches their marriage. But research published in Fortune magazine back in 2016 presented findings to the contrary. This investigationn spanning three decades, found most relationships suffer after couples have kids.
Yet, a more recent study by Bocconi University determined this breakdown need not occur, so long as moms and dads manage the stresses of parenthood and are stable money-wise. Hence, we can deduce the problem isn’t children per se. It is the parents’ unwillingness or inability to invest in their relationship after their offspring arrive.
The good news is they may avoid these pitfalls, provided they diligently nurture their marriage as they do their kids. Such preservation, of course, must concern both spouses to the same degree. It behooves us to acknowledge our “other relationships” are just as important as the ones with our brood.
Another challenge for couples is wading through the flood tide of confusing messages on parenting. The internet is brimming with them, which leaves many parents scratching their heads in bewilderment.
For instance, a segment of experts encourages them to use “naughty chairs” when children behave inappropriately, while others condemn such a practice as emotional abuse. Who do they believe?
Doubtless, every parent wants their child to grow into a productive, well-rounded adult. Yet the glut of parenting books, magazines, and online articles is frustrating their attempts to fix on a strategy.
Understand that nobody has a surefire way of raising perfect kids. Staying informed is essential, but it serves parents better to edit these “best practices” to suit their households.
Finally, the most important challenge that dissuades many couples from child-rearing is financial security. A headline in the Atlantic magazine summed it up succinctly: “Having children makes people happier – if they can afford it.”
While this statement won’t hold true for everyone, the global economic crunch has undeniably contributed to the surge in childless marriages everywhere. Couples are choosing not to have kids because they impede their life goals.
Mull it over for a moment: every one of us dreams of owning a house, vacationing overseas, and securing a comfortable retirement. But as the worldwide recession finds a new foothold in the Covid-19 pandemic, these may be unthinkable for an average middle-class household if we minus child healthcare costs, school fees, and monthly allowances from the parents’ annual income.
In conclusion, prospective mothers and fathers must seriously discuss how having children will remodel their lives. Examine their lifestyles and ask them if they can truly accommodate a new family member. The more they’re prepared to tackle the challenges listed here, the more rewarding and “joyful” they’ll find parenthood. ![]()

The writer is an early childhood educator and editor of www.alkemymag.com. She can be reached at alkemymag@gmail.com


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