Jump to content

Joy, Purpose and the Hard Work of Parenting


Geee

Recommended Posts

e-d-kain-Joy-purpose-and-the-hard-work-of-parenting-99036229.html
Washington Examiner:

Joy, purpose, and the hard work of parenting
By: E. D. KAIN
Special to The Examiner
07/22/10 2:04 PM EDT

Rod Dreher, writing at his new digs at Big Questions Online, has this to say about parenting and happiness:

“The loss of parental freedom is severe, and if young marrieds had any idea how difficult raising children can be, they might never conceive. Today, my wife and I are smack in the middle of raising three small children, each of whom presents a particular challenge. So many nights we are just flat-out exhausted. We have little time for ourselves anymore, and don't have the money or liberty to do the fun things we once did. By conventional standards of measuring happiness, we ought not be happy.

And, I would say, we aren't exactly happy. Rather, we're joyful. I don't for a minute regret having chosen parenthood, despite all the pain, frustration and heartbreak. I think there's a difference between happiness and joy. Happiness is a superficial and fragile thing; joy is happiness that has been deepened and refined by tragedy. Joy is happiness with dimension. Joy is what you have that tells you that the burden is light, the yoke is freedom. It looks like a lie, maybe, from the outside, which is why, I think, my sister told me that we weren't going to be able to understand what we will have lost and what we will have gained from parenthood until we've lived it.”

I’ve always considered the loss-of-happiness arguments against parenting to be fairly weak. Happiness is hard to define. I’m happy when I eat a piece of chocolate cake. I’m happy when I eat two pieces of chocolate cake. But if I keep eating pieces of chocolate cake I’ll be unhealthy and get really fat and pretty soon I won’t be so happy, even when I’m eating pieces of chocolate cake. I’m happy just sitting around in the evening on the couch – perfectly happy to not go on a run.

But I’m more happy after I go on the run, even though it took time and work and even though it hurts more than sitting on the couch does. Similarly, many of us would be enormously happy to never have to go to work or earn our living, but many of us also realize that after a few weeks sitting around the house doing nothing, we’re unlikely to feel terribly good.

Work gives us purpose and occupies our time, which makes the time spent not working all that much more meaningful.

Children are like that in a way, but they’re also more than that. Having children gives us an extended purpose. Yes, they’re tons of work, but when all is said and done at the end of the day and they’re asleep peacefully and it’s just the two of you sitting there exhausted on the couch with toys and clothes strewn everywhere and dishes piled up and the pillow beckoning – well there’s a peacefulness to that. And when you come home from work and your daughter’s eyes light up and a smile leaps to her face and she commences in telling you excitedly all the huge and wonderful things she’s done today – well nothing quite compares. I don’t miss my days of childless freedom. When our daughter spends the night with her grandparents, the house feels quiet and empty, like a huge piece of what makes us whole is suddenly absent.

Kids are lots of work, but the work is part of what makes the joy real.

Rod goes on to ask:

“A thought: When the people in a civilization see child-bearing as a choice, one to be made after cost-benefit analysis, instead of something you just do, is it possible to sustain that civilization?”

I know plenty of people who are unhappy as parents. They chose to become parents and begrudge their lack of freedom now. I’m not sure how this is possible – I’m not sure what’s missing from their family equation that makes them so miserable in what ought to be a joyful experience. We all have our moments of frustration and impatience with our kids, but to begrudge even having them? It’s just a notion I can’t wrap myself around. Perhaps they’re missing a sense of purpose in all of this, and so the work seems meaningless, and therefore the joy is missing.

Perhaps they feel they made the wrong choice.

I think a civilization that sees child-bearing as a choice can survive just fine. It’s that civilization’s understanding of purpose that matters. Once society has given up on work, on producing things, on striving for meaning outside of the cocoon of self-pleasure and consumption, then we’re in trouble.

Having kids requires us to leave that cocoon entirely. It requires us to move beyond ourselves, to give ourselves up. To sacrifice our happiness for a much deeper joy.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

righteousmomma

Thanks Geee! A nice change from politics and yet relates so well to our times and culture. Too bad more parents do not "see" this or even think about the preciousness of the day while in the midst of it all.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • 1711720647
×
×
  • Create New...