Here's
a subject for debate. I had an email exchange with someone who had
written an editorial for the Inquirer about marriage equality for the
LGBT community. He waxed poetical on marriage and our relationships
to our ancestors:
Denying children biological ties creates all sorts of identity problems (including sexual identity problems)…
Marriage also transcends the individual by placing him in a social web that involves responsibilities to parents, grandparents, children, etc. He finds his identity and is linked to generations and even to history.…
...the overriding concept of marriage is that a man and woman give of themselves (and their particularities), temper their individual wants, in order to become something that is larger than the sum of the two. Marriage is greater than the sum of its parts.…
For their optimum development and well-being, children do best when they are raised by their married mother and father. Every deviation from that ideal reduces outcomes for children.
So, from the perspective of children, we should make marriage more subserviant [sp] to their needs, not the desires and whims of adults.
Now,
a buddy from my letter-writing group Rapid Response pointed out that
marriage was not always centred around children, in fact, the
post-World War II generation that gave birth to the baby boomers was
the first generation in history that had the leisure time, the
material goods and the physical safety that permitted them to
concentrate so heavily on the psychological needs of their children.
Of
course past generations paid attention to their children, Henry VIIII
wanted a male heir to take over England after he passed away, but so
long as the child was male and physically capable, Henry would have
been content. Elizabeth I was a capable heir, but keep in mind that
her childhood was a bewildering and chaotic one, with her mother executed when she wasn't yet three years old and a succession of stepmothers following.
Of course, as a female, she wasn't expected to take over the kingdom,
but everyone knew that, as she was of royal blood, she might very
well do so. The idea that marriage in those days was centred around
children, even royal children who might one day inherit the kingdom,
was clearly not applicable. Were English marriages centred around
children during the days of the “dark, satanic mills” or when the
“Little Match Girl” perished in the snow? Obviously not.
Now,
is it a good thing for children to know their grandparents? Sure, I
guess so. I knew my great-grandmother on my father's side.
“Great-Grammy” passed away when I was less than five years old. I
liked her, but didn't really know her. My paternal grandfather passed
away before my birth. Everything I heard about him was good. My
paternal grandmother lived until my maturity. On my mother's side,
both of my grandparents lived until then. My mother had a twin sister
and they had a brother. I never met the brother and everything I
heard about him was bad. His ex-wife had booted him out, he came
back, his kids got tired of him really quickly and he moved out
again. My sisters and I got along fine with the ex-wife and kids.
Did
I miss either my paternal grandfather or my uncle on my mother's
side? Not really. I certainly don't remember wanting to know more or
inquiring about either of them. I certainly never got the impression
that any of my uncle's bad traits were destined to be passed on to
me. I don't remember feeling better because my grandfather was such a
fine fellow. It just never occurred to me to look at myself as the
product of my ancestors and their traits.
So here's my question. With people
becoming orphans through wars and accidents and poor health, with
children getting adopted and in many cases, never being able to get
in touch with their birth parent(s), with parents immigrating and
leaving grand-parents behind in the “old country,” with mothers
having conceived their children via rape and thus not having any
reason to ever care who the father was, with mothers being
promiscuous and thus not even knowing who the father might be, is
knowing one's social context a “nice to have” sort of thing or is
it an urgent necessity that a child is lost without?
1 comment:
Not thinking overly clearly at this time of night but what I am thinking is that the majority of the social constructs your friend mentions are just that: social constructs, which can be pretty well constructed by a savvy single parent of any gender who has a supportive network and family, therefore can also be constructed by married or unmarried same sex couples with supports. I grew up with no dad in the fifties and the most challenging and hurtful/unsettling part of this (for me) was not being acceptable because my mother was (gasp) DIVORCED. I didn't fit and was not expected to thrive. The fewer people with your friend's mindset who affect our children, the better chance that the kids will "be alright".
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