Catholic Exchange

The Me-Centered Family &#0151 A Disaster in the Making

The lead in a recent Washington Post article paints a disturbing picture: "Children rank as the highest source of personal fulfillment for their parents but have dropped to one of the least-cited factors in a successful marriage, according to a national survey."

What's the matter with that sentence? Too much to unpack entirely in a few minutes, but let's zero in on those two enticing words: "personal fulfillment." The emphasis on that idea tells us a lot about what's really wrong with marriage and family today.

As the article states, "The 88-page report… underscores a widening gap between parenthood and marriage — at a time when living together out of wedlock has grown increasingly common and nearly one in four births is to an unmarried woman."

The author quotes several people who say that they think of marriage and children separately, not as a package deal. By a wide margin, the respondents in this survey still want children. They even realize that children need a mother and a father. But increasingly fewer of them are practicing what they say they believe. Why? Because they also believe that marriage is all about "mutual happiness and fulfillment" and "personal satisfaction" instead of the "bearing and raising of children."

Do you see what's missing here? Nothing about putting someone else first. Just marriage as something that makes you feel good — which, as anyone who's been married will testify, isn't an idea that works for very long. It's no wonder that more and more couples have trouble committing to marriage, and that many who do are having trouble making their marriages last.

This is so ironic. We live in an era where romance seems to be on its deathbed and sexual relationships have become casual, ordinary business. Yet here we have a generation with such an impossibly romanticized view of marriage that they have to find the spouse who is always wonderful and satisfying — or no spouse at all.

And it's also no wonder that the idea trickles down to child-raising. People want children to satisfy their own needs, or not at all. You may remember that a while back I talked about two very different mothers: one of them risked her marriage and her health and spent a small fortune conceiving a child; the other was filing a "wrongful-birth" suit over a botched abortion — a child she didn't want. At bottom, I said, they both had the same idea: that a child was a commodity and that their right to self-fulfillment was their chief goal.

At least one married father quoted in this article, David Joyce, got it right when he said, "I think what we're running into… is people saying, ‘[marriage] needs to be about me.' And it doesn't. It needs to be about ‘us' or about ‘we.' Anything that's based on a ‘me' scenario isn't going to last very long." Joyce is right.

So what kind of marriage lasts? A marriage in which the husband and the wife understand that marriage is about self-giving, not about self-satisfaction. That parenthood is a calling to self-sacrifice for the good of the child, not an avenue for self-fulfillment.

We need to start teaching our kids and young adults that me-centered families cannot survive. And instead of delivering happiness and self-fulfillment, the me-first attitude will bring, in the end, nothing but emptiness and a declining birthrate that will soon enough bring about the end of western civilization.

Comments

  1. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    To the defense of those adults stuck in a "me-centered" reality … I think we need to challenge how we are raising and preparing children to take on the adult responsibilities of a family.  So many well-meaning parents try so hard to give their children "everything" in the form of lessons and tutoring and extracirriculars, etc — which are not bad things — but things which nonetheless reinforce the idea that it's "all about me" and that life is one endless stream of electives for ongoing personal development.  Perhaps I'm overly optimistic, but I think it is not so much that these people are wantonly selfish, as it is that they have been raised on the idea that personal development is the ultimate good.  Some (particularly women) have further been raised on an idea that personal development is the ultimate good AND that opting out for the sacrifices of a family is the ultimate evil.

    I think we need to be very careful that in educating our children, we do not over emphasize education and development of gifts to the neglect of character formation and discerning God's will.

  2. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    I agree with you 100%, Stirling!

    Children need to learn to suffer.  Not an artificial suffering for the sake of suffering.  But natural suffering that occurs day to day.  Maybe it's a little hot or a little cold.  Maybe they're a little hungry.  Maybe they didn't bother to do their homework and have to go face-to-face with the teacher to tell her so.  Maybe they're sitting around "bored" and seek to be entertained.  The list could go on and on.  And on and on. 

    Instead of always solving problems for them, making excuses for them, or finding a thousand and one ways to entertain them…they could suffer a little.  Then encourage them to come out of "themselves" and look around them.  Mom or dad or grandma or sister or brother or neighbor might have a greater need than they do – and it should be addressed before their little sufferings are to be alieviated. 

    They also can learn (and be reminded again and again) that their sufferings are nothing when compared to Christ's….but when united with His, they become infinitely valuable.

    It is by the time they ar 18 (or so) that they should be other-oriented instead of self-oriented.  But it takes much training and work to get there BY the age of 18.  That means we need to start NOW.  Not wait until they are 18.

  3. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Once again I say thank you, thank you to the Catholic Exchange family.

    I've been wondering & searching for activities for my 13 yr old who is now in 3rd week of hols, each possibility was just not panning out & I was fearing the 'evil of idleness.' Somehow, though I was ignoring the little voice inside saying 'wrong track.' Articles & sharings yesterday's & today served as confirmation, at this time, the Lord wants to work on something else in him, give them the space. He will be taking part in a parish community outreach (painting house for an elderly person) as a lead up to a stay-in  youth assembly this weekend. Looking at him, the prospect of the house painting made the mandate of the weekend more palatable.

    Thank you for reminding me to look for the opportunities where my  children can serve trusting that in time, they will seek it on their own through the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Blessed be God, that's what my mother did!

  4. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Amen, amen!

    But let's also prepare ourselves for the consequences of such decisions with our children.

    • Your child's friends will have an impact.

    Your child will not be given all the opportunities that their frineds will be given.  Be prepared with your response to this true and painful observation by your child.

    • Your desire to give sacrificially to your child will have an impact.

    They will have a legitimate desire for something worthy, but you will deny giving it to them or make them work toward it. Or they have worked toward it, but fallen short.  At some level, this will make you feel a tad guilty, like you are showing less care and love than you could.  Be prepared to deal with this feeling. Because it will happen.

    • Your child's suffering will have an impact.

    After you "make sure things aren't too easy" for them, you find out things were actually much more difficult for them than you had realized.

    Again, I am in agreement with the author and commenters here.  But as a veteran parent of eight, I'm here to say it's not as righteous as it sounds.

  5. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    I'm the last of 6 children, my friends thought my parents were 'strict', I expected the measures. I enjoyed growing up, mixed with service, family outings, family meals, responsibilities & home & clear boundaries. It only became hard when I changed my reference points, but thankfully, having the foundation, I could reset. Then again, it may have been easier for me, then & now, living in mixed neighbourhoods, my children, as I did, see hardship & know to have the basics is a great blessing – parents alive & present, sufficient food, clothing, schoolbooks & the means to get to school, brothers & sisters to share with, extended family & friends who love them & a home. In time they will also come to know that the gift of faith is the bedrock basic.

    My service as a child was weekly grocery shopping for an elderly cousin, sweeping of her bedroom & frontroom, after that day's  household duties, then the rest of my Saturday, for the most part was glorious play/reading. Let us form our children without driving them to frustration & encourage each other while it is still today.

  6. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Along with the above comments (all very good!), I think we need to keep in mind that it is the contraceptive mentality prevalent in society today that has led to much of the selfishness in relationships (as well as abortion, children born outside of marriage, divorce, the popularity of homosexuality, as well as a host of other problems too numerous to mention).

    We need to teach our children not only the value of marriage, but also the value of Natural Family Planning and therefore the absence of contraception even in our committed, married, child-filled relationships.  We must set a good example for our children so that they will not be sucked into the lie that contraception solves our problems, especially when it comes to the temptations of pre-marital intimacy, in or out of a committed relationship on its way to marriage.  
    I think that too often, despite our best intentions (including the above posted suggestions), parents will find their children grow up and live with their boyfriend or girlfriend and it's years or not at all until they get married and because of contraception, it may be years after that until they have children.  I think parents may fear talking to their children about the negative consequences of contraception and pre-marital sex.  But probably more likely is that they were never properly educated themselves and therefore unprepared to help their children avoid or resist temptation in today's sex-filled society.  
    I think along with pre-cana and NFP classes, the Church should require a course on John Paul II's Theology of the Body as part of marriage preparation (and be sent away with a book or two about how to talk to your children about it some day).  And parishes should offer classes on Theology of the Body, youth groups should teach it and priests should preach on it.  
  7. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    I agree with the last comment on teaching of the Theology of the Body.  It is indeed the "theological time bomb" that will ultimately right the ship in the 21st century.  Alas, their are no guarantees as to what path our children will follow.  The culture and Satan are vicious enemies of the truth.  My wife and I practiced NFP our entire married life and our eldest daughter is living with her second guy whom she has a child with.  Prayer is our greatest ally.

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