A single parent is a parent who raises a child without
another parent in the same household. Single parenthood
may be a result of loss, such as divorce or the death of a
spouse, or by choice, such as adoption or artificial
insemination.
Being a single parent is not easy. The following
suggestions may help your family:
- Find stable places for child care and home. Check out
child care options carefully before you choose one.
Try to avoid changing caregivers and making too many
other major changes too close together.
- Create a daily routine and try to stick to it 7 days a
week. It helps to wake up and go to bed at about the
same time every day and to eat meals together on a
regular schedule. It also helps to pick your child up
from child care at an expected time.
- Plan regular visits with the other parent if possible.
Staying in contact with the other parent, both by
phone and by visiting in person, is usually in your
child's best interest. Your child will do better if
he knows that both parents love him.
- Discipline consistently. Set limits for acceptable
and unacceptable behavior. Notice good behavior and
praise your child. Use methods such as time outs or
job grounding when children misbehave. Do not bribe
your child or try to buy the child's affection.
- Don't put your child in the middle. If you are raising
your child in 2 different homes, don't ask your child
to carry messages between parents. Don't ask the
child to give you information about the other parent,
or to choose sides in adult battles.
- Answer questions about the other parent briefly. Answer
only the questions that are asked. If you have
negative feelings about the other parent, talk them
over with another adult, not your child.
- Spend time with your child each day. Try to spend
some quality time with each child daily. Spending
hours with your children watching TV is not quality
time. Take the time to sit down with each of them and
talk about the day or their problems. This can be
calming and reassuring for both parent and child.
- Make and keep family traditions.
- Set up a good support system. This is important for
both the parent and child. It may include extended
family, a consistent play group, neighbors, friends, or
parenting groups. Organizations such as Big Brothers
or Big Sisters can help provide another adult in your
child's life. Raising children is difficult, and you
need a good backup when you are frustrated or
exhausted.
- Volunteer to participate in activities at your child's
school. This helps you to meet other parents and
have something to talk about with your child. Also
talk with your child's teachers or school counselors
about your situation. They can help watch for
problems and support your child.
- Develop a social life separate from your child. This
could include an exercise group, book club, or church
group. These are also good sources for support.
- Consider your situation when dating. Dating can present
different challenges, depending on the age of your
child. At first, it may be easier on your child for you
to meet your date away from home. Young children
tend to attach easily to adults who spend time with
them. Older children can feel jealous or threatened
by someone with whom they must share their parent's
time and space.
- Seek professional help if serious problems develop.
Feelings of grief or loss are common after divorce or
death of one parent. Individual or family counseling
can provide support for both the children and adults.
- Explain your money problems. If the status of the
family changes from a two-parent home to a single-parent
home, finances are often affected. You may have to
explain to your children that buying "extras" and some
activities have to be limited. However, treat your
child like a child. Your child should not be concerned
with adult problems. Your child is not your best
support for personal problems. It might be a good idea
to talk to a financial planner or accountant for help.
Where can I get help?
Organizations and books are good resources.
Organizations
Parents Without Partners International, Inc.
1650 South Dixie Hwy., Suite 510
Boca Raton, FL 33432
(561) 391-8833
SingleMOTHER
P.O. Box 68
Midland, NC 28107
http://www.singlemothers.org
(704) 888-5437
Books
In Praise of Single Parents: Mothers and Fathers Embracing
the Challenge; by Shoshana Alexander; Houghton
Mifflin, 1994
Mom's House, Dads House: A Complete Guide for Parents Who Are
Separated, Divorced, or Remarried; by Isolina Ricci; Simon
and Schuster, 1997
The Single Parent Family: Living Happily in a Changing
World; by Marge Kennedy and Janet Spencer King; Crown
Publishers, 1994
Single Parents by Choice: A Growing Trend in Family Life;
by Naomi Miller, Insight Books, 1992
The Ultimate Survival Guide for the Single Father (e-book); by
Thomas Herner; Harbinger Press, 2002
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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