Well-being Parent-Children Relationships

743 Words2 Pages

“Well-being” (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/well-being). Which is increasingly used as a synonym for “happiness”, covers both physical and psychological, well-being as well as the quality of relationships between parents and the quality of parent-child relationships? This essay builds upon influences on the well-being of parents and children. Whether kids are from lives in a one- or two-parent household and whether the parents are married, cohabiting, single or separated; Family which conflicts are addressed, generational of family relationships, attitudes to parenting and family roles. Individual characteristics as positive and negative emotionality as well as psychological independence and Interdependence; and Family circumstances such as life events, education, social class, hours worked. (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/well-being). The Effects of Divorce on a Family's Well Being Include Boy meets girl. Girl and boy fall in love and get married. Girl and boy have children and life could not possibly get any better. Many years later; Boy and girl start to notice something different in their relationship, something wrong. They decide that their relationship is over, whether they’re both happy with that decision or not and they divorce. Boy and girl’s children see them divorce. Children process the divorce in different ways, and it stays with them for the rest of their lives. More importantly, children from intact “traditional family”, (Meg Cabot pg.142)where mom and dad stay together do not only demonstrate significantly lower incidents of negative social behavior, but also physically and emotionally healthier than children reared by other family structures. Evidences argument by overwhelming crime studies, ... ... middle of paper ... ...icularly processes involving the ability of resolve conflicts and arguments, and personality traits of parents. The type of family in which one lives such as a one- or two-parent household and whether the parents are married, cohabiting, single or separated has virtually no impact on family well-being. We have found that the environment outside the immediate family has less direct influence on family well-being than internal dynamics within the family itself; although selected aspects of that environment notably support networks, the quality of the grandparents’ couple relationship and social class position, have an indirect effect. If the family is the core aspects of what makes a person feel well in terms of their physical, psychological and relational well-being are directly affected by what happens directly and indirectly affected by what happens in the family.

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