Similarities
in personal values and beliefs between an adult child and an older
mother is what keeps that child in favor over the long-term, and that
preference can have practical applications for mother’s long-term care,
according to a Purdue University study.
“Favoritism matters because it affects
adult sibling relationships and caregiving patterns and outcomes for
mothers, and now we know that who a mother favors is not likely to
change,” said Jill Suitor, professor of sociology, who has been studying
older parent relationships with adult children for nearly 30 years.
“Knowing that favoritism, particularly regarding caregiving, is
relatively stable will be helpful for practitioners when designing
arrangements that are going to work best for moms.”
Approximately three-quarters of the
mothers identified that the child who they favored as their preferred
caregiver at the start of the study was the same child they favored
seven years later.
“One of the biggest predictors of who
remained the favorite was mother’s perception of similarity between
herself and her child,” said Megan Gilligan, an assistant professor in
human development and family studies at Iowa State University and a
former Purdue graduate student who is a collaborator on the project.
“Mothers were likely to continue to prefer children who they perceived
were similar to them in their beliefs and values, as well as to prefer
children who had cared for them before.”
Their research, co-authored with Karl
Pillemer, professor of human development in the College of Human Ecology
at Cornell University, is published in the Journal of Marriage and
Family. The findings are based on the Within-Family Differences Study in
which data were collected seven years apart from the same 406 mothers,
ages 65-75. The study is funded by the National Institute on Aging.
Gender similarity also was a consistent
factor to show long-term favoritism, which is not surprising because the
mother-daughter connection has been shown in previous research to
typically be the strongest, closest and most supportive parent-child
relationship.
In addition to looking at the similarity
of personal values, the researchers also looked at whether a child’s
financial independence, adult roles as a spouse or parent themselves,
consistent employment, and lawful behavior influenced which child
remained the favorite. What was surprising is that whether a child was
married, divorced or achieved independence, mattered much less than
sharing personal values, said Suitor, who is a member of the Center on
Aging and the Life Course.
“These mothers are saying that if I
can’t make my own decisions involving my life than who can best make
these decisions for me? Who thinks like I do?” Suitor said. “Who has the
same vision in life that I do, has a pretty good sense of what I would
do? This is incredibly important with issues related to caregiving, and
that is why understanding these family dynamics is so important.”
While the importance similarity played
in explaining why a mother’s favorite child remained the same across the
study, it was much harder to identify what drove changes when a child
fell out of favor.
“One of the few predictors of changes
was when children stopped engaging in deviant behaviors, such as
substance abuse, during the seven years, and then their mothers were
more likely to choose them as the children to whom they were most
emotionally close,” Gilligan said.
Suitor said, “This is an interesting
change because if a child engaged in deviant behaviors seven years ago
but then stopped they were even more likely to be chosen than were
siblings who never engaged in deviant behaviors.”
Suitor, Pillemer and Gilligan are
planning to extend the Within-Family Differences Study to include
interviewing the Baby Boomers about their own adult children.
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