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 When
Baby Makes Three
Most couples can anticipate the birth of a
first child with joy, and then make the transition from being a couple
into a family, but there are some who find this a difficult and complex
step to negotiate.
The preparation for a baby’s arrival is not
just about buying the equipment babies now seem to need, but also a period
for a couple to think about the transformation which will affect their
lives. Today the expectant father will find himself much more involved
than his father would have been - not only with the preparations for the
birth itself, but even in the delivery room. The plus side of this is that
dads are not so sidelined as they were until recently, and this interest
and involvement helps build a strong platform for the new family to stand
upon.
What if the change from being a couple to
being parents is not so smooth? In the research for my books on family
issues I spoke to men and women who talked to me about their
relationships, and I heard many times that, with hindsight, it could be
seen that the beginning of the end of a marriage was heralded by the birth
of a child. The arrival of a third person, a child, into the relationship
of a couple brings about a shift in the dynamics. In other words, it can
alter the delicate balance of the conscious and unconscious expectations
which were the reasons for the relationship to have taken root in the
first place. The original factors for our choice of a partner has an
important bearing upon whether or not we can negotiate this adjustment.
For some people the flight into
marriage is a desire for closeness, companionship and security. The
shattered dreams which result if these do not materialize may bring about
the collapse of the partnership. A true partnership requires personalities
able to adapt, be flexible and stable and if these qualities are not there
to some degree, the shift which is needed to make room for a baby brings
with it tension and stress. A man or woman looking to their partner for
parental affection and support, will be at a loss to adjust to moving
over, and making room for a real baby. Anyone looking to his or her new
partner for continual mothering, is already setting out in a leaky boat on
the sea of matrimony. It is no wonder they flounder in the choppy seas of
parenthood.
I also heard from couples who felt they had
married before their growing-up process had been completed. ‘We were
just a couple of kids’ ‘Looking back I can see we were like babes in
the wood, we clung on to each other in the grown up world’. These
comments were from two couples who had faltered at the fence when becoming
parents. They were both able to recognize that they needed help in taking
on the responsibility of parenthood. In both cases, eventually a growing
confidence in themselves as adults, resulted in being able to provide the
security needed to care for their baby.
How is it that some families can survive not
only the arrival of children, but mental and physical illness, poverty,
death and more? I spoke with couples who had been married for ‘almost a
lifetime’. This is what they had to say: ‘Learn to say sorry, and mean
it’ ‘Take time to decide on marriage and then make it work’ ‘Just
get on with it, and don’t bear grudges’ and lastly ‘If you marry for
love, it will see you through.’
So perhaps that is the secret. If there is
love and trust between a couple, they will find it within themselves and
each other to greet their new baby with joy and real affection. Their love
will expand to encompass the new arrival, and their own adult relationship
will be enriched because of this. New parents run out of sleep, and
sometimes patience, but if the underlying belief that ‘we are now a
family’ is there, then together the couple will regroup as a family unit
and delight in the fact that baby makes three. © Jill Curtis
2001

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