adoption

Why Daddies Matter

A husband's love, presence and support make all the difference as a woman experiences the transition to motherhood. During those difficult, early postdelivery months, a supportive husband is every wife's ace in the hole. Studies show he's her number-one support player during pregnancy, birth and new motherhood. For a woman to whole-heartedly embrace motherhood, she needs to know that her husband is as committed to their baby as she is. His kindness and practical help keep her going during difficult times. "My husband used to get up with me at night when I'd throw up,” says Grace, 37, "and often at 3:00 a.m. he'd send me back to bed and clean up the bathroom.” Both worked, and Grace admits she would have felt resentful if Tom had slept through her middle-of-the-night sickness.

But what about labor and delivery? What's a husband's role then? During her pregnancy, Antoinette Clyde of Amityville, N.Y., says she sometimes wondered if her husband was really "with” her in the momentous transformation to parenthood. Would he be emotionally available during the hard work of birth? She writes:

As it turned out, my husband was a wonderful coach throughout the 24 hours of hard labor. Immediately after giving birth, I watched as my husband cradled our beautiful son in his arms, welcoming him into the world as only a father can. I witnessed the love shared by these two most important men in my life and thought to myself, "He really did understand what I was trying to say after all.”

So, a wife watches carefully as her husband welcomes their new baby into his heart and life. As he steps up to the challenge of fatherhood, diapering and bathing their baby, a husband underscores the importance of his wife's role as mother. It's critical, during those early months after the baby's birth, that a husband is tender, nurturing and faithful. A woman needs to feel that she can count on her man as she makes possibly the most demanding transition of her life.

In reality, both spouses are stretched as they experience huge role changes to incorporate the baby into their lives. Psychologists who love to create graphs showing marital satisfaction have discovered that a big drop occurs following the first child's birth. This is a time of radical role changes for both parents.

I spoke with the mother of a 6-week-old son who was struggling with her role as first-time mother. "My marriage has changed drastically,” she said. "No longer are my husband and I just lovers, friends and partners who can go out for dinner on a whim, but now we are the parents of this little baby. While we both had careers, now he goes to work and I stay home. Although he tries to be supportive at the end of the day, he can't possibly understand all I am experiencing. Nor do I understand all he is feeling.”

What this mother and her husband need to do is talk about the cataclysmic role changes in their lives. This is a time for frank, open conversations. Both need to tell each other how it feels to be a struggling new parent. In addition, I urge couples to find a babysitter and go out for dinner or dessert every week. The marital relationship needs to be nurtured, even if a woman is grappling with the constraints of breast-feeding. It's important for every new mother to be alone with her husband weekly, however briefly, so that she can feel like her old self again.

Sadly not all women have warm, supportive husbands when they have babies. Sometimes a couple is estranged or the mother is unmarried. I read a poignant account of a mother who abandoned her 3-day-old baby in the lobby of a building in New York City. She had placed her daughter in a Warner Brothers shopping bag along with two handwritten pages. The baby was dressed in a T-shirt, diaper and jumpsuit. Here is the mother's letter:

My sweet angel baby Sarah, I am so sorry to give you such a bad start in your life. You must never for a moment think I don't love you. I love you more than I dreamed possible. If I knew for a way for us not to be apart, that's what I would do. Please know that I never meant to harm you. All I can think about is the things I would like to give you. I don't think anybody would love you as attenfully (sic) as me. Take care. May the angels watch over you and may God forgive me. I'm already missing you. I can't stop crying. I don't know where your Daddy is. (italics mine)

Poor sweet angel, baby Sarah. In having no loving, responsible, onsite father, she lost her mother as well. For without a loving husband, a mother has a rough, demanding course. She can feel quite alone with her baby and overwhelmed by life, whether she's an unmarried mother or a mother lost in a painful, unhappy marriage.

A dad — a tender, loving, faithful father — is absolutely essential in undergirding and supporting a wife's capacity to mother their children well.

Background Information

Agency Adoptions
When it is time to evaluate adoption agencies, consider these pros and cons.

Where Have All the Babies Gone?
The top reasons fewer babies are available to the growing number of couples who want to adopt.

Adopting on Your Own
This advice can help single parents who want to adopt children.

Causes and Characteristics of Attachment Disorder
For adoptive parents, attachment issues can be a huge concern.

Independent Adoption
These are the risks and rewards of adopting without the help of an agency.

Questions and Answers

Are adopted children more likely to be rebellious than children raised by biological parents?
Answer

How would you go about telling a child he or she is adopted, and when should that disclosure occur?
Answer

Review Frequently Asked Questions

Stories

Reflections on Bonding With an Adopted Child
Bonding with an adopted child can take time — and great patience.

A Second Chance at Life
Two adopted children arrived from the most unlikely of sources.

Adoption as Grace
How does enlarging your family reflect God's love?

An Act of Grace
In the midst of ethical ambiguity, one infertility treatment is a welcome development.

Climbing the Hills
A father tells his story of adopting his daughter from Russia.

If you've been through a experience related to this topic, we invite you to share your story with others.
Share Your Story

Other Things to Consider

Where is God in the Midst of All My Troubles?
So many cry out to Him in times of need, but is God really listening? And, more important, does He care?

Life PressuresWorking Moms, Stay-at-Home Moms

RelationshipsBlended Families, Divorce, Parents and Adult Children, Caring for Elderly Parents