T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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652.1 | TRY 100/100! | PROPOS::MCCAUGNEY | | Wed Jan 13 1988 16:38 | 21 |
| For starters -- try looking at marriage as +100/100 at all times!
I never could figure out how a marriage could work using teh 50/50
concept. In the 14 years of our marriage -- we have discovered that
we made it this far because we both work at it 100 % (usually!).
What happens with us is simply when one of us is in say 75% mode
the other virtually has to be in 125% mode - it's a pretty good
system -- especially knowing that whne you're the one in the "dumps"
(75% mode) -- someone else will take up the slack for ya.
As far as children go -- there isn't any posible way of "splitting"
up the duties! You have to give in to the fact that not everyone
is capable (or willing) to share these additional responsibilities
-- or for that matter -- taking up more other duties that tend to
be left by the wayside!
Since the arrival of our children ( now 12 & 9) our priorities/needs
continue to change - you just have to relax and try not to analyze
who's doing what and how often -- you may find it really doesn't
matter.
k
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652.2 | | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Wed Jan 13 1988 18:29 | 16 |
| RE: .0
> I was discussing marriage with my so of 13 years the other day and
>we spoke of the 50/50 commitment. The idea of +- 50/50, In_the_legal_
>sence seems to me to be tilted to the child_bearing woman. If a woman
>chooses to not have a child, it seems that both parties are treated
>relatively equaly but the moment a child enters the situation, that
>legally, the woman has the benefit of the law.
> I asked what seemed to be a simple question of where 'legally' the
>50/50 commitment was and ended up in a quagmire.
Tom, I'm confused by your question. In what legal (or non-legal) area
do you feel that both parties are treated equally until there are children?
And who doesn't treat them equally? The legal system, society?
...Karen
|
652.3 | | CADSE::HARDING | | Thu Jan 14 1988 13:17 | 13 |
| I'm a little confused by your question myself. In most marrages
its what ever the partners feel comfortable with. Through out
a marriage the participation by both will very. What counts is
how each supports the other and one doesn't try to over power/
smother the other.
How you act in a marrage comes more from society pressure and how
you were brought up, more then by some law.
The fact is that a marrage doesn't survive on laws, it survives on
a unwritten commitment between two people.
dave
|
652.4 | | HUSKY::TOM | | Sun Jan 24 1988 08:22 | 40 |
| Hello,
It has taken me this log to reply as are having problems accessing Womannotes
from Husky.
re: .1, 100/100 - I like that.
From a personal committment point of view, it is the best way for both to be.
After re-reading .0, I see that I did not make myself clear at all! Let me
give some background which promped me to enter this.
A friend of mine wrote me a letter saying that after 4 years in a relationship
that they were going to have a baby. They had talked about it in the past and
both seemed eager to have a child. His so is now pregnant and does not want to
have a baby _now_. She feels that she is not ready and that perhaps later would
be best. He is dealing well with the situation and supported her in her decision
not to have the baby. They are still together and seem to be getting on well.
This letter made me think about other outcomes of this situation. For example
if both agree not to have a child. This seems to be an easy decision to make
in advance but conception may totally change feelings on this subject. An
example of this is the Ms Whitehead (sp?) case. Suppose one person in the
relationship _really_ wants the baby and the other doesn't?
The legal question comes in here in that both people in a relationship had an
agreement but then the situation changes. If, for example, the woman chooses
to have the child, then legally the man is bound. It is unreasonable to force
the woman to not have the baby. However the woman's decision generally is backed
up by the courts and the man becomes responsable for her dicision.
My so pointed that it _must_ be taken on faith that the relationship is the
most important thing. I agree but feel that conception can change everything...
This seems to be unresolvable to me...
I appreciate your replies,
-Tom
|
652.5 | Women have the upper hand with children | YODA::BARANSKI | I'm here for an argument, not *Abuse*! | Tue Jan 26 1988 13:08 | 15 |
| RE: .4
"If, for example, the woman chooses to have the child, then legally the man is
bound. It is unreasonable to force the woman to not have the baby. However the
woman's decision generally is backed up by the courts and the man becomes
responsable for her dicision."
I believe, in addition, that a man cannot stop his child from being aborted.
Nor, can a man prevent his child being given up for adoption, or decide to give
his child up for adoption.
Women have the upper hand with children.
Jim.
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652.6 | oh good grief | 3D::CHABOT | Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9 | Tue Jan 26 1988 13:36 | 10 |
| Get back to the point, Jim, and off your private agenda.
The topic is marriage. Are you really sure that in a marriage in
the U.S., the wife can decide to put one of _their_ children up for
adoption with out the consent of the husband? If this is a fear
rather than a fact, please be more explicit in labelling it as such.
It is sad that only women can bear children, but it is a constraint.
You're going to have to get used to the fact that children are a
product of two people, and are never just "his".
|
652.7 | Give us all a break | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | The rug is not an inertial frame. | Thu Jan 28 1988 12:04 | 44 |
| >< Note 652.6 by 3D::CHABOT "Rooms 253, '5, '7, and '9" >
> -< oh good grief >-
>
> Get back to the point, Jim, and off your private agenda.
His response was to the point. In the last century men routinely
got custody of children. For the first 70 years of this century it
was almost impossible for a man to get custody of children in a
divorce. Neither was fair. We are now approaching the point where
"the fitter parent" gets custody. It may be fairer, but it leads
to long custody battles which aren't good for the children. There
is still a presumption in many courts that a woman is inherently a
better parent than a man, though this is getting weaker.
> It is sad that only women can bear children, but it is a constraint.
> You're going to have to get used to the fact that children are a
> product of two people, and are never just "his".
It is also true that children are a product of two people, and
should never by "just hers". It is now the case that a woman
(outside of a marriage) has the choice of whether to have an
abortion, keep the child, or put him up for abortion, while the
man has no say in the decision, he must pay for whichever the
woman chooses, and if she keeps the child may not even get
visitation rights if they weren't married. In this case, woman
seem to have all the power about children. The man must pay even
if the woman lied to him about using contraception (This was
decided in a case involving Serpico (the cop the movie was based
on) where a woman told him she was on the pill when she wasn't.
The court ruled that the child shouldn't suffer because the mother
lied.)
FLAME ON
Give the guy some peace. Jim (from his notes) is suffering because
he can't see his children. Your lambasting him when he makes
perfectly reasonable statements strikes me as cruel. While this is
womannotes, remember that woman ask for a safe place to discuss
issues here, and if men are going to participate, they, by the
same logic, should be entitled to at least a little respect for
their feelings.
--David
|
652.8 | some jumbled thoughts | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Thu Jan 28 1988 15:37 | 40 |
| RE: .7
> It is also true that children are a product of two people, and
> should never by "just hers". It is now the case that a woman
> (outside of a marriage) has the choice of whether to have an
> abortion, keep the child, or put him up for abortion, while the
The woman should have the final decision about whether to
have an abortion, keep the child or put it up for adoption,
especially outside of a marriage. It is her body that has
to go through the changes and take the risks involved.
> man has no say in the decision, he must pay for whichever the
> woman chooses, and if she keeps the child may not even get
> visitation rights if they weren't married. In this case, woman
> seem to have all the power about children. The man must pay even
> if the woman lied to him about using contraception (This was
> decided in a case involving Serpico (the cop the movie was based
> on) where a woman told him she was on the pill when she wasn't.
> The court ruled that the child shouldn't suffer because the mother
> lied.)
I really find it hard to believe that men *must* pay for abortion,
adoption, etc. I imagine that only time men are forced to pay
anything (outside of marriage/divorce situations) is in cases of
paternity suits. And in that case they do have some input into the
decisions that are made. I know a woman who refused to accept any
financial help from the father so that he would not have any legal
rights to the child.
Perhaps this is what marriage is for, so that the father can
have rights where children are involved. It's a form of
contract. It's sad that some fathers cannot have visitation
rights (legally) with children born outside of marriage. On
the other hand, there was no agreement between the couple
about any children. In that case I think rights should lean
towards the mother.
...Karen
|
652.9 | Women still have all the choices | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | Calm down, it's only 1's and 0's | Thu Jan 28 1988 16:02 | 27 |
| Re .-1:
>I imagine that only time men are forced to pay anything (outside of
>marriage/divorce situations) is in cases of paternity suits.
I think that's the point. While I believe that it should ultimately be
the woman's decision on whether to have the baby or not (it IS her
body), still, the man has to pay for her decision, esp. if her decision
is to have and keep the baby. If she keeps the baby, he can be sued
for support of the child, and perhaps not even get the chance to visit
the child. If she chooses to give the child up for adoption he has
nothing to say. Wouldn't it be fairer if the mother chose to give the
child up for adoption, that the father had first dibs on adopting the
child, assuming there was no good reason why he shouldn't have custody
of a child (i.e., history of being an abuser)? And if he does choose
to raise the child, shouldn't the mother have to help support her
child? After all, it did require 2 people to make the baby, so
2 people should share the privileges and responsibilities it brings.
I think the major point here is that the mother has *all* of the
choices in the matter. First she can choose to use or not use birth
control - with or without the man's knowledge. She can walk away from
the pregnancy or child with no further obligation if she chooses to
abort or adopt. The man has no options. While some of this is inherent
in women's unique ability to become mothers, some things could be made
more fair.
Elizabeth
|
652.10 | USE 'EM! | PARITY::TILLSON | Sugar Magnolia | Thu Jan 28 1988 16:15 | 18 |
| Elizabeth,
Just a small nit:
> First she can choose to use or not use birth
> control - with or without the man's knowledge.
Men may also choose to use birth control. Condoms. And if you
don't know a woman well enough to be ABSOLUTELY sure that she is
or is not using another method of birth control, then you don't
know her well enough to have sex without a condom, for both preventing
unwanted pregnancies and for preventing the spread of sexually
transmitted diseases! PLEASE! This is important! They're not
100% effective in either prevention of pregnancy or disease, but
it's the best chance you've got. Make it count.
Rita
|
652.11 | Think we can get the legislature to go along? | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Thu Jan 28 1988 16:38 | 22 |
| Elizabeth:
I like the idea of giving the father the first rights to his child
if the mother wishes to give it up for adoption -- assuming, as
you do, that he is also otherwise qualified. This seems like
a sane and reasonable way to balance the rights of both parents.
I wish there were an equally reasonable solution to the dilemma of a
woman who does not wish to bear a child and the man who dearly wants
the same child. I remember the heartache my brother went through when
his girlfriend chose to abort their child -- but he was only 16, and
she was 15, and really, none of the other choices was reasonable in
their situation. Still, he grieved for months, and I think he treasures
his own children more now for having gone through that experience.
It's a mistake to think that the father of an aborted child is not
part of the abortion statistics.
Sigh. The world can be a cruel and difficult place.
--bonnie
|
652.12 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | | Thu Jan 28 1988 17:43 | 7 |
| I too think that giving the father first rights to adopt (assuming,
etc) would be the best and most humane solution, and that if he
takes up on that, then the mother should be obligated to contribute
to the child's support to the same relative extent that the father
would be required were the situation reversed.
=maggie
|
652.13 | but... | HARDY::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Fri Jan 29 1988 08:20 | 16 |
| Maggie, I like what you said in theory because it sounds fair.
In practice, though, I think many women would choose abortion over
carrying the child and then being financially liable for a child
they were not raising.
Many women who are choosing abortion are doing so at least partly for
financial reasons. Some would love to have a child if they were not a)
in school 2) just starting out on a career 3) supporting other children
on a shoestring.
No doubt some men who are poor feel the same way financially.
But I think that a policy such as you propose would make most women
feel safer choosing abortion.
Holly
|
652.14 | yeah, but, is right . . | JENVAX::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Fri Jan 29 1988 08:38 | 26 |
| "Many women would choose abortion over carrying the child and then
being financially liable for a child they were not raising."
Holly, I have no doubt this is true. I don't know that it's an
adequate reason to say we shouldn't let the father have, to borrow
a legal term, the right of first refusal.
It also illustrates the attitude that some of the men have been
complaining about -- that the woman can decide *not* to abort the
child, then expect the *father* to be at least partially liable
for support, even if *he* wanted the baby to be aborted. The reverse
is not true.
I'm beginning to think that there's something wrong with the whole
way we raise children in this society, something that's much bigger
than forcing a person to help raise, if only monetarily, a child
that he or she helped bring into the world. If things were right,
why would we have to *force* parents to provide their child's minimal
needs?
This whole topic makes my heart hurt. How can we treat helpless
children this way?
--bonnie
|
652.15 | teetering on the edge of a rathole.. | VINO::EVANS | | Fri Jan 29 1988 11:50 | 14 |
| RE: .14
"..forcing parents to supply children's needs"
Indeed.
Not only with unmarried or divorced parents. There are a *lot* of
parents living together with their children who <do something>
until the kid(s) is 18 or 21, which (so far as *I* can see)
cannot be described as "raising".
And how can you force *anybody* to do it?
Dawn
|
652.16 | It is kind of strange.. | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | Calm down, it's only 1's and 0's | Fri Jan 29 1988 15:26 | 12 |
| Re .15
It does seem a little strange that we only make specific demands
on parents that are unmarried or divorced - parents who live together
with their children can do almost anything with little threat of
any consequences.
As someone has already said, there is clearly something wrong with
the way we raise children in this society, but I can't think of
anything better.
Elizabeth
|