| Literature DB >> 27352854 |
Carole Beighton1, Jane Wills2.
Abstract
Although acknowledging the stress of raising their child with intellectual disabilities, parents also report that their child has brought about many positive changes in themselves and family. This study reports what parents perceive to be a positive aspect of parenting their child, as currently what constitutes a 'positive' is unclear. Seven key themes were identified; an increased sense of personal strength and confidence, changed priorities, greater appreciation of life, pleasure in the child's accomplishments, increased faith/spirituality, more meaningful relationships and the positive effect that the child has on the wider community. Interpretive examination of the themes reveals that the positive aspects identified consist mostly of meaning-focused coping strategies. These enable parents to adapt successfully to the stressful experiences of raising their child and therefore could be amenable to meaning-focused therapeutic interventions for parents with newly diagnosed children or for those unable to identify any positive aspects of parenting their child.Entities:
Keywords: caring; intellectual disabilities; meaning-focused coping; positive aspects; positive reframing
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27352854 PMCID: PMC5703033 DOI: 10.1177/1744629516656073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intellect Disabil ISSN: 1744-6295
Positive perceptions identified by parents: Themes across five studies (Hastings and Taunt 2002: 118).
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Pleasure/satisfaction in providing care for the child Child is a source of joy/happiness Sense of accomplishment in having done one’s best for the child Sharing love with the child Child provides a challenge or opportunity to learn and develop Strengthened family and/or marriage Gives a new or increased sense of purpose in life Has led to the development of new skills, abilities or new career opportunities Become a better person (more compassionate, less selfish, more tolerant) Increased personal strength or confidence Expanded social and community networks Increased spirituality Changed one’s perspective on life (clarified what is important in life, more aware of the future) Making the most of each day, living life at a slower pace |
Summary of the characteristics of the participants and their child(children).
| Parent | Child/adult with ID | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Age | Gender | Ethnicity | Marital Status | Occupation | Age | Gender | Diagnosis | Position in Family |
| 1 | 62 | F | British | Married | Retired | 43 | F | GDD/Physical disabilities | Only child |
| 2 | 53, 40 | M, F | Caucasian | Married | Unemployed/carer | 15, 13 | M, M | Both GDD, plus one also has ASD | Second and third of five children |
| 3 | 64 | F | White South African | Divorced/single | Retired | 12 | F | ASD | Only child (granddaughter) |
| 4 | 63, 64 | M, F | Caucasian | Married | Retired | 34 | M | Spina bifida, hydrocephalus | Youngest of 3 |
| 5 | 70 | F | Caucasian | Married | Retired | 7 | M | ASD | Only child (grandson) |
| 6 | 45 | F | Columbian | Divorced/single | Full-time carer | 12 | F | ASD | Only child |
| 7 | 33 | F | Turkish | Married | Full-time carer | 7, 7 | M, M | GDD, blind, one also partially deaf | Only children (twins) |
| 8 | 40 | M | Asian | Married | Unemployed | 10 | F | GDD | Youngest of three |
| 9 | 59 | F | Caucasian | Married | Unemployed | 33 | F | Williams syndrome | Youngest of two |
| 10 | 68 | M | Caucasian | Married | Retired | 32 | M | Down syndrome | Youngest of three |
| 11 | 49 | F | Jamaican | Single | Employed full-time | 25 | M | GDD and ASD | Only child |
| 12 | 60 | F | Australian | Single | Full-time student | 36 | F | Blind and ASD | Youngest of two |
| 13 | 51 | F | Caucasian | Married | Employed part-time | 27 | M | Chromosomal abnormality | Youngest of two |
| 14 | 32 | F | Caucasian | Separated/single | Full-time carer | 15 | F | GDD/physical disabilities | Only child |
| 15 | 48 | F | Caucasian | Married | Employed part-time | 23 | M | Down syndrome | Youngest of two |
| 16 | 61 | F | Caucasian | Married | Retired | 31, | F | ASD | Middle child of three |
| 17 | 29 | F | Polish | Single | Full-time carer | 7 | M | Acquired brain injury | Only child |
GDD: global developmental delay; ASD, autism spectrum disorder; ID: intellectual disability.
Key themes and sub-themes identified relating to positive aspects.
| Key Themes | Sub-Themes | Illustrative Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Increased personal strength | Fight for my child |
‘It’s made us both tougher. You need to be tougher and grow thicker skin when your child is disabled or else you just get trodden on and don’t get anywhere’. (Parent 4) ‘… but it’s taught me if I want something for him, like from the erm council, I have to find the tools to get there and not to stop until I get it’. (Parent 7) |
| Inner strength |
‘… but I think this is good for me, I say this is building me up. This is giving me strength. This is making me a different person which many people say, ‘You have changed a lot. You have changed a lot.’ Right now I feel like I can do anything!’ (Parent 6) ‘That’s the word … I’m very headstrong now. I wasn’t before I had him and he’s made me stronger’. (Parent 11) | |
| Changed priorities | Life changing |
‘I did a master’s degree you know, and then I thought oh f*** you I’ll do it, I’ll do a PhD* as well, and I’ll do some work and I’ll do something else. I’ll do it all! Just finished my PhD and I’ve dedicated it to her… because without her I wouldn’t be doing it’. (Parent 12) ‘… I do feel that it’s an honour that I’ve had [child’s name] because I would not be the person I am now. I would not be as tolerant, I would not be as creative, I would not be as big a person as I would have been otherwise. I could not have envisaged the world as I do now if I hadn’t had him’. (Parent 17) |
| Material things don’t matter |
‘… I understand now life is important, life is so short and if you have health you don’t need to complain anymore. For example money is not important, but health and happiness is important’. (Parent 3) “Money and all the trappings don’t mean much any more our priorities have definitely changed…” (Parent 9) “We treasure each day with her, just spending time with her. Before we had her all we used to worry about was work, work, work…. how naive we were that that’s what we thought mattered most in our lives” (Parent 16) | |
| Greater appreciation of life | Live one day at a time |
‘Funny thing to say isn’t it? When I had him I thought I couldn’t live with him and now I couldn’t live one day without him and with his illness we just enjoy one day at a time…’ (Parent 10) ‘We live one day at a time, enjoying the best of life we possibly can….’ (Parent 7) |
| Simple things mean more |
‘…we get a lot of pleasure just spending time with [child’s name]. We don’t even have to be doing anything fancy you know, something like just taking her for a walk in the park, that’s what we enjoy, the simple things. Does that sound weird’? (Parent 1) ‘I think one of the positives is basic simple things in life are more apparent that I could enjoy are important more than other things perhaps I have not expressed it properly but perhaps it puts your priorities right’. (Parent 14) | |
| More meaningful relationships | Closer relationships with others |
‘… if I had not had (child’s name) I don’t think I would still be married … because we’ve had [child’s name] we’ve had to concentrate more on us. I think possibly we could have broken up. I think she has bonded us together. I think so, so that’s good. (Parent 1) ‘…it’s pushed me out of my reservations but also it’s made me so, so much more tolerant of people’. (Parent 11) |
| Empathy with others in a similar situation |
‘… if you see someone in the street that is disabled and like I said before to you would feel now you want to go and talk to them, you relate to them you see them more as a person than before when you would see them just as the person with a disability’. (Parent 4) ‘… although I’ve always had a certain amount of empathy…you actually grow…it grows huge because you then start thinking of how they’re feeling, and then when you start thinking of how other people are feeling when you say certain things to them, so then you then start thinking before you speak, because you’re thinking of how it will affect that person’. (Parent 5) | |
| Increased spirituality/faith | Faith |
‘I’m a Christian and it’s very much a Christian teaching helping others, understanding others, not being so selfish being more humble too and I think in some ways that it’s almost good for me…’ (Parent 3) ‘I think sometimes God has some influence in your life and he brings people like those for you to become or accentuate your positive aspects towards people with learning disabilities’. (Parent 8) |
| Spirituality |
‘I’m definitely less judgemental, more empathic, more looking at the people inside, more spiritual, more looking at why these things happen in life ….’ (Parent 2) ‘It’s just how you make it at the end of the day, it’s how you are and [child’s name] was given to us for a reason and we get on with it’ (Parent 5) | |
| Child’s accomplishments | Triumph over adversity |
‘If I hear someone turn round and say she can’t do it and then she does it, then I feel like rubbing that person’s face in it [laughter]’. (Parent 1) ‘When I think of the phenomenal effort that [child’s name] puts into doing things and finally he does it you just think, I love him he’s so brilliant’. (Parent 11) …when you see her really struggling to overcome something and she does, it’s like massive (Parent 12) |
| Love for the child |
‘“Oh he’s such fun, he’s great. It’s a joy to have him around. I mean he’s a little monster and we’ve been through hell together this little monster and I, but I do love him’. (Parent 5) He’s absolutely adorable and I love him to bits …. (Parent 11) | |
| Positive effect the child has on others | Acceptance from others |
‘…when people come in contact with him they appreciate him and have got to love him like we do’. (Parent 4) ‘Everyone that comes into touch with her loves her’. (Parent 12) |
| Raising awareness of intellectual disabilities |
‘… from our point of view she has definitely enriched our lives and enriches other people’s that other people have never come across disability in any shape of form’. (Parent 1) ‘I actually think that other people are better off for coming into contact with our children you know’. (Parent 2) ‘I think it brings something to people’s lives, I think it makes them better people when they come into contact with people like [child’s name] (Parent 10) I notice now as well the positives for other people from him just meeting them…’ (Parent 11) |
*PhD: doctor of philosophy.