A new study has revealed that caring for their children is what Australian mother’s dislike the most.
A new study has revealed that caring for their children is what Australian mother’s dislike the most.
A study into parents' moods has found that, especially women find caring for their kids the most stressful, frustrating or boring in their daily lives.It also showed that women feel more positively about their jobs than men, although for both sexes, paid work ran second to child care as the most negative activity of the week.
The study further found that working parents were at their happiest when engaged in socialising, community activities, voluntary work or care, education and recreation.
Peter Brown, study author, from Griffith University's Centre for Work, Organisation and Wellbeing, is intrigued by the result that women feel more negative about childcare, and more positive about paid work, as compared to men.
"The conventional stereotypes of men being breadwinners and women being the carers; in terms of positive effect, it's the reverse of what you would expect. Maybe it's that familiarity breeds contempt," the Age.com.au quoted him, as saying.
According to him, the findings suggest that parents should pursue a third dimension to their work/family balancing act, by including more ‘me-time’ and leisure activities.
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The study involved 173 parents, who worked part-time or full-time, carried a personal digital assistant with them for seven days.
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It was found that the parents, particularly the women in the younger age group (25-30 years), felt more time-pressured than those in the older group (52-57 years).
In the study, overall, the older parents scored more highly on the positive scale but the mood scores showed all participants felt reasonably happy about their time use.
Professor Brown found that younger parents with dependent kids spent more time on child care, while the older group spent more time in paid work and social activities.
Source-ANI
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