I love it when people ask me for cites, assuming, I’m as ignorant as they are. The answer is I never say anything that isn’t in the literature. 😉
CORE PROBLEM
Female mental illness.
Caused by
1) higher neuroticism
2) empathizing over systematizing
3) Higher susceptibility to trauma emotional trauma
4) Internalizing instead of externalizing
5) Externalzing against children by psychological and emotional abuse – and. more physical abuse.
6) Infantilizing rather than ‘adulting’ children.
7) Mothers (filicide) kill more of their own childen.
8) Single mothers more responsible for criminality and
9) Single mothers more responsible for ‘mass shooters’ and ‘serial killers’
10) Fathers are superior single parents, in part because they are more likely to recreate a stable two parent household.
Mothers In General
Mothers often serve as primary caregivers, especially in single-parent households, and therefore their actions can significantly impact a child’s well-being. Factors that may contribute to adverse childhood experiences in these contexts include:
1. Stress: Single mothers often face higher levels of stress due to the demands of raising children without a partner. This stress can be exacerbated by financial difficulties, lack of social support, or personal issues like mental health problems or substance abuse. High-stress environments can contribute to instances of neglect or emotional, physical, or sexual abuse.
2. Mental Health Issues: Mothers with untreated mental health issues, such as depression or anxiety, may struggle to provide consistent, nurturing care. This can lead to situations that are confusing or distressing for children.
3. Intergenerational Trauma: Mothers who experienced trauma in their own childhoods are at a higher risk of creating environments where their children experience trauma. This can be due to a lack of healthy coping mechanisms, unresolved mental health issues, or repeating patterns of behavior that were modeled in their own upbringing.
4. Lack of Resources: Single mothers, in particular, may lack the resources needed to provide a stable, nurturing environment for their children. This can include financial resources, time, social support, and access to quality healthcare and education.
Households headed by single mothers.
1. Crime rates are a complex issue that has been the subject of much research and debate. However, certain risk factors associated with single parent families can contribute to higher crime rates.
2. Socioeconomic Factors: Single-parent families, especially those headed by single mothers, are more likely to live in poverty compared to two-parent families. Financial stress can lead to a variety of negative outcomes for children, including increased risk of involvement in crime.
3. Lack of Supervision: Single parents, due to the demands of providing for the family on their own, may have less time to supervise their children. Lack of parental supervision has been linked to higher rates of juvenile delinquency.
4. Educational Outcomes: Children from single-parent families often have lower educational attainment, which is a risk factor for criminal behavior.
5. Neighborhood Factors: Single-parent families are more likely to live in neighborhoods with higher crime rates, fewer resources, and lower levels of social cohesion, all of which can increase the risk of criminal behavior.
6. Stress and Mental Health: Children in single-parent families may experience more stress due to financial instability, parental stress, and lack of resources, which can impact their mental health and increase the risk of criminal behavior.
BASIC CITES:
1. “The degree of mothers’ regulatory skills in the context of posttraumatic stress symptoms reflects a key process through which the intergenerational transmission of trauma may occur.”
Pat‐Horenczyk, R., Cohen, S., Ziv, Y., Achituv, M., Asulin-Peretz, L., Blanchard, T., Schiff, M., & Brom, D. (2015). Emotion regulation in mothers and young children faced with trauma.. Infant mental health journal. .3) magical thinking as self-regulatory therapy
4) responsibility evasion as failure of self regulatory therapy.
2. “mothers’ posttraumatic stress and depressive symptoms significantly mediated the effects of mothers’ past torture on their children’s adjustment—a pattern indicative of intergenerational traumatization.”
East, P., Gahagan, S., & Al-Delaimy, W. (2018). The Impact of Refugee Mothers’ Trauma, Posttraumatic Stress, and Depression on Their Children’s Adjustment. Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health. https://t.co/MtXpTSNj7s.
3. “mothers’ aspirations to shield their children from trauma was a fragile endeavor for mothers who faced ongoing trauma and economic hardships.”
SmithBattle, L. (2018). The past is prologue? The long arc of childhood trauma in a multigenerational study of teen mothering.. Social science & medicine. https://t.co/umOILzP0MN.
I could spend all day copying and pasting cites here. But you can pull up google scholar or any of the new AIs for scholars and search for cites on the subject.
Unfortunately, @ChatGPT as been ‘sterilized’ and will not answer contentious questions so it’s unusable for scholarly work.
Reply addressees: @FU_transphobes @Citygerl @JessVonMiqobutt @JessicaInsanity @RyanShead
Source date (UTC): 2023-06-30 19:54:17 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1674868983042826253
Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1674861675646705665
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