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Fact Sheet
HYG-5179-97
Family Life Month Packet l997
Family & Consumer Sciences
Campbell Hall
1787 Neil Avenue
Columbus, Ohio 43210
Joyce A. Shriner, CFCS, Hocking County
When asked to describe a special
family memory, individuals often recall specific events or activities
in which their family accomplished something. Many treasured
memories center around family rituals. Rituals help us to identify
who we are both as an individual and as a family; they provide
something constant, stable, and secure in a confusing world;
they help us to make life cycle transitions; they help us come
together during times of crisis. Rituals also help to create
an awareness of our connection with those who went before and
those who will follow after us.
Families use different types of rituals as they move from
one state of development to the next. Many families journey through
each of the six stages outlined in this fact sheet, along with
the corresponding rituals.
Rituals can be divided into five clusters--down-to-earth,
seasonal, hackneyed, courting, and leisure. Down-to-earth rituals
are at-home, inexpensive maintenance activities. Seasonal rituals
center around yearly celebrations and activities, such as birthday
celebrations, holiday festivities, and vacations. Hackneyed rituals
reflect the easiest way to get through obligatory interactions.
Courting rituals represent intimate activities between the couple,
such as hugging, holding hands, and doing special things for
each other. Leisure rituals include relaxing activities, such
as attending concerts, plays, games, and other events together.
Stage 1: Leaving Home (Single Young Adults)
Because the young adult is required
to separate from his or her family of origin at this time, it
is common for them to avoid family rituals or to unwillingly
submit to involvement.
Examples of rituals that would help to ease the transition from
dependent child to independent adult include: assigning chores
that the adolescent will soon have to do by himself or herself
like: balancing the checkbook, meal planning, grocery shopping,
or doing laundry; presenting the teen with a "care package"
full of personal items, rolls of change, snacks, stationery,
postage stamps, and so forth as he or she leaves home; and giving
him or her a quilt made from scraps of fabric from his or her
school clothes.
Stage 2: Marriage (The New Couple)
This stage represents the joining
of two separate family ritual systems, which usually produces
a new, third system. Three researchers, Linda Berg-Cross, Christine
Daniels, and Peggy Carr found four major results when they examined
the connection between marital rituals (activities ordinarily
done together by the couple in a routine way) and the success
or failure of a marriage. They were: (1) taking part in ritualized
activities is identified with long-term marital success; (2)
low ritual activity foreshadowed marital dissolution; (3) older
married women considered rituals that they participated in most
important while, (4) older divorced women showed a strong regret
because they rated rituals that they did not do as most important.
Stage 3: Families with Young
Children
With the first baby comes the
development of child care rituals. These rituals tend to recur
with the birth of each child, and therefore, become the way to
act when a baby arrives. Young children thrive on rituals; in
fact, they need them for security. Parents use them to provide
order and routine during one of the busiest times: in their lives.
Examples of common rituals during this stage are: bedtime and
bathing routines, reading stories, attending extended family
celebrations, and sharing hopes and goals for the future.
Stage 4: Families with Adolescents
Rituals or rites of passage help
establish expectations for adolescents as they move from childhood
to adulthood. Common adolescent rites of passage include: getting
a driver's license, dating, purchasing a class ring, and becoming
old enough to vote. This is the time when boundaries need to
be flexible enough to allow the adolescent to explore and experiment
with new roles and relationships, yet stable enough to permit
him or her to become dependent when he or she cannot cope with
the new and changing demands.
Stage 5: Launching Children
and Moving On
Women often devote more of their
energies to a career at this time. E. Goffman believes that access,
maintenance, and ratificatory rituals may help dual-career couples
stay connected. Access rituals are behavioral signs of affection
when reconnecting with each other. They can include: kissing,
hugging, "hello's," hand-shaking, and so forth. Tension
and exhaustion are likely to cause hostile exchanges during reconnection.
Access rituals help spouses know how the other is feeling and
provide a transition time to let go of negative experiences and
feelings from work and reconnect with positive feelings for loved
ones. Maintenance rituals involve planning and prioritizing time
to be alone together. They invigorate the marriage relationship.
Ratificatory rituals provide a way to celebrate both partners'
efforts and acknowledge the help of each partner in the attainment
of a goal and also emphasize their connection to each other.
A special evening out to celebrate a promotion at work is an
example of a ratificatory ritual.
Stage 6: Families in Later Life
Contact with extended family
members is very important during these years. Family traditions
that provide a way of reviewing the family's history help to
fulfill the older generation's need to survive while accepting
their mortality. Telling stories based on family events such
as: births or deaths,exciting or difficult times,or funny things
that have happened helps to build a bridge between generations.
Symbols of important ritual events abound in homes of elderly
family members. On mantels, desks, dressers and refrigerators
are photographs, items grandchildren have made, bronzed baby
shoes, dried flowers, and other sentimental keepsakes. These
are ritual symbols of the times we treasure.
References
Berg-Cross, L., Daniels, C.,
and Carr, P. (1992). Marital rituals among divorced and married
couples. Journal of Divorce and Remarriage, 18 (1.2),I-30.
Carter, B. and McGoldrick,
M. (Eds.). (1989), The Changing Family Life Cycle.
(2nd ed.). Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
Goffman, E. (1971).
Relations in Public: Microstudies of the Public Order. New
York: Basic Books.
Title: The Times We Treasure
Author: Joyce A. Shriner
Publication Date: 1997
Publisher/Institutional Source: The Ohio State
University, Cooperative Extension Service
Contact: See publication.
Copyright/Permission:
This text
is copyright © 1997 by The Ohio State University.
This text is reproduced on NPIN with the permission of the The
Ohio State University, Cooperative Extension Service.
PERMISSION STATEMENT HERE
NPIN Acquisition:
N00035.
April 1998. |