QSaltLake Magazine - Issue 309 - March 2020

Page 27

VIEWS   |  QSALTLAKE MAGAZINE  |  27

March, 2020 |  ISSUE 309 | Qsaltlake.com

who’s your daddy

Science proves it: We make great dads

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BY CHRISTOPHER KATIS

It’s strange

to think that there was once a time in this country when single men weren’t allowed to adopt. I imagine it was based on prejudices: first, that only women take care of kids; and secondly, that single men wanting kids were obviously pedophiles. It wasn’t until 1968 that a handful of single men were allowed to adopt. Among them was Bill Jones, thought to be the first gay man to adopt. It would be another decade before gay couples adopted jointly. What’s ironic about this history is the growing evidence that same-sex couples may actually be better parents than their straight peers. Kelly has a theory about this: unlike straight people, who can become accidental parents, we usually have to go out of our way to become moms and dads. Therefore, we’re more invested and more resilient. As much as it pains me to admit it, he may be right. As far back as 2012, LiveScience.com highlighted Clark University psychologist Abbie Goldberg’s research noting that nearly half of straight couple pregnancies are accidental, and that “gay parents tend to be more motivated, more committed than heterosexual parents on average because they chose to be parents.” But there seems to be more than just planned versus accidental parenthood. Dana McNeil, licensed marriage and family therapist and founder of The Relationship Place, whom you may remember from last month’s column, practices a form of couples therapy called the Gottman Method. She says that research shows that both the cultural and social stressors LGBTQ parents face make us more resilient than our straight peers. Los Angeles-based licensed psychotherapist and co-author of Gay Dads: A Celebration of Fatherhood, David Strah, agrees. “I would say for all LGBT parents there is the added stressor of homophobia or transphobia. This might take the form

of feeling judged for our parenting by non-LGBT parents and family members, or some internalized shame, and the need to prove ourselves as being perfect parents. The antidote to this is talking about it, recognizing it, acknowledging it and trying to surround ourselves with other positive LGBT parents, families and supportive allies.” “The ability to overcome the same day-in and day-out problems that all parents experience is often easier for LGBT parents,” McNeil also adds. “Research being done at the Gottman Institute is finding that LGBT couples often hold each other in a more positive perspective than do many straight couples. They use humor, roll with life’s punches, and often let things go more easily — and they’re doing it better than their hetero peers. That support and affirmation is good for their kids.” And this is having a profound effect on kids of queer parents. Last year, The Washington Post cited a study by several European economists that shows kids with two moms or two dads fare better in school than those with a mom and a dad. They have higher test scores in elementary school and are nearly seven percent more likely to graduate from high school. Even with this research, I don’t think that LGBTQ parents are categorically better than straight parents. I know some pretty phenomenal straight moms and dads, and some not-so-great LGBTQ parents. What I think it provides is unbiased, scholarly research about us. That’s important as legislators across the country work to enact laws harmful to gay adoptive and foster parents, often relying on biased, flawed studies to support their actions. It may have taken 50 years, but science is finally showing the world what LGBTQ people have always known: we make great parents.  Q You can reach Dana McNeil, LMFT at sdrelationshipplace. com or facebook.com/sdrelationshipplace/ and you can find David Strah at davidstrah.com.

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Articles inside

The tale of a dizzy queen

4min
page 46

8 things that’re getting on my GD nerves right now

3min
page 44

Vacation: The best cure

2min
page 43

You’re a Bad-Ass

3min
page 42

Gay Like Me: A Father Writes to His Son

2min
page 41

5 retail replacements that should satisfy your urge to splurge

3min
page 34

The Madness of Martha Wash

13min
pages 30-32

Genderbands to hold first Purple Soirée

3min
page 29

Deep Inside Hollywood

3min
page 28

Science proves it: We make great dads

3min
page 27

Steven Hotze

4min
page 26

IF YOU’RE OUT IN PUBLIC AND YOU CAN’T FIGURE OUT A STRANGER’S GENDER, FOLLOW THESE STEPS:

6min
pages 24-25

The Equal Rights Amendment is a queer movement

6min
pages 22-23

My brother is wrong about his transgender bill

3min
page 21

Rachel Slawson is the first out contestant for Miss USA

5min
pages 18-19

Elevation Utah Gay Ski Week Turns 10

1min
page 17

Utah Gay Football League’s 2020 season beginning

1min
page 17

Qmmunity

5min
page 16

Salt Lake County Health Dept. adds HIV PrEP to STD Clinic services

1min
page 15

'No Sides, Only Love' banner slashed in Orem

1min
page 14

Few LGBTQ-related bills on Utah's Capitol Hill this legistlative season

3min
page 14

Local leaders endorse Buttigieg for president

2min
page 13

Buttigieg draws thousands for town hall in Salt Lake City

4min
page 12

Utah ranks in top half of states in HRC State Equality Index

3min
page 11

Top national and world news since last issue

4min
page 9
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