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On Your Own
Becoming a Single Mom Through Choice
By Neilia Sherman
TV stars make it look easy. Murphy Brown and Friends have shown single women having babies with minimal life disruption. Calista Flockhart and Rosie O'Donnell make adoption look like a breeze. For most single moms, it isn't that simple.
Yet single motherhood is on the rise. According to the 2000 U.S. census, almost a third of all children in the United States today are being raised in single-parent households, with more than 80 percent of them headed by single mothers. Although divorce is still the most common way in which women become single mothers, more than 40 percent of today's single moms have never been married, suggesting a significant shift in societal attitudes.
The majority of women who choose single parenthood, says Dabney, want to experience motherhood fully but either have not had the opportunity, time or resources to meet the man they would want to spend their lives with or feel otherwise unable to make a lifetime commitment to a partner.
Advances in reproductive technology, as well as improved career opportunities for women, also factor into the increase in women making the choice to enter parenthood solo. Those who choose to adopt are finding agencies are more willing consider financially-secure single women as adoptive mothers.
Jody McKenna, a registered social worker employed as a program manager with the Family Services Employee Assistance Program in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, points out that although single motherhood has its stresses, "There are advantages," she says. "Single moms avoid the need to discuss and negotiate around key parenting issues ... she can shape a child in her own unique vision."
Obviously, the decision to become a "single mom by choice" requires a serious examination of a variety of issues and should not to be entered into without the proper commitment.
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