4.1 Article

Unpacking the Parenting Well-Being Gap: The Role of Dynamic Features of Daily Life across Broader Social Contexts

Journal

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY QUARTERLY
Volume 83, Issue 3, Pages 207-228

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0190272520902453

Keywords

gender; life course; parenting; subjective well-being; time-diary methods

Funding

  1. University of South Carolina through the SPARC Graduate Research Grant
  2. Russell J. and Dorothy S. Bilinski Dissertation Fellowship
  3. Minnesota Population Center [5R24HD041023]
  4. American Time Use Survey Data Extract Builder project through the Eunice Kennedy Shiver National Institute for Child Health and Human Development [5R01HD053654]

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Although public debate ensues over whether parents or nonparents have higher levels of emotional well-being, scholars suggest that being a parent is associated with a mixed bag of emotions. Drawing on the American Time Use Survey for the years 2010, 2012, and 2013 and unique measures of subjective well-being that capture positive and negative emotions linked to daily activities, we unpack this mixed bag. We do so by examining contextual variation in the parenting emotions gap based on activity type, whether parents' children were present, parenting stage, and respondent's gender. We found that parenting was associated with more positive emotions than nonparenting, but also more negative emotions. This pattern existed only during housework and leisure, not during paid work. Moreover, patterns in positive emotions existed only when parents' children were present; patterns in negative emotions were primarily observed during earlier stages of parenting. Results were similar for men and women.

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