David Brooks has a long and fascinating article in The Atlantic about how we need to embrace extended families, not just those related by blood, to repair our social fabric. Weavers provide the kind of care to others that many of us provide only to kinβthe kind of support that used to be provided by the extended family.
"This is the story of our timesβthe story of the family, once a dense cluster of many siblings and extended kin, fragmenting into ever smaller and more fragile forms. The initial result of that fragmentation, the nuclear family, didnβt seem so bad. But then, because the nuclear family is so brittle, the fragmentation continued. In many sectors of society, nuclear families fragmented into single-parent families, single-parent families into chaotic families or no families.
If you want to summarize the changes in family structure over the past century, the truest thing to say is this: Weβve made life freer for individuals and more unstable for families. Weβve made life better for adults but worse for children. Weβve moved from big, interconnected, and extended families, which helped protect the most vulnerable people in society from the shocks of life, to smaller, detached nuclear families (a married couple and their children), which give the most privileged people in society room to maximize their talents and expand their options. The shift from bigger and interconnected extended families to smaller and detached nuclear families ultimately led to a familial system that liberates the rich and ravages the working-class and the poor.
... When we discuss the problems confronting the country, we donβt talk about family enough. It feels too judgmental. Too uncomfortable. Maybe even too religious. But the blunt fact is that the nuclear family has been crumbling in slow motion for decades, and many of our other problemsβwith education, mental health, addiction, the quality of the labor forceβstem from that crumbling. Weβve left behind the nuclear-family paradigm of 1955. For most people itβs not coming back.
Americans are hungering to live in extended and forged families, in ways that are new and ancient at the same time. This is a significant opportunity, a chance to thicken and broaden family relationships, a chance to allow more adults and children to live and grow under the loving gaze of a dozen pairs of eyes, and be caught, when they fall, by a dozen pairs of arms. For decades we have been eating at smaller and smaller tables, with fewer and fewer kin.
Itβs time to find ways to bring back the big tables."
How do you face the challenge of treating others as family in a culture that tells us our first, and only, obligation is to protect and help those in our nuclear family?
Read the full article in The Atlantic.
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