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FEATURES
Families in Transition
 
— Patricia Sullivan

robert johnson
photo by Ben Barnhart

Resilience Matters
Robert Johnson, 43, and
Kelly Rimondi, 34

Children: Alexander, 6 and Abigail, 4
Robert: $11/hour machinist
Kelly: $20/hour customer service rep
Own home in Springfield

The shelf beside the stove in their breezy kitchen sags with cookbooks, but Robert Johnson and Kelly Rimondi of Springfield haven’t eaten dinner together more than once a week during their eight-year marriage. They work opposite shifts, and although they talk on the phone two or three times daily and “mutter” to one another when Robert comes to bed at midnight, Sundays are the only times they’re together with their children, Alexander and Abigail.

“Not having enough time to spend with the kids or each other is a huge source of stress,” says Kelly. It helps that talkative Kelly and reserved Robert share a cheerful attitude about their situation. “When we have problems, we just roll with them,” Robert says. “We have to get from point A to point B and can’t think much beyond that,” adds Kelly.

Kelly, 34, works in customer service for a utility from 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.; Robert, 43, works from 3 to 11 p.m. as a machinist. Tag-team marriages such as theirs are common. In fact, one in three dual-earner couples with children include at least one parent who is a shift worker. “Shift-work issues are such a widespread phenomenon that, although it wasn’t part of our initial proposal, we focused on these families in a recent paper,” says Maureen Perry-Jenkins of the UMass Work and Family Transitions Project. Perry-Jenkins hypothesized that parents who work nonday shifts may be more depressed and argue more. The data partially supported that idea and also showed that, with very young children, it is more stressful for a mother to work the evening or night shift than for a father.

Further complicating the Johnson-Rimondis home life are the children’s disabilities. Alexander has cerebral palsy and an attention-deficit disorder. Abigail has a mild form of autism. Niece Becky, 19, who is developmentally disabled, shares their Pine Point home.

“There was a time when Abigail wouldn’t walk on tile floors,” remembers Robert. “She has these sensory quirks. We couldn’t take her to a store, and it was tough getting any shopping done with our working opposite shifts.”

But now Alexander is thriving in first grade, while Abigail has progressed well, thanks to nine experts, including occupational and physical therapists. “She used to be withdrawn and not interact with anyone,” says Kelly, as Abigail comes home from preschool, bursting with energy and demands.

The resilience of families like the Johnson-Rimondis amazed researcher Perry-Jenkins. She discovered a notable lack of entitlement among most working-class couples. “They don’t expect what they perceive as handouts,” she says. “When they have a hard time, they think, ‘Maybe I can sleep less or get my family to help out more.’”

Says Kelly Rimondi: “All these questions about how we cope makes us take a step back and feel good about what we’re doing.”


 

The Value of Family
 
Keep On Keepin' On
 
The Power of One
 
Resilience Matters
 
Finding Balance
 
The Mommy Tax
 
A UMass Amherst Family Portrait
 
Getting Smarter about Growing Older
 
Marrying Research and Policy
 
Hope for Holyoke
 
Confessions of a Backyard Blogger
 
Hungry Hill
 
Brothers D’Angelo
 
The Evolution of the Family
 
All the Boys and Girls Now
 
Babes in TV Land
 
Rule #98: Turn It Off
 
The United Colors of Family
 
 

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