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Nine Reasons Men Often Fall Short of Women as Parents

5/24/2021

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In general, society sees dads as falling short as parents compared to moms. I agree with that--in general. I know many wonderful fathers. In fact, almost all my male friends are great dads. But when you look at the fathers in a much larger framework, across the USA--absent and distant fathers are contributing to an epidemic of social issues. Even effective dads could be more effective with just a few changes. But what are some of the possible reasons for men coming up short compared to women as parents? Here are my observations as an observer of fatherhood

  1. Dads do not carry or give birth to the baby--a distinct disadvantage in connecting. The baby has heard the mother’s heartbeat for months. The mother has felt the kicks. A natural consequence, dad is an outsider for the most part until the child is born.

  2. Dads read about sports, finance, politics, outdoors, bar-be-cuing, etc. – not parenting. It’s true! It was even true for me. I blame myself, but I also blame the fact that few parenting books or articles are written with the father in mind. It’s a chicken or the egg problem. Would more parenting topics for dads be written if they would read them, or would they read more if they were written specifically for dads? I guess the response to my book may answer that.

  3. Dads are told they aren’t as good as moms are with their kids—and they believe it. Call a man a bad sport, or a poor leader, or a whiner and he will be p*ssed! Tell him he can’t parent without his wife’s direction or help, he may just shrug. Some mothers overrule fathers in parenting which should never happen. There must be compromise and agreement in parenting.

  4. Dads don’t talk to each other about being fathers. I watched the Today show the other day and Willie Geist had some of his friends on the air to talk about being dads. When the segment was over he said, paraphrasing, “it was interesting because we never talk about being dads to each other”. It’s true. It’s very rare for men to talk about being dads.

  5. Although changing a bit, dads are not at home with their kids as much as moms. There are more moms working and more stay-at-home-dads (SAHD) than ever before. But dads still are away from home much more than moms. Only 5-6% of families have SAHDs.

  6. Dads assume they are doing the right things as dads, and don’t look to improve. In general, men think providing and being around are all that’s necessary. Well, it’s a good start but there is so much more! It is a rare dad that will consciously look for ways to be a better father.

  7. Nature favors moms as caretakers. Women seem to have a sixth sense about parenting that most men don’t have. I think most everyone would agree. Of course, exceptions do exist.

  8. Society expects moms to take on the bigger parenting role. Historically, it has always been this way. It doesn’t have to be so, and it may not be that way for your situation, but I expect that expectation will remain for quite some time.

  9. Competition among men does not include being good fathers. Be it softball, arm-wrestling, checkers, or fantasy sports, men like to compete. When you compete, you try to get better. But men don’t compete as parents and there is no compulsion to get better other than your personal desire.

It would be unfair to label all men as the weaker parent.  But when you see the issues in our society, such as poverty, crime, teen pregnancy and violence, that exist in broad areas of our country, especially in inner cities, know that a primary cause is ineffective families due to missing fathers.

Of the nine reasons fathers may trail mothers as parents, only #1 and #7 are not going to change. The rest can change and have been changing as of late, but the process has been slow.  Somehow we need to encourage and mentor fathers or fathers-to-be in their responsibilities as parents, thereby interrupting the cycle of ineffective families. Nothing will change until the offspring of ineffective families get help, or find the energy/desire, to pull themselves out of their situation.

Of those men who are involved fathers, know that your different style is of great value to both your sons and daughters. Two parents means twice the love, twice the variety and twice the protection, at the very least! And as important, being an involved father brings a
 masculine view of the world to your children, a valuable complement to the feminine view brought by their mothers, allowing their insights and understanding of the world and to be balanced.

Note:
For any dad, my book, "The Power of Dadhood: Be the Father Your Child Needs" will help you, at a minimum, with reasons #2, #3, and #6.


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Agape, the Strongest Love but the Least Expressed!

5/17/2021

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Love is powerful! This statement has been proven countless times, not that it needs to be. Every healthy person needs to be loved and needs to show love. Love helps us live fuller, longer, happier lives. But love is not just a subject or a noun in a sentence. Love is action. Love is best when used as a verb.

Love comes to us and through us in many ways.
​
  • There is romantic love (Eros), the love of new beginnings where common sense may take a back seat to passion.
  • There is friendship love (Philos), where two or more people are engaged in a special relationship. They each gain from each other by also giving to each other.
  • Lastly, there is unconditional love (Agape), where a person gives love to another person regardless of any benefit in doing so. Whether the love given is returned or not, the person continues to love. This is truly a selfless love and the type of love you find in families.

Clearly, the strongest love is Agape, or unconditional love. A parent will easily give their life for their child. A child will take care of a parent in sickness when the parent can no longer love them back. Brothers, who may fight among themselves, will strongly defend each other from any outside threat. Agape is a self-sacrificing love!

Men and the Three Types of Love

It can be interesting to observe men regarding the three kinds of love. They almost always show their Eros and Philos love. Eros love is almost all show, all action - full of acts of love. Philos love is identified with much action - hugs, bonding ceremonies, and special handshakes. But the strongest love of all, Agape, may often be the weakest love in terms of men committing to it with action. Love is most powerful when it is in the form of an act, when love is a verb.

We can discuss love all day yet never express love, but loving and showing your love is powerful indeed. When a father is listening to his child, he is showing love. When he takes his child fishing, he is showing love. When he says, “I’m proud of you!” he is showing love. Children need this from their father as much as they need it from their mother. Being loved is an essential need of all of us, but particularly important to children.

A smile, a hug, a pat on the back are the signals that remind your child of your love for them. Even disciplining is a sign of love, an act that shows you care. You may know you love your kids, but do they know. Show them a little Philos love occasionally, give them a little of you! It’s what they want most. The more they see it, the less they will need to see it, and their confidence and mental health will soar!

Love is a good subject, but love is even better when used as a verb.
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IF...

5/10/2021

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Preface: This piece was originally posted in May of 2016. I repost it now as my son will be retiring next month
after 20 often very dangerous years in the Army. Whether this poem helped him get through the rigors, boredom, and harrowing events of service and combat, I don't know. I do know I did what I could as his father. I know that, at least, he appreciated my concern and desire to help him.                             .......................................................................................................................................................................................................................


IF only I could find it! AH! Here it is.

About the same time I started taking notes to write my book on Dadhood, I found a poem by Rudyard Kipling which I believed to be a brilliant summary of what characteristics it takes to be a man. It was also the time when my son was graduating from college and about to join the Army.

I thought this was the perfect message to give to my son as he was about to embark on what turned out to be a most serious, life-altering, and sobering stage of his life. I didn’t know what he was really getting in to, nor did I know what he wanted in life. Neither did my son.

In those moments of fear, doubt, dreams and dread, I thought the words of Rudyard Kipling would give him the wisdom and strength to help carry him forward. But to be sure he would understand the poetic wisdom Kipling said so well, I explained each idea in the simple terms and examples of our time and smaller world. Somewhere, I saved a copy of that letter to my son…IF only I could find it!

For you dads out there with sons. IF you don’t how to explain to your son what it takes to be a man, use the thoughts of Rudyard Kipling and put them in your own words. Words both you and your son can relate to. Or just use Kipling’s own version. He says it so beautifully!

IF

If you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you;
If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
But make allowance for their doubting too:
If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,
Or, being lied about, don't deal in lies,
Or being hated don't give way to hating,
And yet don't look too good, nor talk too wise;

If you can dream---and not make dreams your master;
If you can think---and not make thoughts your aim,
If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two impostors just the same:.
If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken,
And stoop and build'em up with worn-out tools;

If you can make one heap of all your winnings
And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss,
And lose, and start again at your beginnings,
And never breathe a word about your loss:
If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew
To serve your turn long after they are gone,
And so hold on when there is nothing in you
Except the Will which says to them: "Hold on!"

If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with Kings---nor lose the common touch,
If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you,
If all men count with you, but none too much:
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds' worth of distance run,
Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it,
And---which is more---you'll be a Man, my son! 
​

Rudyard Kipling




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Mothers, The Enduring Parent

5/3/2021

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 “It’s not easy being a mother. If it were, fathers would do it.”
The Golden Girls

Don't forget Mother’s Day! When Anna Jarvis started her endeavor to honor mothers in 1908, she had no idea what it would turn into. Actually, she was appalled at how commercial it became and tried all she could to stop that trend. The commercialization of Mother’s Day is not going to stop. But it is also the day that Anna Jarvis intended – a day to honor the cornerstone of families, our mothers!

We know that Moms and Dads often show caring in different ways. Very generally, Moms soothe while Dads prepare. Moms protect and Dads challenge. Moms are often overlooked and taken for granted by their children, while Dads who interact tend to be more appreciated, especially when compared to less-involved dads.

Moms give us the tenderness we all crave and require. When in need of sympathy or understanding, nine out of ten times we go to our moms. They seem to have this magic power to know what to do. And when in danger, a mom perks up like a bear protecting her cubs. There is no power known to man stronger than a mother defending her child.

Moms are the best! Houses may be built by fathers, but homes are made by mothers. Fathers may provide, but mothers make the most of it. And when fathers don’t provide, the mothers can and will do their very best without their help. My mom did this for her six children, raising us all virtually by herself!

I have, been raised by, lived with, helped conceive, known many, and are related to, wonderful mothers. My mother may admit she wasn’t perfect, but there was no way she could have been. Raising six kids alone and working full time at minimum wage only allows a parent to survive, provide, and give love to her children. She did that heroically!

My wife, Kathy, has been a mom above all other things. She had a career she put on hold for 15 years to stay home with our kids. Not all moms can do that, nor should they have to. But we are happy it worked out for us. Kathy took the kids everywhere and gave them so many experiences. Because of her, our children had happy, carefree days. She made my role as dad one I could enjoy so much more because Kathy took care of so many of the kids basic needs.

My two daughters each have two beautiful children. They are both modern working moms but both have a day or two off during the week because of school-aged children. They are married to great dads and they have both learned from their mom. At their homes, I have seen numerous books on parenting (even mine). It is so wonderful to not have to worry about your grandchildren—being able to spoil them because mom and dad are in full control.

It seems like moms are there for their kids 99% of the time. My sisters and some of their daughters raised their children with little or no help from the fathers. I don’t claim to know why that happens as often as it does, but I credit moms for toughing it out when parenting is more difficult than it should be, because it is never easy!

I hope all mothers out there are recognized for all their sacrifices! And please know, there are sacrifices that they have made that we will never know or understand.

Families are the backbone of our country and mothers are the backbone of our families.

​PS. Happy Mothers Day to you wonderful moms out there!!
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