Showing posts with label fatherhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fatherhood. Show all posts

Sunday, October 28, 2012

What Kind Of Man Are You?


The internet is loaded with websites and blogs, as well as, government and academic research, detailing the effects of absent fathers on society. None of these effects are anything close to positive. I just did a quick search and headline scan on Bing.com and was amazed at what I found. Here are some of the words that pop up: POVERTY, PRISON, JAIL, YOUTH INCARCERATION, HUNGER.  Just skim reading the articles that are available fills me with a huge sense of sadness at the seriousness of this problem.

It’s a problem that feeds on itself. Our society is in a deepening spiral. 90% of our prison population is male. 85% of them came from family situations with an absent father.  Guess where that leaves their families? That’s right! Without a father! As more and more children grow up without a father in their home and life they begin to build their own lives and families based on the model they have experienced. Boys become men who follow their father’s example and are absent in their children’s lives. Girls grow into women who repeat their mother’s decisions resulting in more children growing up without the healthy influence of a man of character.

There are other causes of the absent father problem besides crime, imprisonment, or promiscuity. Some elements of society would try to convince us that single parent homes are not a problem. They want us to believe that divorce doesn’t harm children. There is a cavalier attitude towards children being born to young women with no husband or even a committed relationship with the father of their child. Requiring child support payments from the father, if he is forced, or even willing to accept responsibility, is only a partial remedy for the poverty and hardship that will be faced.  If you track the statistics, you find that unwed mothers and their children battle tremendous struggles in life, financially, emotionally and legally. Children without the benefit of a stable family unit are no big deal, it is said. The facts do not bear this out.

Of course, the Absent Father Syndrome can also be the result of a father who simply refuses to accept his responsibility to provide for, teach, and train his children. This is the man who is preoccupied with work or his own pursuits. This is the man who is around but not really there. He spends his time doing whatever he wants, seldom giving his children the love and attention they need and crave. When he does pay attention it is usually criticize and castigate.

I’m not suggesting that we shouldn’t punish lawbreakers.  Criminals must be punished. Society must be protected from violent and otherwise dangerous people. I do not believe that we should condemn or despise unwed mothers or children of single parent families. I do believe we must begin to create a shift in the attitudes and acceptable behaviors of society. We must reverse this trend for the health and well-being of our society and our citizens.
I don’t profess to have all the answers. I don’t pretend that this is not a complex, multi-faceted problem. But, there are simple answers.  One of the simple answers is that we must recognize that this is a fight that will not be won quickly. Overcrowded prisons and populations with more children born to unwed mothers than to married women are problems that indicate serious societal decline. This will not be reversed overnight. Another simple answer is for men to make a difference in their own families and, at the same time, in the lives of fatherless children outside their own families. Not easy, but simple.

What kind of man are you? What's your simple answer?

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Holy Cow! We're having a Baby!

We had an ultrasound the other day. WOW! Makes me smile just thinking about it. Seeing that perfectly formed little person moving around in there is pretty awesome. We could see his/her brain, his/her heart beating, even the four chambers of the heart! It's too early to tell whether we're having a girl or a boy, but the professionals could pick out other internal organs even though  Little Person Henry  is only about 4 inches long. Amazing!

My wife and I are expecting our first child. Those of you who have already experienced this probably remember the emotions: fear, uncertainty, anticipation,and excitement, that all first-time parents experience. Now its our turn. We are having so much fun thinking about how we'll raise our child, looking for the perfect name, wondering if it's gonna be a girl or a boy, debating parenting strategies, planning the future (Yeah, we know that's kinda silly but we can't help it.). We spend lots of time talking about what life will be like when the little one arrives. We're 16 weeks in and it's starting to sink in I think.

Honestly, thinking about being a dad is pretty scary. There's a person who's going to be counting on me to protect them, provide for their needs, teach them how to live life. On the other hand, I'm really looking forward to the challenge of being a father to the tiny person who is joining our family. What a privilege it is to guide a youngster on their journey to adulthood. I hope I never lose the sense of wonder and responsibility I feel right now.

I wonder what the experienced parents in our lives would say to us. I would love to know more about what they experienced as they anticipated their first child. I suppose its an odyssey everyone has to take on their own, but it seems like it would be so enriching to hear other people talk about what it was like for them to make the transition from being just two to three or more.

This experience is so deeply moving that sharing it with others will help us connect with people in a powerful way. Sharing these life moments involves a level of vulnerability that can build a bridge between people that would otherwise have very little in common. I wonder how it would change our world if we would take the risk of opening up to others our hopes and fears connected to this and other life changing events in our lives.

What would you say about your passage from couple to parents?  Feel free to leave a comment, brief or lengthy, in the comments below.