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Dads - Celebrating the Difference
By Warren Redman owner of the Centre for
Inner Balancing
Ive heard a lot recently from dads who have felt displaced inside
their own family. This is how a typical conversation has gone:
For years I did what I thought was expected of me. I have been
the chief bread winner, and my wife has mainly taken care of the children. I realize now
that I spent too much time working, because I believed that I had to bring in enough money
for us to maintain a reasonable standard of living, or sometimes, even enough to pay the
mortgage and feed the kids. Suddenly, I have two teenage children and a wife I hardly seem
to know, and they certainly dont know me. I feel like a second-class parent. All
Im asked to do is hand out the discipline when the children won't do what their
mother says, and the money when they want something.
If that sounds like a stereotype from the seventies, all I can say is
how common it appears today.
Nobody teaches us the kind of parenting skills that helps us to
distinguish the equally valuable, yet distinctive roles that moms and dads play, or could
play, in the development of their children. Nor are men and women taught how to
communicate their needs, fears, hopes and personal strengths to each other, especially in
relation to the sensitive subject of how shall we bring up our kids. When the
only model we have is the one of our own parents, or of living in a dysfunctional family,
it is hard to escape that way of being, even with the best of intentions, without an
understanding of how to create the best partnership in the most important role we ever
play.
Children need the loving care and attention of both parents, because
they get different things from each. Boys learn how to be men from their fathers. If they
have a father who shows his love by not being present because he is working to bring in
money for the material things, that is what his son will learn. Daughters, who see the
same thing, will learn to expect material, not emotional, support from a man. Nobody is
satisfied. The man is unable to express his love in the ways that are natural to him,
since he has learnt to be the strong provider; the women feels trapped in the role of
child-rearer; and the children see models of parenting that create disempowerment, and
eventually discord.
The answer? Men and women need to ask each other what they both really
want as parents, and what each really has to offer. And they have to listen to the answers
and arrive at ways to mutually provide support. Easy? Well if it were that easy, there
would never be a problem. It takes practice, and more practice, because, as we know, men
and women communicate differently. It takes a big effort to shake off the preconceived
notions we have of what parenting is about. It is not just what mothers do, nor just what
fathers do. Its what they both have to offer as men and women.
We are just beginning to understand the importance of dads. Being a
great dad isnt being just like mom. Being a great dad is being there, teaching your
children about the things you know as a man - sharing your stories with them, playing with
them in your own distinctive way, giving them values and clear boundaries and explaining
why they are there, supporting them when they are down or in trouble, showing that
its OK to express love and fear and joy. Oh, and showing how you value their mother,
and all the things that she does.
So, when you and your partner talk about the dad side of parenting,
explore the differences between my list and being a chauffeur, paying the bills, being the
disciplinarian, and fixing things.
Most important (and difficult) of all, learn
with each other to value and celebrate the differences between your parenting styles,
instead of seeing the differences as right or wrong. They are both
right for the children if they come from a place where each parent is wanting to be the
best they can be. When mom and dad both reach into the natural love they have for their
children, and then acknowledge that each shows that love differently, there will be no dad
who feels like a second-class parent, displaced from his own family.
Warren Redman is a psychotherapist, facilitator,
author, husband, dad & grand-dad. He runs the Centre for Inner Balancing & is
President of the Men's Conference Association of Calgary. The Conference - Fatherhood -
Past Present & Future will take place in June - 7th to 9th. 403.245.5463
www.innerbalancing.ca
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