Posted on 06/15/2014 4:17:53 PM PDT by Kaslin
This isnt going to be one of those sentimental Fathers Day articles, even though that is what I would prefer. This article will have a bit of an edge to it. Please excuse my bluntness, but fatherhood is serious business, and for me to sugarcoat or evade the truth about it would benefit nobody.
Here goes: What does my peculiar title mean? Arent all fathers men? No, they are not. All fathers are male, but not all fathers are men. Maleness is a biological identity, a physical reality, a matter of hormones and organs. Manliness, on the other hand, is a matter of character, an intangible quality, a demonstrated achievement of maturity that not all adult males attain.
Several years ago, I wrote about an appalling situation in our countrythe fact that the second leading cause of death of pregnant women in the U.S. is homicide, usually perpetrated by the father of the unborn child. Some males are so selfish and antisocial that they reduce their lover to an object that they will destroy rather than allow her to give birth to the precious life that they have conceived together.
It is a socioeconomic fact that one of the two leading causes of long-term poverty in America is for women to bear children out of wedlock. (The other leading cause is failing to complete high school.) For a male to use a lover for a few moments of pleasure and then abandon her to a lifetime of poverty because he doesnt want the responsibilities of fatherhood is cruelly selfish. Dont do it, fellows.
Fatherhood is one of lifes most momentous choices. Males can become men by accepting the responsibilities of fatherhood, by marrying and committing themselves to full-time partnership in raising, teaching, and financially supporting their offspring. Alternatively, males can opt for bachelorhood, freedom (from responsibility) and let their lover bear the psychological and financial cost of intimacy.
Let us salute the fathers who are menthose who have accepted the responsibilities of raising their children. These are the men who become genuine dads to their childrenloving them, spending their hard-earned pay on them, and most importantly of all, being there for them both in times of joy and times of need.
I can vouch for the irreplaceable role a dad plays in a childs life. Pop, my uncle, gave my mother and me a home in the absence of my biological father. Pop was a man in the fullest sense of the wordhardworking, unselfish, and always willing to serve above and beyond the call of duty. In addition to giving more than a decade of his life in hazardous military and military-related service to his country (no desk jobs for Pop!), he also committed himself to raising me. Many males would have balked at raising another mans son. Pops thought process would have been this (he never told me, but I know how he thought): Heres a boy who, through no fault of his own doesnt have a father; his mother, my sister-in-law, even though we dont get along, has neither the income nor skill set nor emotional capability to raise him by herself; ergo, theyll live with us and Ill help raise the boy.
The dear teacher I had for first and second grades, Mrs. Talley, told me years later that I was rather undisciplined and unfocused during most of my two years as her pupil. Pop was gone then. He was working in the bleak Arctic, superintending construction of the DEW (Distant Early Warning) Linethe string of radar installations at the northern extreme of North America. According to Mrs. Talley, as soon as Pops work was completed and he returned home, I shaped up. Pop set the tone. He enforced standards of right and wrong, and he demanded that I meet his expectations of me. The result? I started to fulfill my potential.
For some men, being a full-time dad to children is the greatest joy in life. For others, it isnt easy. But to each good man who sticks it out, who loves his children and helps to raise them, you have earned our respect and appreciation. Your work as a dad has blessed your children and strengthened our society. Happy Fathers Day, men!
Being her and her family’s boy toy is probably not going to be propitious for him in the long run, though there HAVE been enduring marriages like that.
Anyhow it’s possible to be TOO dutch uncle to be of use in a situation. Driving the lad away or shoving him deeper into her arms is counterproductive. Balanced advice has to point out the upside of doing things right, not just the downside of doing things wrong. It’s possible to be right the wrong way.
It seems like every year the message I get is either I need help to do my job as a father or I'm not doing enough.
I haven't seen seen one that says "For Dad on Mothers Day". What's up with that?
Why do dads have to share their day with graduates and mothers get the day to themselves?
I have to agree that manhood and fatherhood are so much more than just the biological siring of offspring... they have much more to do with behavior modeling for the offspring... I speak as one who had a nasty, woman-hating and child-hating bastard for a sperm donor...
Ping!
>> “For Mom on Father’s Day.”
Noticed “Single mom’s working twice as hard on Father’s Day!” be thrown about on the Interwebs.
I agree. Correspondence from me is done unless he starts it.
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