Posted on 12/20/2012 12:32:16 PM PST by truthczar2000
Divorce is never good for the kids. I know a young man (15) who lost his father to cancer some years ago. Is he also doomed? Or do different circumstances of single-parenthood make a different outcome?
Bears repeating again and again.
That’s why the Great Society was such a “success” for the progressives. Raising unwed black births > 75% has made them a permanent underclass reliably dependent on the govt.
Therein lies the problem. When you have a father who's not so well-adjusted, who makes the entire family miserable, emotionally abuses them, whatever, should the wife keep him in the picture for the kid's sake?
I don't think so. There is no blanket policy for people's lives they just have to try to figure it out as they go and make the best decisions they can. And none of us should second-guess them.
Amen.
bkmk
Sadly, liberalism is bereft of love, and it has enabled no-fault divorce, where whimsy as well as neglect and abuse can be the deciding factor to leave the relationship legally. The man may love his wife, but his voice is moot.
Lack of fathers has caused horrific ill in America, and women bear as much of the blame for it as men. Maybe more, because if I remember correctly, most divorces are filed by wives. I also blame the oxymoronic "family law" system in America, which serves to create financial incentive for women to divorce their husbands and become "single moms."
Sorry, it's the hard, cold truth. I say it as a woman.
“A mother alone has a hard time teaching a boy to be a man, and teaching a girl how a man should treat her. The lack of fathers is the single greatest plague on the black community in this country, and its spreading....”
This is so very true. My Dad died of a heart attack at age 51 years, and my Mom was left with 7 children, although only three were minors yet. Two others were still in post-HS education processes (a teacher and a radiologic tech). I was only 11 years old, and I still feel an emptiness when I think of my Dad’s death.
Only 17 years later, my sister (who was the RT) lost her husband in a small airplane crash. He was only 36 years old. She was living on the East coast and had five kids under age 14 years. She decided to move back to Minnesota where she had 2 brothers, 3 brothers-in-law (her husband’s brothers), plus some other in-law males such as husbands of siblings. Many of her friends on the East Coast asked her why she was moving; perhaps she was being too hasty. However, my sister was determined to raise her children where they would have adult male members of both families to advise them and who could be examples to her children of well-balanced men. It was a good decision. Her kids turned out great.
“Dont LET these women push you out.”
“The problem isnt about women pushing men out. The problem are men checking out.”
Unfortunately selfishness knows no particular gender, and I have seen personally cases of bad fathers abandoning their homes for other women, and bad mothers who check out of a marriage so they can run around at night with guys at the bars.
I just wish people would not have kids if they are not mature enough to put their childrens’ needs ahead of their own whims and weaknesses. Unfortunately our society glorifies sex/lust above love, marriage, and restraint. The kids are the BIG losers
Fair enough. I am not saying that all mass murderers have daddy issues. Bet a look at the profile of both the Columbine killers shows two young men dealing with what they saw as rejection.
What kind of rejection do you think a child whose parents split up feels. Imagine the pain of seeing a father or mother walking out the door by choice!
We see the results of that kind of rejection in kids all the time. People just need to acknowledge the truth; maybe then we can get about the business of dealing with it.
And you think that a father being gone from his life for years had nothing to do with his mental problems?
I can tell you from my own interactions with young men and women is that the kind of numbness described in Mr. Lanza is often caused by personal trauma. Is it not possible that his father walking out of the home contributed to this kind of mental trauma?
God second guesses all of us, and He’s right. That is why it’s important to make Godly choices in things like marriage and raising children.
I am not second guessing anyone’s choices. I am merely pointing out God’s plan. You can choose to do with it what you will.
To the level of schizophrenia and worse is usually a biochemical problem unless severe abuse was involved. Absence of proper parenting can lead to some functional problems, however, severe mental problems are physical and chemical.
It has been my experience that a parent dying is different from a parent walking out.
Yes, there is a profound sense of loss, but not the kind of feelings of rejection divorce can foster. I don’t know for sure if that is true in all cases ( the heart is known but to God). But that has been my experience, for the most part.
I understand what you are saying, and I agree with it to a point. However, I also believe that mental trauma can manifest itself in chemical changes in the brain. I won’t say that is a definitive cause for schizophrenia; I do believe, however that it can be a factor in some cases.
I deal with disabled people in my line of work. I know that these severe mental problems are physical and chemical. But is it not also possible that the level of trauma needed to push someone over a theoretical edge varies from person to person. One person’s bad experience may well be another person’s mind-altering trauma.
As I recall, those homes were broken and rebuilt, which means the real fathers weren't there.
Thank you for your kind words.
If anyone wants to know more about the European Code of Chivalry, that information can be found at http://www.middle-ages.org.uk/knights-code-of-chivalry.htm
A Prayer for Fathers
No Better Gift for Fathers Day
Gift of Fatherhood: Kneel before the Father from Whom Every Family in Heaven on Earth is named
Fathers are important
Fathers
Fatherhood and Religion
The New Catholic Manliness (about priests)
Dads: Men for All Seasons
The Father of Fathers
On The Demise of Fatherhood
Fathers Day 2009: An End to Buffoonish Fathers
Of Treacheries, Tykes, and the Trinity (Fatherhood, Family, Effects of Abortion)
Priests and the importance of fatherhood [Catholic Caucus]
[OPEN] The Government, Divorce, and the War on Fatherhood
Study Shows Christianity Makes Men Better Husbands and Fathers
Study Shows Christianity Makes Men Better Husbands and Fathers (Open)
Honoring Thy Fathers
Priests of the Domestic Church: A Father's Day Homily
The Blueprint for Heroic Family Life [Fathers' Day] [Ecumenical]
Honoring Thy Fathers
A Father's Tough Love
Children Who Have An Active Father Figure Have Fewer Psychological And Behavioral Problems
Where Have All the Christian Men Gone? My Conversation with John Eldredge
The Transforming Power of Prayer [Part 1] (Catholic Man)
The Transforming Power of Prayer, Part 2 (Catholic Man)
The 10 Paradoxes of Fatherhood, There is a certain immediacy about motherhood that cannot
The Story of Champions [Father's Day]
What Makes a Man a Hero? [Father's Day]
The New Catholic Manliness
Applying St. Benedict's Rule to Fatherhood and Family Life - Using 6th-Century Wisdom Today
The best thing we can do as parents is to be the best examples we can to our children. A lot of stuff they learn just by watching us.
I have taught my children about what a good spouse is by pointing out the good example of my better half they have in front of them.
So far, two of my kids have made excellent choices for spouses.
In other words, we need to teach our children to pick their spouses well. That way they don't have to be surprised by a bad one.
The advice my dad gave me was, "You want to see every side of that person, you want to see what he is like when he is mad, how he treats his mother, how he treats little kids, does he maintain a responsible attitude in all situations?"
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