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The Father Factor: The Official Blog of National Fatherhood Initiative

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Guest Post: Are Dads an Endangered Species?

  
  
  

This is a guest post by Dave Taylor. Dave has been living the single dad adventure for almost five years and continues to fight for equal access to his children, while trying his best not to explain to them the behind-the-scenes reality of life as a divorced, single man. You can read about his travails and musings at GoFatherhood.com or find him on Twitter as @DaveTaylor.

single divorced dadI'm a single dad. I have three children from my marriage, a 15yo daughter, 12yo son and 8yo daughter. I have the kids roughly 50% of the time, which makes me a really unusual person in the world we inhabit here in Boulder, Colorado. In fact, I was having a fascinating discussion with my teen just last night about the hassles of two households which, we're both convinced, just sucks. No great solution to the problem, but there's no way that it's an optimal arrangement for anyone, unfortunately.

She observed that none of the other kids in her high school class bounce back and forth like she does, to which I commiserated and made my usual suggestion: "just come live with me".  We talked a bit further, and she shared that almost half of the kids in her class come from broken homes, but that in every other case, the dad's vanished. Either he's literally in another state, he's missing in action or he's either been pushed out of the parenting role or abrogated it of his own accord. Her class of children have about 50% of the dads completely out of the picture.

I think it reflects a greater reality in our society as we fully enter the 21st century: men are being pushed out of the parenting role. I think that there are a lot of causes for this, including that a lot of us men are more interested in impregnating a gal than in stepping up and taking life-long responsibility for their offspring, whether it's easy or hard, whether the children are polite and respectful (read "compliant") or not. But that's not the only reason for this looming crisis, and a crisis it is.

I believe that our society has created the myth of the irresponsible father and that we now have men and, especially, women who buy into it so wholeheartedly that they don't believe there are honorable, trustworthy and reliable men still left. Watch the movies, endure a day of TV shows (especially daytime programming), or read contemporary best-selling fiction, that irresponsible man shows up everywhere! Just count, how often do you see men holding babies or grocery shopping in media portrayals?

What's happening is that we men, we fathers, are in danger of becoming second class citizens.

I know, I've seen it arise time and again, like when I would pick up my little girl at preschool and be the only man in the room. "Who are you? Why are you here? What's wrong with your wife that she isn't here for pickup?" was the constant vibe I got as i walked into the coatroom to wait. I've experienced conversations literally stopping when I walked in, like I was a gunslinger and they were in an Old West saloon.

Even years later, years into this experience of being a highly involved single dad, I experience a skepticism, a suspicion of my motives and comments about how I am so incredibly unusual when compared to most divorced dads. It gets old. And in my experience, not just our culture but the legal system also discriminates against men in both divorce proceedings and post-divorce issues.

A friend who is just starting down this lonely road commented to me a few days ago that he was thinking of trying to get full custody of his kids because his wife is an alcoholic, but realized that it would be just about impossible to win at that battle, however fabulous he was (and he's not, he's just a guy doing his best and occasionally challenged by his dark side, as we all are) and however horrible she might be (and she's not either, she just does what a lot of alcoholics do, unplugs and leaves the children to their own devices).

He's smack in the middle of the cultural morass that we've been stuck in since the 1950s, if not before: It's all too common for the outcome of a divorce to be that the children are fulltime with the mother and the father's role is writing checks and, if they're lucky, interacting with their children in very, very small amounts.

What's worse is that it's then a self-fulfilling prophecy: if you only see your children for one afternoon a week, you will indeed lose touch with them and they'll act up when they're with you because they don't know you. They act up, you're out of practice parenting, so you get angry and upset, then they go home and say how mad you were. Doesn't take long for that cycle to result in you being the Checkbook Ex with almost zero time with children you don't even know.

It's a cycle that I see too often in the divorce community and it's dangerous, not just for us men, but for our children. How will they learn what a healthy mother/father relationship is? Where will they learn what it is to be a father, to know what to expect from a good man who isn't the Prince Charming of teenage fantasies, and to work with us men to create healthy, successful family units again?

But this isn't just about divorce and single parenting, this is a more pervasive problem with the role of men, of fathers, in our culture. Thirty years ago men had a known, specific role in our family unit, the "wait 'till your father gets home" and 'father knows best" world of women as day-to-day nurturers, but fathers as pivotal members of the family too. Now plenty of us men are home, moms are working fulltime. Times have changed. Indeed, our expectations of relationships and our willingness to work towards success have changed. Isn't it time to make sure we're still moving in the right direction before we find that us fathers are obsolete?

The views expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect those of National Fatherhood Initiative.


Comments

Excellent post. I think couples are less likely today to try and work out their marital problems than they were a generation ago. People are more inclined now to reinvent themselves via divorce, and men are apt to get marginalized in the process. The prevalence of the hookup culture in our society and frequent depictions on TV and in the movies of men--and especially fathers--as adolescent buffoons don't help. As a father myself, I firmly believe that men make indispensable and irreplaceable contributions to the whole child rearing experience. Which is why support groups like NFI are so important in today's world where positive examples of fatherhood in the mass media are fast becoming a thing of the past.
Posted @ Wednesday, May 23, 2012 12:33 PM by Robert Sedgwick
Although i agree with most of what you said, i just want to piggy back on a fact that accuring all over the U.s especialiiy in NYC. Iam dad who not only took care of my separated wifes teen son, but my own three year old boy. My ex wife has been in and out of the system fopr so many years since she has three children from three different men. Im expearincing the pattern she has created, once the man does not want to be with her because of her abusive controling ways, she goes to cout out an oprder of protection on the dads and make it difficult to be in their childs life. I blame the system because i pay child support child care and can't see my son or can't be in his life. The system will always take the womans side because of this domestic violance increase, but that not fare to those dads who want to be in there son life. Its really bad for the child who really is the victum in this whole dilema,. Many fathers just give up because of the beuracracy of our horrible system.
Posted @ Wednesday, May 23, 2012 2:32 PM by David Berry
Excellent Post! I my self have just experienced of the bias of society and the total injustice of the process. My ex was caught with the swim coach of my four children, refused to faithfully try marriage counseling, admitted to her two years of planning the divorce, and then abandoned the home. In spite of this crushing emotional blow I had the greatest summer of my life with my kids 50% of the time. It was truly amazing and eye opening to spend time with them without the harsh and controlling filter of my ex's presence. The time I was able to spend with my children that summer is priceless and far outweighs personal cost of the sabotaged 22 year marriage. Shared custody was working great. My kids were happy and felt the situation was working well--of course it was working well, they wanted to be part of both of their parents lives. But as soon as school started her gloves came off and the barrage of strategic but baseless litigation began, as well as the obvious and active alienation of my children. She drove this process on for two years and well over $400k in legal bills, throughout which I received numerous reports from my children of her family's planning sessions to "destroy me" and "put me in jail". The process is so distorted that my selling of a $350 piece of furniture was deemed "an emergency worthy of an injunction" but not a single one of her blatant violations of court orders was ever even considered--and she was even the author of those orders! This included therapy for my children to cope with divorce as they became suicidal and reached out to me while under her sole care. The final result today is that I myself am suicidal because I never get to see my children, children who have been taught to hate, and use love and affection as a tool to manipulate, control, and hurt others. My mistake was letting it be known that the only thing I was concerned about was my children and then expecting that my actions to put them first in all situations would somehow be recognized. I was so naive. The system is so slanted it almost forces you to become a "deadbeat dad" to maintain any self worth or self respect. The process is that destructive to men. The only thing of value left to me of those 25 years is the personal knowledge that I refuse to be a deadbeat or act to the detriment of my children--children I will likely never know further and can now only pray for. Certainly no one else in this prejudiced system even gives me credit for that.
Posted @ Friday, June 01, 2012 12:24 PM by Peter Shiner
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