Tuesday, August 28, 2012

"28 Rule for Fathers"

No I did not write this list.  No I am not trying to take credit for it either.  I follow a blog, Single Dan Laughing, which where I stumbled upon the "rules."  It is always interesting to me when I find a list like this for fathers to follow.  Automatically I wonder why men have to have a parenting "reminder" list of the things to do and not to do.  I know that historically and traditionally, mens roles as father meant provisions and discipline, not hugs and conversations.  So I get the list, I understand it's purpose to move men away from thinking their only role in parenting is to pay for shit and yell about other shit.  So I get it, but my feminist side kicks in and knows that if there was a "reminder" list for women as to how to mother, the author of that list would be crucified.

College taught me well, I read everything from a feminist stance first.  So now that I have gotten is snip-it of those feelings out of the way, I must say that these kinds of lists pull and me heart strings in a hardcore way.  I can't help but fit RP and I into that kind of equation.  These lists are a reminder of the things I can not do for him no matter how hard I try to be his mother and his father.  Reading this made me wonder if he will every feel that security of holding a father's hand, or having the bear hug, or seeing a "Dad Superhero" everyday.  We are so removed from his father that, if there is ever a relationship between the two of them again, it will not be for a long time.  By that time, RP's childhood will be a memory.  I know that RP has very strong, positive and important male role models in his life, but it would be a dream for him to read this list as an adult and have one man, a father, who he thanks for following "The Rules."


28 Rules for Fathers of Sons
1. Love his Mother. He will learn to love like you love, and hate like you hate. So choose love for both of you. Devote yourself to it. Love with your whole heart and express that love each and every day. Then, someday down the road, you will see the way he loves his own wife, and know that you played a part in that.
2. Let him drive. Every child remembers the first time they drove on daddy’s lap. For that one moment, he will believe that he is just. like. you
3. Teach him to be picky. Especially when it comes to women and burgers. Teach him to never settle.
4. Take him to a ball game. There is something about sharing a day of hot dogs, sunshine and baseball with your father.
5. Love with Bravery. Boys have this preconceived notion that they have to be tough. When he is young, he will express his love fully and innocently. As he grows, he will hide his feelings and wipe off kisses. Teach him to be a man who rubs them in instead. It takes courage for a man to show love: teach him to be courageous.
6. Talk about sex. Sometimes, boys need to know that all men are created equal.
7. Teach him to be a man’s man. Show him how to be brave and tough around the guys. Then, remind him on the ride home that it is okay to cry.
8. Share secrets together. Communicate. Talk. Talk about anything. Let him tell you about girls, friends, school. Listen. Ask questions. Share dreams, hopes, concerns. He is not only your son, you are not only his father. Be his friend too.
9. Teach him manners. Because sometimes you have to be his father, not just his friend. The world is a happier place when made up of polite words and smiles.
10. Teach him when to stand-up and when to walk away. He should know that he doesn’t have to throw punches to prove he is right. He may not always be right. Make sure he knows how to demand respect- he is worthy of it. It does not mean he has to fight back with fists or words, because sometimes you say more with silence.
11. Teach him to choose his battles. Make sure he knows which battles are worth fighting- like for family or his favorite baseball team. Remind him that people can be mean and nasty because of jealousy, or other personal reasons. Help him to understand when to shut his mouth and walk-away. Teach him to be the bigger better person.
12. Let him dance in tighty whiteys. Dance alongside him in yours. Teach him that there are moments when it is okay to be absolutely ridiculous.

13. Share music. Introduce him to the classics and learn the words to the not-so-classics. Create a rock band with wooden instruments, share your earphones, and blast Pink Floyd in the car. Create a soundtrack to your lives together.
14. Let him win. Sometimes he needs to know that big things are possible.
15. Teach him about family. Let him know family is always worth fighting for. Family is always worth standing up for. At the end of the day, he has you to fall back on, and pray to God that you will have him.
16. Father him. Being a father—to him—is undoubtedly one of your greatest accomplishments. Share with him the joys of fatherhood, so one day he will want to be a father too. Remind him over and over again with words and kisses that no one will ever love him like you love him.
17. Listen to him now. If you don’t listen to the little things now, he won’t share the big things later.
18. Let him try on your shoes. Even if they are old and smelly. Let him slip his little feet in and watch him as he hopes like hell that someday he can fill them. He will fill them.

19. Give him bear hugs. The kind that squeezes his insides and make him giggle. The kind of hug only a daddy can give.
20. Give him baths. Because Mom can’t do everything damnit.
21. Teach him how to pee standing up. Let him pee outside- such is the joy of being a man. Mom cannot teach this talent, so someone has to.
22. Know the answers. He will assume you do. If you don’t know them, pretend you do and look them up later.
23. Toss him around. Because little boys love seeing the strength of their father. Throw him up in the air, so that he knows you will always be there to catch him on his way down.
24. Ask his mother. He will come to you with questions that he won’t always want to ask his mother, about girls and about love. Ask her anyway, she will know the answers.
25. Love him like you would love a daughter. Little girls are not the only ones who need hugs and kisses. Love is the color yellow of emotions. It is both happy and gender neutral.
26. Grow a big belly. Because every child should get the chance to rest their head on the absolute softest pillow ever. Daddy’s belly is the best place to land.
27. Don’t say, do. American inventor Charles F. Kettering once said, “every father should remember that one day his son will follow his example instead of his advice.” Be a good one.
28. Be his hero. You are anyway. To him, you have the strength of Batman, the speed of Spiderman and the brain of Ironman. Don’t disappointment. Prove to him that Daddy’s are the biggest heroes of all. Only Daddy’s can save the day. 
After all, good fathers make good sons.
Sarah D. ~Diapers & Daisies

Copied here from Single Dan Laughing

***Side note, I truly to not agree with #28.  I think that "Rule" diminishes how important mothering is and excludes single moms from being able to step up to the Superhero plate.  I know I am my son's hero.***

2 comments:

  1. Let's see.......peeing outside, showers, tighty whitey dances (let's not visualize that one!!) family trees, and respect...... How am I doing?? AND you are a Superhero!! I hope I was all of that to you!

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  2. Let's see......peeing outside, showers, tighty whitey dances (Let's not visualize that one!!), family trees, respect...and I do have the belly!!....Hope I am meeting most of the challenges. AND, you are a Superhero, I hope that I was that and all of the above to you!! Love.

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