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Belated Mother's Day“It’s the rougher side of motherhood,” a dad of a pre-schooler told me when
describing fatherhood.
Mother’s Day is Sunday. While talking about fatherhood is not exactly what many
of you would expect in today’s column, I ask you. What is that softer side of
fatherhood we need to take stock of and realize not just Mother’s Day, but
everyday?
Mothers do it all. They attend school meetings. They are the ones the teachers
expect when they ask for volunteers. They are den mothers for various scout
organizations, and home room mothers at school. The list is endless as more and
more of them are going to college as they earn eighty cents for every dollar men
do. They sew the fabric as well as pick out the fabric upon which the canvas of
our country is sewn. You look for change…it happens in the home predicated by
the various edicts laid down by mothers. You even have a grandmother in the
White House doing much the same the grandmothers we grew up with did.
Still, one of the things most often ignored in these scenarios is the
relationship many of the mothers have with their fathers, and later with their
sons. It’s no hidden secret many of today’s parents cope with issues they have
never faced before. As a result these parents carry either a hope for something
better because of the baggage given to them by their dads or covered up by their
moms. Dr. Ken Canfield, former president of National Center for Fathering in
Kansas indicated in his book “The Heart of a Father,” that 60% of the adult
population had unresolved issues with their fathers. Why is that? And why ask
that question now? Why focus on it when there are more children moving back home
than ever before; when there more boys unprepared for school; when there are
more boys unprepared to be adults?
Why? Because many of these issues generally connect with mom and a dad. We often
forget that no matter what we do, children grow up. No matter what we do we
cannot control how they will turn out. We can be there when they come home. Love
them when they feel lost. Look for them when they are lost. But not feel guilty
if they choose to make choices we didn’t encourage. We must stop babying them or
feeling guilty because there was no one there when they came home, to tell them
right and wrong, good and bad, no and yes.
Granted many mothers moved into the work force. That’s a good thing.
Unfortunately many men were not taught how to handle that and during this
transition, many men never acknowledged the fact they are just as responsible as
mothers for nurturing the emotional development of their children, especially
their sons.
People talk about how society began slipping when they took prayer out of
school. While I won’t argue with this somewhat pejorative statement, look at the
way society was changing about the same time when women began entering the
workforce in higher numbers. Fewer and fewer mothers were home when Donna came
home with a scrape on her knee, or Elmer came home and needed help with
homework. Yes, maybe things began happening when prayer was taken out of the
schools, but as women moved into the workforce, many men just stayed at work
longer.
Men were used to coming home with meals being prepared, homes being cleaned. As
men accepted the social economic status upgrade, many men abrogated the
additional responsibility of assuming domestic chores as their spouses brought
in additional income for the family. Incumbent with a mother who worked outside
the home was a mother who had less time to do all the things that were
previously done. Rather than become a better team, many men turned deaf ears to
change. Instead, as I mentioned, many stay longer at work or left home because
they were unaccustomed to this change. So society began its slide. And when
Elmer and Donna came home with no one to greet them, these children began to
fend for themselves. Discussion around dinner tables was replaced with TV
dinners, TV or video games. Help with homework was outsourced to tutors. The
once efficient team became a competitive money making machine that gave more to
Uncle Sam than each other. See where this took us.
We have children less capable of taking care of themselves than ever before
because many ignored the handwriting on the wall. Lower scores in schools. Fewer
individuals wanting to be teachers. Conspicuous consumption becoming the driving
force rather than just keeping up with the Jones’. Divorce rates and teenage
pregnancies rose to all time highs. So what’s the answer? I don’t know, but I’ll
take a stab at it. It’s mothering.
Mothering is a cooperative effort. Some of you may just call it parenting.
Children need parents, and at no time more so than today. Judith Harris said
that parenting is unimportant and children will grow up to be their own no
matter what we do. For the parents who subscribed to Harris’ “The Nurture
Assumption,” statement, I have one statement. “Don’t have kids!” For the parents
who feel they have to be the perfect parents I have two statements. “There is no
such thing; but being there is a start!”
I can’t begin to think what our children’s lives would be like without their
mothers. Mothers add things dads never could. There are times when couples don’t
get it right, but keep trying. There are different ways to do the same thing and
the important thing that helps is accepting what may be a good decision today
may not work tomorrow. Just like no two children are the same, no two decisions
may work in the same circumstances.
I challenge many of you this Mother’s Day to do something for your mother or in
your mother’s memory. Let it be something simple, but memorable, an
acknowledgement that was it not for her you would not be here. Your legacy is
knitted and tied to her and acceptance of any estrangement, differences, or
unbridled love you might have at some point needs to find a release. Find it!
Find a way to communicate this in a society that deeply needs it. And men, be
there. Sometimes fatherhood may be the rougher side of motherhood, but so much
of fatherhood is ‘just showing up.’ Do that on Mother’s Day. Show up! It’s an
example your children won’t forget.
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