In case you haven’t heard about Dad Labs, it’s a group of daddy bloggers whose mission is: Taking Paternity Back. Here’s a recent post from their blog.
BY DADDY CLAY
In Theory: Don’t play the “Mom’s Away” Card. Dad taking care of the kids when mom is out of town should be a non-event. Because dads are now equal co-parents, it would be absurd and demeaning for a dad to ask for some kind of accommodation or special consideration just because mom is out of town.
In Practice: Overheard within twelve hours of mom’s departure — “You see, coach, My Wife Is Out of Town, so I couldn’t find Ri-ri’s soccer uniform. Or her water. Or her ball.”
In Theory: Don’t gender daily housework or routines, especially with your daughter. Model for her your ability to handle even those “girly” tasks like putting hair in ponytails.
In Practice: The bathroom door slams in my face when I ask if I can help with the hair situation. Her struggles continue all he way onto the sideline of her brother’s soccer game. She adamantly shrugs off my attempts to help. A mom on the sideline asks, “Can I help you with that?” and before I can warn her off, Ri-ri has handed over the brush and has backed in for service.
In Theory: Do not lose the children.
In Practice: It’s my second lap around the elementary school, panic rising. Ri-ri is on the field playing soccer, so she’s accounted for, but Coop has vanished from the playscape while I was spectating. He’s not on any of the fields, not on a second playscape, not in any of the bathrooms. All the other doors are locked. In desperation, I shout his name at the dense thicket that abuts the school property. It shouts back, “Dad! We found a creek!”
In Theory: Cook for the children, observing the same nutritional guidelines the family would normally follow. Dads are as competent in the grocery aisle and the kitchen as moms are. To depend on takeout and processed food reduces your standing and has negative impact on the kids’ health.
In Practice: Marinated and grilled pork tenderloin, pesto pasta, salad, apple slices, that the kids lavish with such patronizing praise that I’m serving frozen pizza for the rest of the week.
In Theory: Keep the kids healthy! Observing routines will help, but if a child does grow ill, dads are just as capable as moms of being patient and nurturing. Male nurses are more and more common, after all. Get in touch with your inner Florence Nightingale.
In Practice: As the stars parade across Oscar’s red carpet, I’m loading vomit-soaked sheets into the washing machine. For the second time. Because as any good parent knows, the last thing you want to do when a child throws up all over his room is strip the bed and put on the only other clean sheets, then deliver a stern lecture on nutrition because the child went on a Smart Food binge while you were chatting with an old college buddy on the soccer sideline because the child will promptly boot again, this time all over the pillows, comforter, stuffed animals, curtains, carpet and bookshelves, leaving you without any clean sheets so you will have to make a humiliating call to your spouse admitting that you not only allowed the child to become sick, but also that you don’t know if you can put the comforter and Wally the Panda in the washing machine.
In Theory: Parenting experts.
In Practice: We screw up so you don’t have to.
About Daddy Clay, co-founder of DadLabs: “When I’m not staring at a computer screen or sitting on the sidelines of a soccer game, I’m probably enjoying one of my wife’s amazing meals and a glass of completely unsubtle red Zin. I love reading the New Yorker, though I’m usually about three issues behind, and will go for the occasional jog as long as the music is good.”





















http://www.scribd.com/doc/16936349/Flight-to-Health
Your stories are touching but can you top me? Four boys, one disabled, mom left 14 years ago. We moved from a farm to the city to get better health care.
Comment by al — May 21, 2010 @ 12:56 pm
I raised my son from the age of four as a single father. Now, I'm happily married and proud father of a two week old baby daughter. It drives me to distraction when my wife tells someone that "Randy is watching Saralynn." I'm not babysitting and I'm not "watching" anyone. I'm fulfilling my role as a Daddy by making sure that our daughter is clean, fed, healthy and happy…along with laundry, dishes, vacuuming, preparing dinner, …etc. Don't demean that by inferring that I'm providing Mommy with a temporary respite from her duties.
Comment by PrimalRand — May 22, 2010 @ 8:55 pm