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Importance of the Father/Child Bond

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One of the most magical moments of my
life was being at the birth of my child. I wouldn’t have missed it for the
world. I remember watching him squirm and cry as he met the world. I remember
how he paused to listen to my voice as I whispered my love for him and commitment
to him. To this day, spending time with my kids continues to be one of my
favorite activities. To not spend time with my children is unfathomable.
For many fathers, this isn’t the case. They sit in hospital waiting rooms,
clapping each other on the back and congratulating one another on a job well
done, while their child enters the world without their father next to them.
The day after the delivery and every day after are filled with missed
opportunities to bond with their child and influence the directions they
will take in life. They rationalize that they are sacrificing for their family
by working long hours and justify their emotional distance as modeling how
to survive in the “cold, cruel world.” Food on the table and a roof over
head is nice but nothing makes up for loving, nurturing relationships with
one’s father.
How do fathers build this bond? What barriers stand in the way? And, what
are some practical tools to help fathers strengthen their children
intellectually, emotionally, spiritually, and physically? To help me answer
these questions, I asked for advice from dads who have a close bond with
their children. How do I know they have a close bond? I asked their wives!
How do you bond with your child?
In response to this question, all of the fathers answered alike. They stated
that the best way to bond was simply to spend time with a child. What you
do is not as important as doing something.
They divided activities up into four main areas: Physical, Intellectual,
Social, and Spiritual. A balance of these four areas would result in a child
having a happier, healthier life. Physical activities are the most familiar
to fathers and include working around the house together, sharing a hobby,
coaching an athletic team, exercising together, and going places together.
Intellectual activities focus on being involved in a child’s academics,
participating in school related activities, encouraging hard work, and modeling
yourself as a their primary teacher of life. Social activities centered on
talking with children, sharing feelings and thoughts, demonstrating appropriate
affection and manners, and getting to know your child’s friends. Spiritual
activities are used the least by dads but have the most power to influence
a child. These activities incorporate reading spiritual stories together,
going to church or the synagogue, praying with children, establishing rules
and order, being consistent and available, and exploring the mysteries of
nature.
What is difference between the father/child bond and the mother/child
bond?
It was quickly apparent from the surveys that dads have a different approach
or style to bonding than moms. Dads have a more rough and tumble approach
to physical interaction or may spend time in more physical activities such
as play or working on a project together. Competition was also seen more
in father/child bonding and was considered healthy if used in small doses
and with sensitivity to a child’s temperament and abilities. Sportsmanship,
but not necessary sports activities, was regarded as an essential ingredient
in the development of a child’s characters. While the approach may differ,
the need for bonding with mom and dad is equally significant. One dad joked
that other than a couple of biological differences (e.g., giving birth or
breastfeeding) he couldn’t see one as more important than the other.
What barriers prevent fathers from achieving a bond with their child?
All of the fathers agreed that work and the mismanagement of time were the
biggest robbers of relationships with children. No one discounted a
father’s responsibility to provide for his family, but all of them maintained
that a healthy balance is needed between work and family. They felt that
society makes it easy to use one’s career as an escape. Social influences
tend to value the bond a child has with mom to be more important than with
dad. But none of the dads questioned felt this barrier to be insurmountable.
Eliminating barriers in society begins in the home. Dads must demonstrate
that being involved in the home is important to them before society will
start treating dads as important to the home. Dads need to take the initiative
to change a diaper, clean up after dinner, give the kids their bath, and
do the laundry. The collective effect of these “small” acts will ripple out
into society to create “bigger” change.
Can a father bond with a child if they did not have a father growing up?
The entire group affirmed that not having a father would make it more difficult
but not impossible to bond with a child. According to one dad, bonding is
more of an innate need or spiritual drive, than simply a learned behavior.
Therefore, fatherless fathers are not doomed to repeat their own childhood
experiences. Another dad suggested “getting excited” by the little things
that make a child excited or happy. Getting down on the child’s level, regressing
to those early moments in life when you were a child, and sharing simple
pleasures with your child will foster the bonding missed the first time around.
In summary, it is clear that the bond between a father and a child is an
important one. Barriers, such as social values and absent fathers make bonding
with children difficult but not impossible. Children need the unique style
of bonding that fathers can provide and fathers can build that bond by spending
time engaging in physical, intellectual, social, and spiritual activities.
Special thanks to the following web sites who volunteered their husbands
or who contributed information for this article:
http://www.boxplanet.com.au
http://www.everythingforparents.com
http://www.womanlinks.com
http://four-fold.homepage.com/
http://www.fathersworld.com/
About the Author
Ron Huxley is a Licensed Child and
Family Therapist, Author, Speaker, and the Father of four. He has helped
parents find the right tools for the job in every conceivable setting, including
corporate boardrooms, private practice, foster homes, school gymnasiums,
parenting halls, and even a women's prison. He has been the quest of the
Leeza Show and his parenting tools have been a regular link on Oprah.com
and many other online parenting web sites. You can visit his site,
Parenting Toolbox or pick up a
copy of his book:
"Love
& Limits: Achieving a Balance in Parenting"
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