¡Hola! Everybody...
My fathers were good, if flawed, human beings, but they gave much.
My fathers were good, if flawed, human beings, but they gave much.
Happy Fathers Day, everybody...
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Fathers, Sons & Daughters
What have you done with the garden that was entrusted to you?
-- Antonio Machado
-- Antonio Machado
I had two
fathers and possibly more. I had uncles, older cousins as well as elders from
the community who were to me as fathers in some respects. But the two that were
most influential was my biological father, Edwin, and my stepfather, Vincent.
Both were polar opposites of one another.
My father was
almost all yang: penetrating intelligence, extroverted, creative, charismatic
-- he was everything a little boy wanted as a father. I adored him --
worshipped the very ground he walked and I wanted to be just like him. My
father passed on to me the gift of the thirst for knowledge and I could never
repay him for that. My father’s example taught me that there was a higher
purpose in life and he taught me love for knowledge, beauty, and truth.
My stepfather,
Vincent, was almost all yin -- he was easy-going, definitely not cerebral,
loved doing things with his hands, and loved music. As a child, he would take
me to his various jobs and brag to his friends and co-workers that I was a
genius. Then he would say something like, “Go ahead, ask him anything,” and his
co-workers would and I would almost always get the answer right. He used to get
a big kick out of that. Vincent, instead of resenting my intelligence, supported
it. Any other man would’ve felt insecure, but not Vincent, because he was easy
going almost to a fault. Not that he was a pushover, he wasn’t, he had the
hands of a carpenter, large and rough, and I had seen him knockout a man much
bigger than him with one punch. He was just less confrontational than my
father. Vincent’s example taught me dependability, consistency, “showing up” as
he used to put it.
These days it’s
popular for talking heads and politicians of all stripes to go on at length
about fathers and fatherhood. On one side, there’s the myopic notion that almost
all social ills can be placed firmly on the shoulders of fathers -- or
“absent” fathers. Of course, this is just a form of scapegoating. Sure, fathers
are important in the development of young minds, but a father being more
“present” doesn’t automatically translate to a better, more just society.
I once created
a leadership development workshop that utilized relationship-building skills.
Leadership is about being able to connect to people, not forcefully leading
them by the nose. Whenever I would ask the participants to list what they
perceived as leadership qualities, nurturing -- the core skill for
relationship -- was almost never mentioned. When our culture emphasizes
bread-winning and individual success for men at the expense of care-giving, the
welfare of children is at risk. A father’s absence influences the son and
daughter’s development of social skills, self-esteem, and attitudes towards
achievement. But more importantly, our culturally warped understanding of
masculinity contributes to various forms of maladjustment, such as lack of
impulse control, incompetence, dependence, and irresponsibility. The son of a psychologically
absent father experiences a weakened identification with what it means to be a
man, and the daughter experiences a weakened relationship to the masculine
principle.
Yet, in the
name of family financial and psychological welfare, our legal system emphasizes
the importance of the father’s job, and therefore his absence, and award child
custody to the mother nine times out of ten. When societal attitudes are
unsupportive of the father’s active involvement in the family, then we see the
fragmentation of family relationships so common today.
Don’t
misunderstand my point: I am not advocating for some vague notion of “men’s
rights.” I am saying that we -- all of us -- need to redefine what it means
to be a man.
In the end, we
are all flawed creatures. We all make mistakes. As for myself, I would say that
if you were to ask my son, he would give at best a mixed review. More likely, I
don’t think he would characterize me as a “good” father. And he has good
reasons for his view. I guess I too am human. I guess what is important is not
to get too stuck in who’s “wrong” and who’s “right,” but to do the right thing
at the right time because it is the right thing to do at that moment.
And yet my own
experience leaves with the feeling that a good father requires more than
getting the task done right. Perhaps fatherhood is more about being who you are
and revealing that vulnerability to those you love. When I reflect on the
relationships between fathers, sons, and daughters, I am reminded of the words
of the poet Rumi: “Out beyond rightdoing and wrongdoing, there is a field. I’ll
meet you there.” My son will one day be a father and if he can take even a
little of what my own teachers gave me, then he will be a man.
My name is
Eddie and I’m in recovery from civilization…
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