Daddy's Issues.

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So, father’s day. And my birthday coming up. Those two always go together. And it’s the week before Lily will go and stay with her mom through summer vacation. Not with me. For the first time, things are the other way around. She’ll come back after the vacation. Back to live with me. To keep living with me. It’s hard to fathom after so many years of struggles. And it’s weird that 9 months have already gone by so quickly, but given the amounts of changes and re-learning I underwent it does make sense.

That's 6 years ago now. Everything's different now. She's about to be 7 years old.

SO much change.

I talked about many consequences that I faced in my social life after becoming a full-time-single-dad. But there is more to it, things that shook me harder than these flimsy interferences that I had expected, knowing my friends’ personalities quite well. I comprehended many things, and I wrote about a few, like the “It takes a village” figure of speech. In the last days, what resonated most with me is the following:

It doesn’t matter what you say, but what you are.

It’s so simple, and yet so hard. So many people around me are proud of teaching their children values – verbally. But then they turn around and do just the opposite, in secret or blatantly open, and it takes them by surprise that the children don’t turn out the way they had “taught” them.

Incoherence strips words of their weight.

It starts with small things. You don’t want them to speak while chewing? Stop doing it yourself, only then you can ask it of them. But it goes into all aspects, and especially values. You can preach all you want about them, your children will feel what you do, not what you say. They’re connected to you, they see the nuances, they – probably subconsciously – know when you’re being incoherent.

There's much more color in all rooms now. And the paintings on the paper are the only colors that I can remove 😅

The work is on myself, not on her.

I thought I had many things figured out, as I did shovel quite a bit of incoherences out of my self for the last years. But I still encounter parts that need working on. Luckily, it’s mostly rough edges, as I can already see some of those reflected in Lily, meaning I might be too late, which makes me want to sand them down faster. Unfortunately, there’s no accelerator. Yet, I put in the effort.

It’s noticable.

It’s not only the effort to be coherent, but also the talks, the examples, the listening. It’s not one in particular, but the mass that influenced so much change in Lily during the last 9 months. Positive change, from my point of view. Her behavior has shifted a lot towards what I hope is the best possible for her to be a happy person and a solid and productive member of her future community.

9 months ago. That dress doesn't fit anymore. The panties are torn. Since that pair of shoes, she had 2 new ones, and I'll have to buy the third, soon.

I’m collateral damage.

And I learned so much, not just about her and me, but I comprehended many connections in our society. Yes, of course, the intellectual exchange with my best friend and the HIVE community helped a lot in that, too, but seeing, no, feeling her growing up next to me, seeing the effects of the little things, the rapid growth of a mind of its own, that is what let me to comprehend.

Is parenting a transdisciplinary instrument?

For me, it is. I wrote about the difference between understanding and comprehending, and in this case, the theoretical knowledge was a good base, though still superficial in comparison to the many relations I can perceive now. All the stuff I had read, been told, observed, suddenly has a deeper meaning, there's a truth to all of it. I connected the Ivory Tower with the community experience.

And it sucks.

Of course, that also comes with the tiny detail of seemingly realizing what’s going so terrible wrong in the world, the society, my community. It’s Plato’s cave all over again. But, and that is what I always derive from all the ugly – it motivates me to be different. To dig deeper into my self, learn more about my values, to find the incoherence left, analyze it, extinguish it one way or another. To become what I believe to be a better human, and with that:

Becoming a better father.



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18 comments
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One of the challenges I face as a parent is my own parents. Whether I do the opposite of them, or the same as them now, it is an issue, because it means my current actions are tethered to their behaviours, and good or bad, the opposite doesn't mean it is the right thing to do. Either way, I need to stop using the past as a model for the future, and work out what is the right way for now.

And live that way.

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(Edited)

I'm glad I don't have that dilemma. I think my parents did a fairly good job, good enough to not really think about them much in my parenting style - which probably means that they have indoctrinated me successfully 😅 I did work through most of my childhood experiences before I became a father, though, that might influence as well.

Identifying what you value as good or bad is a good step there. There will be some similarities, and some contraries. I usually have that kind of inner conflict with Lily's mother. I'm trying my best to balance out all her actions by being very contrary. Very stable, for example, reliable. Ironically, her being so obnoxious in quite a few ways helped me define who I am.

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And now that you write it - yes, of course trying to teach other people's values won't work out really well, either. I hadn't thought of that, but it makes sense.

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You remind me to an old song from 1989, by Nirvana "Negative Creep". Thank you for that

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Luckily, she still is a girl, at least for a few more years.

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So mister…you are not just the best partner…you are also the father of the year. You are constantly learning, appreciating, and accepting your role while understanding where the challenges lie. It's truly impressive. Lily may not realize it yet, but as she grows up, she will come to understand how much you've done for her and the love you have given her. I'm sorry that she won't be with you, but knowing that you have supported her and have done a great job as a father is something to be proud of…Unfortunately, life doesn’t always go as we plan, but that makes us appreciate these moments even more.

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Oh, I might not have expressed that well. She will be with her mom for the summer - usually, she was with me only for 1 month a year, besides my frequent visit to that wretched village that they lived in. Now, Lily is living with me for the school time - so she'll be back in August to keep living with me for the next school year, too. In a way, it's going just like my strategy intended.

It was a struggle for 6 years. Like really hard struggle. All those lessons didn't come on a silver platter, more like through kicks in the stomach when already on the ground. But I guess that was necessary. And all that hardship makes your kind words even better received, and it does feel very good indeed to get that kind of support - not only from strangers on the internet, but also from my friends, family and so many others that have in ways accompanied us through those years. Thank you! 🙃

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No, I understand that she’s heading off for the summer, but it’s tough to think about being without her for such a long time. It’s definitely going to be challenging to cope with her absence.

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Oh, no, it's actually not. I got hardened when her mom took her to Venezuela for 3 months, disappearing from one day to the other and not telling me where they were. And that's only one of several situations of separation, so the summer vacation is really a very, very short time (and a needed rest for me as well, that kind of parenting is quite intense).

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I cannot imagine how someone could do that. I don't want to be mean, but what kind of person must you be to take a child and not tell to you where you went? And how did this affect your child? 😔 I hope you have everything in order now so this can’t happen again. And yes, take some time for yourself. The more you miss someone, the more you appreciate them when they return. 😊 Your child knows that. How old is she? 🤔

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A lot of things lead to that action. It's not excusable, but I got to the point of understanding the mother and how she thinks and feels enough to at least understand why she did it. Lily was only 6 months old, so it didn't affect her too much. But it wasn't the only time she got pulled out of her home and moved around. A lot of ugly stories, but it's over for now.

She's going to be 7 years old in July, and this year that she spent with me did do a lot of positive change in her. The stability that I give her is bearing fruits, and that is just wonderful to see. I wrote about it in my birthday post as well.

I'm going to the Intag Valley on Tuesday, until Friday. Really looking forward to that little vacation 🙃

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I really hope everything will be alright now 😊
Oh, and I saw you were in Germany with Lily…Kann die Kleine schon ein bisschen Deutsch sprechen? 😊

I needed to Google the place you are going…I'm a little bit jealous…it looks amazing. Enjoy your time there. ;)

And…happy birthday… a little late, but still from the heart ❤️😊

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She speaks a lot of German! That trip with her accelerated the speaking part a lot. On top, we also have 2 German families here that go to her school and they're besties, so she does listen to a lot of German.

I'll post about the Intag, don't worry - you'll be even more jealous! Visiting 3 friends on their farms, and then another friend at her hostal.

And thank you for the birthday wishes - never too late! 😊

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This was really touching to read. It's clear how much you've grown alongside Lily, and how much you care about doing it right -not just saying the right thing but actually being them. That part about incoherence really stuck with me

She's lucky to have you. And honestly, posts like this remind me how deep parenting can go. Thanks for sharing it

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Thank you for reading and your kind words! And yes, as everything, there's always something more waiting in the depths.

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It is really nice she had you as her dad. Ever caring. Not minding the situation on ground. Parenting can go a long way. Sticking to what is right. Thanks for sharing

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She still has! She's going to come back for the start of school :-) Thank you for your kind words!

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