
Becoming
the Primary Caregiver
| Issue: | 6, 1999 |
Page: | 7-8 |
|
Abstract: |
Dealing with communities
views family structures. |
| Keywords: | Familes. |
For
Tom Signal, becoming an At-Home Dad was for more than purely economic
reasons. He shares with us the
difficulities of dealing with the community’s views of
the family structure, bringing up two young
boys and dealing with the varing realtionship he has with each child,
and well
as the enjoyment of watching his
children grow.
Traditionally
in two parent families a key role of the father
has been that of primary income earner but increasingly this is being
challenged by rapidly changing economic conditions and shifting ideas
about the
roles of men and women.
Some
fathers become primary caregivers for purely economic
reasons. In our family this was one but
not the only reason I became a full-time dad.
We simply did not like the idea of our sons being brought up by
strangers at child care centres.
When I took over as a
full time dad I went in cold turkey with no inkling what to expect but
I learnt
very quickly. Probably the hardest part
in the beginning was learning to deal with comments I was getting when
I would
go to town to do our shopping.
People
would say “Oh, it’s your turn to babysit today” and
when I replied that this is my full time job they would ask “Well,
where’s the
mum?”. When I then told them she is at
work some people could just not agree to this - including my own aunty.
My
first son, Benjamin, was only three months old when I took
over his full time care. He is now just
over two years of age and has a little four month old brother, Hayden. This time, their mum returned to work when
Hayden was two months old and it has been hard at times with the two
boys, but
we work together to make it work.
I
think Dads would have an easier job taking care of children
if society was more accepting and encouraged us to do a good job. It is often said that children need their
mother around all day for the first twelve months, but our boys
certainly do
not seen to be suffering from being mainly in my care.
Despite
this arrangement, we did not need supplement feeds for
Benjamin until he was nine months old, Hayden is still fully breastfed
and we
use milk that Leighanne expresses during feeds in the morning and
evenings,
along with some breast milk that was frozen before she returned to work. I find being a full time dad challenging yet
rewarding. Watching our boys grow and
learn every day is so pleasing.
Fathers
who have no input into raising of their child are
missing so much. Who would not be
completely taken by the first smile or the first time your child says
“Dad”? It makes it all worthwhile.
But
after saying this, some fathers have a hard time at home
with the child and often we do not have people we can turn to or even
just ring
up and have a talk to.
I
am not bonding as well to Hayden as I did with his older
brother - that is not to say I do not love him, because I do, and I
will never
do anything to hurt him. Maybe it is
because my first son Benjamin and I are very close, but I feel I will
get
through this.
Some
days it would be good just to be able to pick up the
phone and talk to another Dad just to say how I am feeling about my
child and
our experiences of bringing them up. I
am sure I am not alone feeling this way...