Still a place in the world for fathers
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Maybe Jodie Foster and Rosie O’Donnell are right. Maybe dads aren’t
needed to make up a happy family. Maybe it just takes the kind of
money they have to buy the support you need to take care of a kid or
two.
After all, what do dads really contribute to a family besides a
paycheck? Not much, when you really think about it. And what they do
contribute, moms could easily do instead. Moms can teach kids how to
hit a baseball, paint a wall or change the oil in a car. Moms can
watch wrestling, drink beer or go fishing all day, too.
Moms can teach kids how to cook and clean and help them with their
homework. And they can yell at them when it doesn’t get done.
There is, in fact, not a single thing you can mention that dads
contribute to the upbringing of a child that moms can’t do instead.
So if men are irrelevant, why celebrate them Sunday on Father’s
Day? What’s the big deal? OK, so dad had to contribute to the process
of making the baby -- but that’s it. Moms can take it from there,
can’t they?
Besides, looking at all of the Father’s Day ads, you’re likely to
get the impression that dads are extremely superficial. The experts,
killing trees with their junk mail, have determined what dad wants
most is:
a) New watch
b) Some new clothes
c) The latest electronic gizmo
d) More channels on his cable TV
Besides being incredibly base, men, not women, as plenty of people
have pointed out, are responsible for nearly all that has gone wrong
around the world since humans first appeared. Our testosterone has
been blamed for all the wars and most of the rest of our suffering.
When I think of my own father, I recall a man who worked hard, but
he smoked cigars and drank a lot. On weekends, he loved to watch
baseball on TV. I don’t recall him ever hitting me, but I do recall
him once chasing me around the house with his belt in his hand.
“The belt” was a focal point of a classic comedy routine by Bill
Cosby. And if you haven’t heard, “To Russell, My Brother, with Whom I
Slept,” do yourself a favor and get a copy at once.
The entire album is hilarious, but the last 20 minutes of the
story of one night in his bedroom with his brother is history. It is
very nearly an exact recount of any number of nights I had in a
bedroom with my brother, Stuart.
As Cosby notes, any kid knows that when mom asks you to do
something such as go to sleep, you have another 5 or 10 minutes to
keep fooling around. But when dad says it, it’s lights out.
OK, so maybe dads are good to have around as an enforcer, but
that’s probably it -- unless you take the time to look up some of the
data.
The source is “One-Parent Families and Their Children: The
School’s Most Significant Minority.” It’s a study conducted by the
Consortium for the Study of School Needs of Children from One Parent
Families, co-sponsored by the National Assn. of Elementary School
Principals and the Institute for Development of Educational
Activities, a division of the Charles F. Kettering Foundation, in
1980.
Although the data is 23 years old, it still applies. The data
found that “Children with fathers at home tend to do better in
school, are less prone to depression and are more successful in
relationships.
Need more current information? In 1990, the U.S. Census revealed
that, “Father absence contributes to crime and delinquency. Violent
criminals are overwhelmingly males who grew up without fathers.”
See, that’s the trouble with certifiable, documented studies and
the hard data they produce. It gets really hard to use emotional
arguments to support the case that a home is just as good or better
without dad, provided, of course, that dad is not abusive.
So maybe there’s something to this dad thing after all. Maybe what
dads contribute to raising a child may look superficial on the
surface, but is really built into the foundation of a family. It’s
just not easily visible until much later in a child’s life.
So, dads, despite the whims of a few famous but not important
people, it looks like you’ll have some job security for a while and
that maybe you do deserve a special day.
I’ll certainly be thinking about it while I smoke my cigar during
the Angel game Sunday.
Happy Father’s Day.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
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