It Has Been Too Long

busy bee stay at home dad

Thanks for your concern – I have been a busy bee lately

Hello Everyone!

Yes I am still alive.

It has been such a long time since my last post as I have been an extremely busy bee with various projects both parenting and non-parenting.

As I had previously mentioned, I am no longer technically a Stay at Home Dad as I have been out and about earning some supplementary family income.

While I am still looking after our growing three and a half year old two days a week and having many parental experiences I am just lacking the time to write them down!

Additionally to working part time and being a dad I am also in the process of starting a new business which makes me about as busy as a centipede on a hotplate (dad joke)!

Anyway I will attempt to contribute to this site a lot more often in the near future.

Thank you to all of you who have contacted me to ask if I was OK. I really do appreciate it. It is nice to know that there a quite a few of you out there who actually read this stuff and more importantly, that you find it useful in your quest to be better parents.

If one piece of information I write helps one person connect with their child a little better then I feel that it is more than worthwhile.

A friend of mine who recently became a dad for the first time is also embracing his role and has come up with a few excellently useful tips of his own. I will be including them on this site in the future as well.

If there are any other Dads out there who would like to contribute then please drop me a line through the contacts page.

OK so that’s about it for the time being. Please keep the comments coming as the premise of this site is still the free exchange of parenting advice so that we can all learn from each other and build a community of loved and well-adjusted kids….

 

Posted in Parenting | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Your Fish Is Dead

Your fish is dead

We have had a minor tragedy this week with the death of our daughter’s first pet.

Fishy, the Siamese Fighting Fish, who was a gift from some friends and had been in the family for nearly two years, was found stiff and floating on the top of his tank this morning.

I really like pet fish but I honestly don’t know how these guys survive with no bubbles or filters or anything. They must get so bored in a plain glass cage all alone.

To make matters worse I hadn’t noticed his most recent demise (he had been on the ropes for a little while) when I said to my daughter, “Have you said good morning to Fishy yet?”

“Good morning Fishy….Fishy?… Dad!”

Even before I looked over I knew what I would find and in that split second I immediately wondered how I was going to explain this one. I wished that I had previously pondered what I was going to tell our daughter about death when eventually the time came.

Instead I found myself scrabbling around in my foggy pre-breakfast brain trying to gather up enough cognitive power to explain a fairly powerful lesson to a curious three year old.

Before I could say anything she looked at me and said, “Dad, I think Fishy is dead.”

“Yes, I think he might be.” I replied.

I didn’t even realize that she knew what ‘dead’ was. I was immediately relieved that she had already had a handle on the death thing and that I wouldn’t have to explain any further. At least now I’d have some time to think about what I was going to say.

“Dad?”

“Yes honey?”

“What does ‘dead’ mean?”

Shit. I opened my mouth hoping that something would come to me. “Oh, erm…well you see honey death is when you don’t need your body anymore because your spirit has gone back to live with God.” (Not bad for seven in the morning!)

“So Fishy’s spirit has gone back to God?”

“Uh-huh.”

“And he doesn’t need his body?”

“That’s right.”

“What should we do with his body Dad?”

“Maybe we should send him back to the ocean?”

“Yeah!”

So we walked solemnly to the bathroom with Fishy in a net and said a few words before dumping him in the toilet bowl and flushing his lifeless body back out to sea. (I left out the bit about the sewerage treatment plant and the fact that as a fresh water species he probably wouldn’t appreciate the sea very much. Keep it simple I say.)

“Bye Fishy Bye! Thanks for everything.”

As we are walking out of the bathroom with empty net in hand she looks up at me and says,

“Dad, when can we get a new Fishy?”

 

Posted in Development, Parenting, Stay at home dad | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Do We Do Too Much For Our Children?

Do we do too much for our children?Do we do too much for our children?

In our efforts to spare them pain and suffering are we also eliminating the important lessons of life?

In an article in the Herald Sun last week, social worker Ms Chris Daicos, who presents seminars at schools, said that most parents had the best interests of their children at heart but needed to learn to “step back a little bit”.

Ms Daicos went on to say that by developing independent, resilient children we are developing socially competent, empathetic kids that have good problem-solving skills, communication skills and a sense of humor.

I have to agree. We need to step back to allow our kids to step forward. Children need to experience hurt, anger and frustration in order to learn that life is a series of ups and downs.

These feelings are a normal part of existence and should be allowed to be expressed. By shielding them from this we are protecting them from some of life’s really important lessons.

We must let them try and fail and then encourage them to try again if they are to build confidence in their own problem solving abilities.

When we do everything for our children we are in effect saying to them that we don’t think that they are capable. By giving them the chance to try things by themselves and in their own way we are communicating our confidence in them and that in turn builds their self-esteem.

It is also obviously quite important to carefully nurture your child’s confidence in accordance with their abilities. I try to allow my child a range of tasks so that she can succeed in some and fail in others thereby enabling me to encourage all of her efforts regardless of the outcomes.

I wouldn’t want to crush my child’s confidence by raising the bar too high too early but equally I wouldn’t want overconfidence and the inability to deal with failure due to inadequate testing.

If children are to build resilience and tenacity they will need to be able to deal with failure and disappointment as well as success and achievement.

Posted in Development, Parenting, Stay at home dad | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment