Yesterday Facebook was filled with Fathers’ Day wishes and sentiments. I was glad for them and even joined the fray. But judging by the posts you would think fatherhood is a universally admired occupation and is being taken off the greasy shelf in the garage where it was placed to wither in the 1960s.
But as the video above and the one below show, to believe such is a mistake. With all due respect to the feel good holiday that comes every June, fatherhood remains in trouble and it’s loss is one of the main ills in our world today.
Below is a blog I wrote in 2011 about how my fatherlessness is a personal mirror to the statistics of how damaging the current view of fatherhood is.
In 2010 Jennifer Aniston became the spokeswoman for fatherlessness. In her movie, “The Switch,” Aniston plays Kassie, a self-assured single woman, who Aniston describes as “ready to have a child and she’s not in a place where she feels she needs a man to do it.”
Ms Aniston, I don’t believe, was intentionally promoting fatherlessness. She was simply promoting her movie. I don’t think she gave a second thought to the plight of the 24 million children growing up in homes without fathers in America today, at least until trouble-maker Bill O’Reilly brought it up.
I think about it though–maybe too much. I can’t really help it. Like the kid in “The Switch,” and every other fatherless child, I had no choice in growing up without a dad. My father died of a heart attack when I was 11. I often wonder what life would have been like, both good and bad, if dad had come home that night after welding bumpers in his best friend’s garage. I only know after that summer night in 1968, life got down-right hard. So much so if I had my way, no kid would ever have to grow up without a dad–or with a bad one.
So, Aniston really struck a nerve. “[Kassie] wants a child more than she needs a man,” said Aniston. Want and need are key words here. Kassie may not need a man to become a mother–maybe all she needs is a sperm-donor. But the kid needs a dad. And believe me, no kids wants to grow up playing baseball or dolls with just a sperm-donor.
But my argument against raising kids without good dads is not sentimental and anecdotal. My case is both statistical and personal.
- Kids in fatherless homes are twice as likely to do time in jail. All of my siblings, including me, found ourselves in jail.
- 63% of youth suicides happen in fatherless homes. I am alive only because my mom–and God–intervened.
- 71% of high school dropouts live in fatherless homes. I dropped out and three of four Scott kids failed to earn a diploma.
- Fatherless children are at greater risk for drug and alcohol abuse and mental disorders. Okay, so this is getting too personal.
- Single parent families are more likely to live below the poverty line. I had to start working at age 13 and at 16 dropped out of high school in order to work full-time.
- Children without fathers are more likely to beget kids to fatherless homes. This may be the most painful personal statistic. My sisters’ children grew up without their fathers and now several of their children (a third generation) have kids who don’t know their dads, though one family is motherless (equally painful). And the cycle seems unlikely to stop. How I weep for them.
Unfortunately these are just a few of the obstacles us kids without fathers have to contend with. There are myriad more.
Losing my father left a huge hole in my life. Fatherlessness is leaving a vast canyon in our culture. We gape at the hole and then try to fill it up or deny it’s there.
For many years I blamed my dad for his death, just as if he had flipped me off and walked out the door. After all, he smoked and ate fatty foods. There is always blame enough to go around. But that was simply a way for me to try to deal with the loss. Blaming my dad did zero to alleviate the pain and problem. Sure Hollywood, et. al. have exacerbated or glorified the problem by promoting what they think are funny or unusual stories for the sake of the box office. Or worse they have promoted an ideology that sounds progressive and wise, but is not. As a man, I get the feeling some think life would be better without men, much less fathers. (Responsibility is another issue and I believe men, no matter the contributing cultural factors, need to own their role in this epidemic. More on this next week). But blame. What a waste of time.
Denial is another way we try to fill the gap absent fathers leave in our lives and world.
My family often said we were better off without him. He was strict. Dad would have never let me grow my hair out like I had. Real men didn’t wear long sissy, hippy hair. Sometimes dad got really angry, especially with my oldest sister. Today he may have bordered on what we call abusive. And he made me mow the lawn and sweep out the garage and clean greasy car parts.
But even as we sat around the basement living in denial, my heart ached for my dad to yell down the stairs: “I told you kids to get to bed. Don’t make me come down there.”
If you tell yourself something untrue long enough, maybe that’ll make it so. It didn’t. Listen to pop culture on fatherhood and you will come to believe it is, at best, archaic, and at worst abusive. It’s not.
In his book “To Own a Dragon: Reflections on Growing up Without a Father,” Donald Miller relates how hard he tried to fill his father gap. To no avail. Not even God, the Father of all will fill it. When something crucial to our lives goes missing, God is not capricious enough to replace it with a stand-in, or even stand in the hole Himself. As it should, this is why grief lingers. Forty years after my father’s unexpected death, I look back at all the silly, hurtful, even beautiful things I tried to replace him with. I’m glad I failed. Now–mostly–I live with this hole in my soul willingly. I know now to fill it is to not acknowledge it.
Perhaps that is what we, as a culture, do too. Like bewildered people watching a fault line grow in the street before us, we deny, blame, anything but say, “Look, a terrifying hole. What are we going to do about that?”
Jennifer, Kassie may not need a man, but we all need a father. And it’s okay.
P.S. See fatherhood.about.com/od/…/a/fatherless_children.htm for more stats and http://www.co.jefferson.co.us/cse/cse_T86_R33.htm for more local Colorado stats.
We have gotten so far away from common sense and practical realities, and so diverted and distracted by the prevailing “entertainment-oriented fantasies” — [concocted to make us think and believe that sinfulness, abnormalities, and family and cultural failings are humorous, “doable,” commonplace, and that they may even offer us “new” and excitingly challenging “cutting edge” lifestyles! ~ (but not really)] — that many have essentially “lost their way.” They envision a world where their “every road choice could easily lead to Rome,” (or at least to American Idol), and that myriad opportunities will come to them in all kinds of shapes, sizes, and definitions — (if not today, then tomorrow) — indefinitely. This has led to massive confusion and disorder, denigration of the resources that could give us good guidance, and “every man doing what is right in his own eyes.”
Deuteronomy 12:8 “You shall not at all do as we are doing here today—every man doing whatever is right in his own eyes—”
Proverbs 12:15 “The way of a fool is right in his own eyes, But he who heeds counsel is wise.”
Luke 17:26,27
26 “And as it was in the days of Noah, so it will be also in the days of the Son of Man: 27 They ate, they drank, they married wives, they were given in marriage, until the day that Noah entered the ark, and the flood came and destroyed them all.”
We live in perilous times,… perilous for the soul. Life on these terms of such flaunted disobedience IS painful. “Man’s inhumanity to man” is legendary,… but we have an even worse spiritual enemy. Unless we will respect God, He is unable to respect us, to make His covenant of love and forgiveness with us, even if He wishes to do so — because our own perverse wills “get in the way.”
It’s a “bad feeling” to have “good advice fall on deaf ears.” To intervene in the social confusion, — [now so well-established by the proliferating examples of “anything goes” and the pervasive modern/(“scientific”) theories and their attendant “miraculous” possibilities] — one would have to back-track to a level of “human basics” that the culture really no longer has “ears” for.
What are the prevailing licentious theories (lies) and free-wheeling philosophies that abound in the pornographic venues, that have seduced a generation or two of our potential male family and cultural leaders, fathers, faithful and responsible men? We hear the concept of “manhood” tossed around,… but what are the visible fruits of this “manhood?” When it exists to serve its own lusts, appetites, and pleasures, it devolves into something pitiful, powerless, and unrecognizable. It descends into childishness, immaturity, a selfish style of “independence,”… it abdicates its righteous throne,… its end is worse than its beginning,…
2 Peter 2:20 “For if, after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, they are again entangled in them and overcome, the latter end is worse for them than the beginning.”
Biblical sexual morality would be the beginning of some sanity in the Right to Life issues of the day, but the general populace “doesn’t want to go there.” However, if the house is not built on a firm foundation, no other round-about efforts and tentative solutions will cause it to stand. Cruelty? Pain? Ultimately, this far-flung approach will come down to some very bad experiences,…
Luke 6:48-49
48 “He is like a man building a house, who dug deep and laid the foundation on the rock. And when the flood arose, the stream beat vehemently against that house, and could not shake it, for it was founded on the rock. 49 But he who heard and did nothing is like a man who built a house on the earth without a foundation, against which the stream beat vehemently; and immediately it fell. And the ruin of that house was great.”
I know how greatly my own soul suffered, and for how long, upon the early death of my own father. I did relentlessly pursue God for the spiritual relief I needed. It did not come all at once, but it DID come. (We’re talking decades upon decades, here.) God has beautiful ways and things He can do for those who really seek to find their “everything” in Him.
Thoughtful and thought-provoking, a very well written post. I really admire your balanced approach and appreciate your writing here. Makes me want to have a look at more of your blog!
Thanks. I appreciate you reading and commenting.