Pop culture doesn’t appreciate dads. Sitcoms make fun of
their diapering (in)abilities or portray dads as irresponsible babysitters who
feed the kids pizza, ice cream and sugary soda while mom is out for the
evening. Personal experience tells me there may some truth in this. My own
husband shows our kids zombie movies then acts surprised when they refuse to
sleep with the lights out. Really.
Stereotypes aside, it can be hard to move past the “mom knows
best” mentality and make room for dads’ different style of parenting.
Mom of four Tsara S. says parenting together with her
boys’ dad has been the biggest challenge in their happy, 13-year marriage.
Read more: A quick and easy Fathers Day craft!
“I always want to be the one with the answers and insights!
But in truth, it's been co-parenting that's blessed my boys with the best of
what both mom and dad have to offer.”
All moms can learn valuable lessons from watching what dads
do best. Here’s how:
Dads are good with
good enough
Most moms I know struggle to drown out the nagging inner
critic who says we aren’t good enough. We feel intense pressure to keep the
house (and kids!) clean and to respond cheerfully to every social obligation.
Our to-do lists never get done. And it’s stressful. Researchers at Auburn
University found women are more likely to feel inadequate at home and at work
than men because we’re more perfectionistic.
Dads recognize the 80 percent solution is often good enough.
They can walk away from a sink full of unwashed dishes — without feeling guilty
— to spend time playing with the kids before bedtime. Moms can’t deny there is
wisdom in this approach. Dishes don’t grow up and go off to college. Kids do.
Read more: Dr. Paul Schwartz on defining the modern dad
Being good with “good enough” doesn’t mean dads deny their
shortcomings. Tina Bushman, co-author of the family discussion-starting book “Table
Talk,” says she has learned from watching her husband, John, address his missteps.
“When it has been a rough parenting day, he will sit on the
edge of our child’s bed and explain that even though parents try hard, we
aren’t perfect,” she says. “He apologizes if he got upset or said the wrong
thing and asks forgiveness. It takes a humble dad to do that and I love him for
it.”
Dads encourage active
play
Mud pies, snow forts and do-it-yourself science experiments
are dads’ domain, says Wendy Valderrama. “They do messy fun really well.”
Valderrama watches her 3-year-old daughter’s princess
wedding ball with prince Daddy every night. “He lets her take the lead and
follows right along with her in the imaginative play,” she says. Dads’ passion
for play is a joy to behold.
When they aren’t entertaining kids on their own level, dads
expose kids to grown-up tasks and topics. A dad might teach a child how to mow
the lawn or talk about financial matters during informal apprenticeship
sessions. Since dads aren’t focused ages and stages of development, they may
share information that is over kids’ heads. There is an upside to this,
Valderanna says. “The conversations I overhear between my daughter and her dad
are amazing! I see her processing concepts I wouldn’t have thought possible
because I am stuck in a preschool mentality all day.”
Read more: Building bonds between dads and kids
Dads encourage
risk-taking
While moms’ protective instincts lead us to discourage kids
from taking physical risks, studies show dads give kids more personal space to
explore the environment, even if there is risk involved.
“At the park, I’m nervous about my 2-year-old going down the
big slide, and, at home, I protect my baby from face-planting very time he
attempts to crawl,” says mom Anna Crowe. Dads often push kids to go outside
their comfort zones.
Physical challenges help kids develop strength, coordination
and confidence. “Kids learn valuable skills that could prevent them from
getting into serious trouble in the future,” Crowe admits. Dads allow kids to
learn by doing when moms might be more likely to teach by talking.
During the anxious moments in parenting, dads maintain a
calm composure moms admire.
Stacy Lewis says her husband changed her perspective on
parenting forever during one intense encounter with their three kids. He said,
“I don’t get it! You are the mom. Why are you hollering?”
And something clicked for Lewis. “He keeps things insanely
balanced, and I love him for that.”
Read more: Like father, like … daughter?
Dads set boundaries
Because women are focused on preserving social connections,
we may avoid family conflict. The mental and emotional effort of peacekeeping
can lead to emotional exhaustion for women, according to research by
psychologists at Carnegie Mellon University. Over time, minor frustrations can
grow into deep, simmering resentments.
Shelton admits she struggles to establish clear, firm rules
for her kids. She sees most issues as gray areas and enjoys discussing the
connections between kids’ behaviors, social expectations and cultural
pressures.
Men are less likely to shy away from conflict because they
don’t take it personally. That means they step in and confront interpersonal
issues head-on. Shelton’s two youngest sons — who had symptoms of autism
at early ages — learned to be comfortable in their own bodies and brains
because of their dad’s black-and-white boundaries.
“If my husband didn’t bring everything down to its
simplicity I would get lost loving my boys in the gray,” Shelton says. The key
to parenting well is to figure out which situations require a firm, rule-based
response and which ones call for deeper conversation. Dads seem to know this
intuitively.
Dads don’t fret
Women often wish men would listen to our problems without
trying to solve them, but that’s not how men are wired. When things go wrong,
dads jump into problem-solving mode and determine what steps they can take to
change the situation. If the first attempt isn’t successful, dads try another
approach.
Women are more likely to focus on feelings, which can
actually amplify distress. We may commiserate with girlfriends or replay
worst-case scenarios in our minds.
C. Lee Reed recalls her father often told his kids to “suck
it up” in the face of disappointment. “It sounds crazy but we learned to put on
our big girl panties when things didn’t go our way,” Reed says. Now she uses
the same phrase with her own daughter. It lightens the mood when emotions run
high.
Dads’ emotional balance allows them to keep parenting
problems in perspective. Crowe says she often panicked at her son’s inability
to sleep through the night or the fact that he didn’t crawl when other babies
did. But her husband took a longer view. “He taught me not to worry so much about
the little things, unless they become a bigger concern,” says Crowe. A calm
response is both comforting and practical.
Dads are present
Moms take pride in our super-human ability to do five things
at once, but there is an undeniable downside. Multitasking prevents us from
seizing the joys of the present moment. Lauren Nichols praises her husband’s
ability to be in the moment with their 4-year-old son.
“I admire his ability to slow down and listen to everything
our son has to say. It is as if he really remembers what it was like to be a
little kid. They are two peas in a pod.”
Reed says she is inspired by her husband’s presence as well.
While Reed, who calls herself “Helicopter Mom” is busy multitasking, her
husband, “Just Plane Dad,” knows how to be fully present in the moment.
“When he spends time with our daughter, he’s not worried
about the laundry or paying the bills. He is all there,” Reed says.
Tuning in completely allows dads to see children as growing,
loving little people. And it reminds us all that we’re blessed by our children —
and their dads — in big and small ways every day.
Heidi Smith Luedtke,
Ph.D., is a freelance writer and personality psychologist who has gleaned many
practical parenting strategies from her husband’s more laid-back approach.