This article was number five in a series of articles by various parents in the special needs community. The articles were intended to raise awareness amongst special needs parents that they need to look after their own needs as well as those of their children.
In traditional society, mothers and fathers tend to live in completely different worlds. The home, the kids and school are all in the mother’s realm while the father is more likely to take care of bread-winning and financial matters.
The working week has expanded to take in weekends and the hours of work have lengthened too, courtesy of the traffic problems. Many fathers today hardly see their children and not because of the high divorce rate either. It’s simply that they have to leave before the kids are awake and they don’t get home until after bedtime. Some fathers have frequent out of state business which further reduces their family time.
Today’s fathers are simply fighting for free time. We are weekend fathers, trying desperately to squeeze a week of family time into a few spare hours on the weekend.
Of course, our children are “perfect” from our point of view. We only see them in fleeting glimpses and our rarity makes us exciting. The kids tend to behave for us because we have that “less familiar” quality that mom and their teachers simply don’t have anymore.
We have no idea what our families go through from week to week because we’re simply not there. It becomes easy to turn a blind eye to the problems of school and home and to those “labels” we keep hearing about. Let’s face it. After a week of hard work and after we’ve completed our manly chores around the house, we just want some time to ourselves.
Sometimes we’ll fool ourselves into thinking that we’re doing a good thing by looking after the kids for the day while our wives go out to enjoy themselves. Sometimes, it really is a good thing because mothers certainly need a break but sometimes it isn’t.
The truth is that we’re getting stuck in the rut of everyday life and that we’ve forgotten the importance of our relationships. Without love, sharing and support, our lives are empty and despite our hard exteriors, fathers need love too.
Since it’s obvious that time is our biggest enemy, it makes sense that the most important thing for us to do is to make time for ourselves. There are lots of ways to make that extra time.
Seriously, work and money are very important but there are other jobs and if your workplace can’t be supportive of your needs as a family man, then it’s time to move on. If you’ve taken out a giant mortgage and you need to work long hours to pay it off, then perhaps it’s time to consider whether it’s really worth the effort. Chances are, you took out that mortgage before you really understood the demands of parenthood – certainly before you realised that you had special needs children who would require much more time and money than other children.
I have a real problem with some of the things that the now retired baby boom generation are doing with their lives. They were supported in their parenthood by the previous generation. I know, I remember because I was a child being looked after by grandparents at times. Their generation was also much more neighbourly and it was quite common for neighbours to look after each other’s children. These days, the older generation seem to be shirking their family responsibilities and taking overseas trips all the time.
The other thing that’s critical is being supportive and working on the partnership. Here are a few tips which have helped my relationship.
When my wife had our first baby, I was caught up with work and I think I made only one or two obstetrician appointments. When things went pear-shaped during the birth, the obstetrician wasn’t exactly on friendly terms with me and I wasn’t fully aware of what my wife had told him during appointments, so I wasn’t able to prevent him from making choices she wouldn’t be happy with.
First things first is all about taking time out for yourself. It might seem to be a contradiction that I’m advocating spending even more time with your family but what I’m really suggesting is that we need to be spending more quality time on togetherness. We need to be pulling the focus off supporting our special needs children all the time and putting a little more effort into supporting each other. You’ll be surprised how little effort it takes to lighten the load.