Category Archives: Our Responsibility

In spite of all the blame we attempt to push off on family law, society, and our ex, we can enjoy miring in the mud only so long. When it comes down to it, we just need to bite the bullet and take responsibility for our own lives, and even amidst the pain and road blocks on every side, we must pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off, and fight the good fight to make our lives what we want them to be. There is always joy to be found, even if just the sparkle in our child’s eyes or the occasional opportunity to lift another soul in despair.

What No One Ever Tells About Being A Single Dad

It’s been a while since I’ve written, but my heart has been on this web site. Much has transpired, which I want to share as I have time. But I came across a listing of things that someone not being a divorced father likely would not realize. As I read them I picked out those that apply to me and put my own description.

  • People will give undue credit to your ex.
    People assume only mothers shop, cook, clean, and discipline.
  • Everyone will have an opinion about you and raising your kids alone.
    People are people and they will talk and have opinions on your failed marriage. They will lay blame, even without knowing the facts. You’ll get looks from the mothers at school people at church and everyone in between. Regardless of the truth, you may as well have a nun walking behind you ringing a bell and chanting ‘shame’ with your every step.
  • People will stare when you act silly with the kids.
    As a new single father, I was more aware of those around me and watching me. We usually ate a home, but when we ate out or went to a park or any activity, I suddenly became aware of other men alone with children. I wondered if they were single, and if other people looked and wondered at me being alone with mine. We did some awfully silly things occasionally, things usually only children would do or that only parents would do at home. One sunny afternoon we bought fried chicken and side dishes, gathered up plates utensils and glasses, and took at portable table and chairs to a highway overpass. We set up on the overpass directly above the traffic, table cloth and all, and had lunch. My son and daughter didn’t bat an eye. Cars honked and people stared. It was memorable.
  • It doesn’t pay to hide your feelings.
    No one told me that during separation and divorce I would be an emotional trainwreck and be in denial about it being permanent. I lied to everyone about how happy I was. If I had the capacity to be honest with myself back then, things might be different. Or perhaps not. When in the throws of the hardest time of your life, you have to experience everything yourself. Humility is necessary to be a better dad and a better you.
  • Being a divorced parent may even make you a better parent.
    Counterintuitive, but true. If you’re a divorced dad, whether with split custody or just visiting hour rights, you get a break from your kids. A reprieve from the kids makes you more appreciative when you are with them. (That’s a trite way to say that every waking hour from your kids you’re still thinking of them and planning your next time with them.) This in turn translates to being a more patient, forgiving, and caring parent. Absence makes the heart grow fonder, adoring, caring, loving, tender, affectionate, sympathetic, attached, devoted ….
  • Exhaustion becomes your middle name.
    Work, church, planning, cooking, shopping, and preparing for your kids’ visit, then being with them, and all the emotion of this new life takes a tole.
  • You won’t be lauded as a superhero.
    No one ever told me I was a “superhero single dad” or anything even close to it. Only single moms to get that title. You have to be proud of yourself in isolation.
  • Your social life will inevitably take a hit.
    Because my ex was a stay-at-home mom, and because women are naturally more social, nearly all our dating and family activities were planned by her. When we separated, suddenly my married friends were gone. My social life skidded to a halt. I hate little time to date, especially because I had my children every other weekend. I might have been able to do things with some of my old buddies, but I’d be taking them away from their wives. And I was focused on my children so there was little time for a social life. It was years before I had my first serious relationship beyond a few dates.
  • Sometimes, doing it all on your own kind of sucks.
    You’re doing it all on your own–holding down a job that can work with your children’s schedule, cooking, cleaning, school work, disciplining, preparing lunches, doctor and dentist visits (I chose to do them as much as I could (one more excuse to see them), and trying to find someone to date who doesn’t care that you have kids, and more importantly, that can appreciate that your children are your focus now and will still be important in the future.
  • You won’t be able to stop thinking about the kids when your ex has them.
    When I first separated from my wife, the toughest part for me was that feeling that I was no longer there to protect my kids. I had lost control as a father. When I questioned once my ex why she was allowing something that we never allowed for our children when we were married, I simply got a curt response that I have no say in what she does when she has the children. Every night when my ex and I were married, I read to the kids, I checked in on them, I made sure I knew they were safe. Not being there to ensure their safety was pure anguish.
  • It’s the hardest job you’ll ever have.
    No one ever tells you that few care about how hard you have to work. But you’ll feel really proud of yourself for managing everything. It’s a lot like what they say in the Peace Corps: “It’s the toughest job you’ll ever love.”
  • But it’s also the most rewarding.
    It may sound corny, but it’s true. If you put your heart into it, life as a single father is the most rewarding experience you will ever have. But you may not realize it for years. You will grow, and if you do it right, your children will be blessed by you doing your best and remaining a significant part of their lives. You may be divorced from your ex, but don’t divorce yourself from your children. Children need a good man and father in their lives.

Dos and Don’ts of Divorce

Unlike most posts, this will deal not with the divorcé, but with the one comforting a divorcé.

All those having gone through divorce should succor those going through it. It’s a good way for us to heal. We bear another’s burdens and at the same time we learn we’re not alone, and we both are lifted.

There are things to do and not do when you put your arm around a fellow divorcé (or even divrocée, as we can comfort them, too). It’s easy to have the attitude of “I know exactly how you feel! My ex this-or-that and I this-or-that,” But those of us hurting don’t need preachers. We know our failings well, we know (or think we know) the failings of our ex, and we don’t need someone to add fuel to the fire, even if we may want our world ablaze in anger and blaming.

So here are some dos and don’ts for us divorcés (and other listening in) when we are comforting another starting the walk down the road of divorce.

Don’ts

  • Don’t assume you have to talk.
    A hug or an understanding look, a how-are-you or a few minutes to listen, are often more than words.
  • Don’t tell your own grief story unless you’re asked, and don’t go off on a long rant.
    If you do tell your story, make it tasteful and with the intent to lift and validate, not start a bonfire.
  • Don’t offer advice.
    … except carefully. Perhaps share what worked for you if you’re divorced, but don’t prescribe and preach (especially if you’ve never been divorced!).
  • Don’t brush off any feelings that may be expressed, even if foreign to you.

Dos

  • Recognize there is intense grief at the loss of a relationship, dreams, plans, potentially a home, the noise and bustle of a family, and usually the ability to see children as in the past. There is a loss of control and input into your family’s activities.
    It is like losing a loved one–in fact we have lost a loved one, someone we do or at least did love, and lost the daily relationship with our children. Some say divorce is worse than death—and I do. Having lost my mother, a sister, and a son, the loss of my marriage and intact family has been more traumatic. Every return of my children to their mother and the home I used to live in (for many of us) is a loss all over again, a reminder and a reopening of a wound.
  • Give full, focused attention.
    And make that attention real and feel it in your soul.
  • Invite to activities, to church, and to whatever seems appropriate.
    Divorcés hunger for companionship, and often seek the wrong kind of companionship, and too early. There is intense loneliness and a feeling of loss of self-worth.
  • Ask if you can come visit. Or just go visit.
    People, even family and friends, tend to stay away from divorced men. The ones that could support you most are often the most distant. (During the first two years of my own divorce, the most difficult time, I recall only one visitor that I didn’t invite, my ex’s brother and sister-in-law. Even my sisters, brother, parents and friends never showed their faces. I hope that’s not typical.)
  • Allow sharing of honest feelings, including anger to God and church and ex.
  • Share your own feelings and words of love and caring.
  • Give a little gift, such as a basket of fruit or something simple or meaningful.
    That item may become cherished and a reminder of your caring.
  • Pray for the person, and to know what to say and do, and how often.