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I Am a Father

[big]Why Is It So Important For A Father To Be In His Daughter's Life?[/big]

THIS QUESTION WAS ASKED OF ME BY A YOUNG WOMAN:
[i]Why is it so important for a father to be in his daughter's life?[/i]

After standing there for a few minutes with my jaw hanging down, I finally answered:

This question just blows me away. Seriously. You don't know?


I don't know the relationship you have with your father. I do know the one I have with my daughter, however. I know why I am the way I am, and why I do things the way I do them. So, again, I can't speak for all dads, just me.

1. My daughter is the first girl born in my family line in 64 years. No, that's not a typo. 64 years. To say she is treasured beyond all measure is an understatement, considering that in my family, you only get ONE daughter per generation, and usually the first born. So, yeah. Nothing will come between me and her, unless it wants to suffer pain with extreme prejudice. Try to harm her, and pain will be the least of your worries. That's not a promise. It's a guarantee.

2. I am her Knight and her Protector. I am the Shield between her and a cruel world that doesn't care about her welfare and well being, until such a time that she can do it on her own, with or without my having her back.

3. I am her Teacher. I am her Mentor. I must impart to her all the skills I have, so that she may survive and thrive, flourishing in a world that will one day not have me there anymore, because eventually-- we all die.

4. I am the Example. I am the Template. I am what she will consider "normal" for a husband and a future father to be, and what she will seek for companionship when she is looking for a mate, and as such, I must be the kind of man that I would want my daughter to be with, one who will love her with all of his heart and soul, and give themselves completely to her.

5. I am her Truth. I am her Rock. I never lie to her. I keep my morals and my ideals constant, a solid foundation upon which she may build her own. I live by my word, and by my deeds, one and the same. She knows that I am consistent, and she can count on it, no matter what.

I could go on, but that's the basics. I don't know why it's important for anyone else, but I know why it is for me.

It's because she so important to me.
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BabyTay98 · F
This makes me realise what an asshole my dad is. But beautiful on your part.
GwydionFrost · 56-60, M
@BabyTay98 My own dad was an asshole, as well. However, as I got older, I realized that, just like me-- he had NO IDEA what he was doing (nobody does), so he did what [i]he thought was best[/i]. In hindsight, he was wrong on many things, however-- this was still valuable, because it gave me the "red flags" to look for, in my own behavior... so, when I open my mouth, and my dad starts coming out-- my brain screams, "WHOA! STOP!" ;)
BabyTay98 · F
@GwydionFrost My dad is never there, I hardly see him whatsoever. He has a new family now.
EnigmaticGeek · 61-69, M
@BabyTay98 Sorry about your dad. :-( I guess that explains why he never came up in any of our conversations.
GwydionFrost · 56-60, M
@BabyTay98 My dad and I didn't talk for quite a while... like, for YEARS. I think he had a health scare, and realized that he might actually need to establish a relationship with the now two grown men he raised. Now, we talk more often, but nowhere near what my mom and I do. He also remarried, but... yeah, no new kids. He didn't like that gig the first time around-- why ask for more...? ;)