Finding Time
by Bruce Linton, Ph.D.
I have found it most difficult
to get the time I needed to write this essay! When our children were
little, it was obvious why it was impossible to get much "private"
time. With small children the day to day tasks are like "digging a
hole in the sand on the beach," no matter what size the hole, the
water will fill it up. The demands to be both physically and emotionally
present for infants and young children is pretty much a full-time
work for both parents.
I have been surprised, even as our children have grown, (they
are now 12 and 16), that parenting responsibilities are still a
major focus of our day to- day lives. I have found, with each year
of fatherhood, I have had to ask myself, "What kind of father do
my children need this year?" I have been lucky in that my personal
interest and professional career have been interwoven. I have focused
in my career on "coaching" and counselling parents with young children
on how to balance parenting and being a couple with working at jobs
and careers. This is also an issue I constantly struggle with myself.
And I am not always satisfied with my own results.
As parents, time is our most valuable resource, our most precious
commodity. Think about it: we work all our lives so we can retire;
in otherwords, so we can do what we want with our time. The way
we define, or spend our time, defines who we are and what we value.
Our society sets values on what we do with our time. I have always
been offended by the policy in the United States that if you work
and put your kids in childcare, you get a tax credit. But, if you
stay at home with your children or work part time there is no tax
credit. What we say in the U.S. is that we value only your "time"
spent working. How deep the message is in our country that parenting
is not a priority.
We do not need to be locked in a battle between time spent working
or time spent parenting. Both work time and family time sustain
us in very important ways. We gain unique satisfactions from both.
And there are practical matters to consider as well: we need money
to live and our children are only little for such a short time.
How will we prioritize our choices?
As fathers how we choose to prioritize our time is very difficult.
The undercurrent in our society is still that our identity as men
is linked to our work. Although this is changing, the esteem men
feel around their careers is still rewarded financially and in status
more than their time spent parenting. Also it is still accepted
that the money a man makes is the way he is "supportive" to his
family.
Most of the expectant and new fathers I work with are terribly
conflicted by wanting to spend time with their young children and
the financial pressures. Even when both parents work, dads, as well
as moms want more time with their young children. I think we have
a much larger social problem then we are aware of in terms of the
emotional cost to both parents and young children when it comes
to "time" in the early years of parenthood.
From my perspective as a Family Therapist, it is easy to understand
that the changes couples and babies go through in the first year
of life depends on having the necessary "time" to form the attachments
that will normally occur. Yet, we do little as a society to "protect"
this time for parents or children. Pressures mount quickly for parents
to get back to work. I am not saying that every couple should stay
home with their new baby. What I am proposing is that, especially
in the early years, there is a need for flexibility in regards to
time, so that fathers, mothers and baby can feel they have enough
time to get to know each other. It takes time to come to a personal
understanding of what parenthood and family life means for each
of us as individuals.
In some ways the public problem we have-that we don't provide
supporting families in our country-must be resolved in a "private"
way. Each of us, as a couple and as parents, needs to find the way
to create the work-family balance that can sustain our families
emotionally as well as financially. For us as fathers, we need to
support each other in parenthood. We dads must give each other the
encouragement to take the risks both emotionally and financially
to be more integrated in our families.
In choosing our priorities we make sacrifices. If we recognize
the gain, the sacrifice is easy. Father's have been "sold a bill
of goods," when we have been told that our "work" will give us all
the fulfillment we need in life. We are now discovering that we
need to feel connected with our children and families to truly be
content with life. No father on his deathbed has every said, " I
wish I had spent more time at work."
It is coming to understand as fathers that our relationships with
the important people in our lives, especially our children, is of
paramount importance to our feeling good about ourselves and to
feeling our lives have meaning.
When I asked my children what they think makes a good parent they
gave me the following responses:
Our 12-year-old daughter said that taking your kids to school
and picking them up, (on time) and having time to play with them
and help them with their homework was important. She also commented
that young children should spend more time with the parents than
a baby sitter.
I asked our 16-year-old son about what he thought it took to be
a good dad. He summed it up by saying it just takes time to spend
with your kids. He said people should not be prejudiced against
teenage fathers, if they can have the time to be with their kids
they can be good fathers too. It all comes down to time.
I know from the dads and new parents I work with, as well as my
own wife and me, balancing our many needs and desires and finding
the time it is often overwhelming. I encourage you not to give up
the struggle. Most important, when it comes to your children, finding
the time for them will not only benefit their development but, particularly
for us fathers, can make all the difference about how we feel about
what is of real value and meaning in life.
Like the season's of the year, our lives as parents, as fathers,
go through transitions. Look at the time you spend with your children
in relationship to the season of their life. Getting your son or
daughter off to a good start often takes more time and is very intense.
I can't remember how many times I've heard, "They are only little
for such a short time." I can't remember any days (and nights) that
where longer than when our son and daughter where between birth
and two years old. And today I can already feel they have one foot
out of our house and into lives of their own. And I could not be
prouder of each of them, for how wonderful and difficult our life
has been. But more than a few times I wish we could go back in time,
and my children could be our babies once again.
For Further self-reflection and discussion:
1. What do you spend the majority of your time doing?
2. How have (or if you are expecting a baby, how will you) your
"routines" changed once you had a child?
3. How did your father prioritize his time? What was most important
to your father?
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