“He’s disobeyed me again,” Bill fumed as he walked in the door
at night. The kitchen was a mess and his teenage son was playing
“Grand Theft Auto: Vice City” on the computer with rap music
blaring at 106 dB, known to cause permanent damage in less than
4 minutes, and homework nowhere in sight; all things Bill had
fought with his son about before.
Bill’s heart started pounding and he shook with rage. “Why does
he defy me?” he thought. “I don’t need this tonight.”
A hard day at the office can be followed by a hard day at home,
and today’s fathers often work 60-70 hours a week.
Nobody said parenting was easy, and many of today’s fathers
didn’t have much of a role model. It’s likely they had fathers
who were distant; providing, but not involved.
If you decide you want to be a better father than you are now,
or better than the one you had, where do you begin?
We decided to talk with Fathering Coach, Mark Brandenburg, MA,
CPPC, ( http://www.markbrandenburg.com ) a therapist who is now
coaching, and specializes in helping men balance the important
things in their lives.
SD: “What’s new on the fathering scene, Mark? Have things
changed?”
Mark: In the sense that fathering is always something we can
improve on, there are a lot of men who’d like to but aren’t sure
where to start. Not feeling close to their own fathers, they
aren’t sure what it looks like. They go to a baseball game with
their Dad, and sit side-by-side and talk about the players and
don’t even look at one another.
SD: Isn’t that how men bond?
Mark: Traditionally yes. Men tend to bond by doing things
together, not by talking together or going into depth, and
that’s something, but it’s not fulfilling.
SD: How so?
Mark: I don’t think it satisfies that deep need than children
have to be accepted by their fathers. We need to be accepted by
our fathers.
SD: How do you show that to a child?
Mark: By spending quality time with your kids. Doing more around
the house. Men today want to be better fathers at the same time
work demands are higher than ever, so it’s a stressful
situation.
SD: So if a man wants to become a more effective father, what’s
the first thing he should do?
Mark: Start with what I call “the conversation”. In it you talk
to your child about the changes you’d like to make. Perhaps it’s
about spending more time together. But if you just try to get
more involved, your kid is likely to say, “What’s going on with
you?” I recommend my clients say something like, “I’ve not been
involved enough and I’m not happy with that and I hope it’s okay
if we try something different. What do you think?”
If you have a previously uninvolved father, you’re going to have
some resistant kids who will test you to see if you really mean
it. You’ll definitely get some resistance. Change scares a lot
of people.
SD: But isn’t the client going to change his way of parenting?
Mark: Yes, and that’s why coaching works. Change is never easy.
It always involves risk. It takes courage. If a client makes the
commitment to change, I can make the process easier, with
practical how-to tips and also an understanding of what it’s
like, because it requires emotional intelligence, too.
SD: So what does getting involved with your kids look like in
real life?
Mark: It varies. Talking to them and knowing what their life is
about. You have to ask questions. Find out who their friends
are. What subjects they like. Basic things. I had one client,
gosh he knew everything. Current events, sports scores, all the
emperors of Rome, two languages, but he didn’t know the name of
his son’s best friend. He didn’t know what his daughter liked to
eat.
SD: So where do you start?
Mark: Spend some time and get to know their world a little bit.
Do something with them, or do nothing. One thing I recommend is
leaving notes to your kids. Make your home a sacred place, a
place where special things happen. Get involved in setting the
table and having a nice family dinner. Leave little notes for
your daughter and ask her to leave some for you. Pop it in her
school lunch, under her pillow, or in her Barbie chest. You want
your children to perceive that you love them and that they have
value. Children think this way: If my dad doesn’t ask questions,
and doesn’t spend time with me, he doesn’t care about me.
SD: Can you recommend any books?
Mark: I have two ebooks that are helpful, “25 Secrets of
Emotionally Intelligent Fathers,” and “60 Tips for Fathers to
Create Happy, Connected, and Responsible Kids.”
http://www.markbrandenburg.com/e_book.htm
SD: How does coaching fit in?
Mark: Because these things have to be put into practice, which
requires change, and change involves risk, and it’s helpful to
have an expert who can guide the process. Someone who knows
where you’re going when you can’t quite see it yet, who knows
these things work. Ultimately it’s all about having better
relationships, passion, a more meaningful life, and better
health, with and through your family.
SD: I can’t help but think –What’s it like to work 10-12 hours
and then come home and be the warm attentive father?
Mark: Paradoxically it can help. More effective fathers are more
effective workers, and vice versa. It’s about personal
development, about who you’re becoming. Okay here’s an example,
let’s call him Ted, a coaching client of mine. He has three boys
and is a pretty reserved, analytical kind of fellow, a
scientist. In his case, when he saw college on the horizon for
the oldest son, he realized he wasn’t as close to his boys as
he’d like. In the coaching, it turned out he hadn’t told his
kids much about himself. He didn’t tell his stories, talk about
what he was really about. It was an “ah hah” moment for him when
he realized if he wasn’t willing to share with his kids, they
weren’t going to with him. I gave him some suggestions for
getting started.”
SD: One more thing before we part. Can you give me an example of
how it works changing the work situation first?
Mark: Sure. I had another client who wanted coaching because he
had a dilemma. He had to work with some co-workers he didn’t get
along with, and he couldn’t transfer and he didn’t want to leave
the company. In coaching, he discovered he was having the same
sort of power struggles at home he was having at work. It
centered around emotional intelligence competencies he needed to
develop. He liked to control things at work, and also his wife
and kids at home, but it wasn’t getting him what he wanted.
SD: So the coaching work made him a more effective co-worker and
also a more effective husband and parent?
Mark: He did a lot of work and the outcome was very favorable.
He achieved his goals.
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