grahamg
Old codger
- Location
- South of Manchester, UK
Another thread on aspects of divorce, or separation of parents, (maybe even those parents who never chose to to marry or live together but created a child nonetheless).
It often happens I'd suggest, after a divorce/separation of parents, that the question of whether or not the parents ever truly loved one another arises, (perhaps in the minds of the children affected by the split if no one else).
Nowadays there seems to be a common enough tactic (or fashion?), for denigrating "biological fathers", as though they didn't have any more involvement in the creation of the child than the gift of their DNA, (much like a sperm donor, though there is the obvious difference they did at least know the woman they created the child with, "at some level or other").
However, looking at things in a different light, whether or not our own parents loved one another, (even "truly loved one another" in the sense that they couldn't live without one another, and stuck the marriage through thick and thin), will have had a significant impact on our own childhoods and maybe our view of this world throughout it, from the way they were, what they chose to say and do when bringing us up and so on, (the commitment they showed to their children as well as to each other).
I often seem to hear the view "most men" wont turn down s*x with an attractive female, and there are no moral considerations in their minds, but I'd say when this leads to children being born, the way we did once feel about the mother plays a big part in how we are able to feel towards our children, (maybe mothers dont have this kind of aspect to their love of their children?).
It often happens I'd suggest, after a divorce/separation of parents, that the question of whether or not the parents ever truly loved one another arises, (perhaps in the minds of the children affected by the split if no one else).
Nowadays there seems to be a common enough tactic (or fashion?), for denigrating "biological fathers", as though they didn't have any more involvement in the creation of the child than the gift of their DNA, (much like a sperm donor, though there is the obvious difference they did at least know the woman they created the child with, "at some level or other").
However, looking at things in a different light, whether or not our own parents loved one another, (even "truly loved one another" in the sense that they couldn't live without one another, and stuck the marriage through thick and thin), will have had a significant impact on our own childhoods and maybe our view of this world throughout it, from the way they were, what they chose to say and do when bringing us up and so on, (the commitment they showed to their children as well as to each other).
I often seem to hear the view "most men" wont turn down s*x with an attractive female, and there are no moral considerations in their minds, but I'd say when this leads to children being born, the way we did once feel about the mother plays a big part in how we are able to feel towards our children, (maybe mothers dont have this kind of aspect to their love of their children?).