grahamg
Old codger
- Location
- South of Manchester, UK
I do question my fathers views more as I get older
I agree that I do feel people tend to reconsider whatever their parents told them as children more as they grow older, but so far as my dad remaining childless goes or that he should have done so, well that just wasn't a realistic prospect given his character (he even had an uncle who decided to leave his wife because she couldn't have children and had children with another woman subsequently, so important was it to him to have children). My mother wouldn't have married him either if she thought in any way he didn't want children, and they did successfully raise seven children, so no, that was never an option for them.
In any event I do think my father thought he was acting in his children's best interests by telling us: "Its every man for himself in this world", and I admit there was a contradiction in the way my father behaved which was that he spent his life helping and protecting his children.
What alternative piece of advice would you like fathers to impart to their children I wonder, given all the misgivings other forum members have expressed about thinking you can always rely on others to look after you, or generally trust folks to assist you in life?
It's not easy to face, but there's also the possibility that your father wasn't the genius you seem to have believed. One of the things that happens when we grow up is that we allow ourselves these realizations. He may have been asking you to be less dependent on him so his life was easier. If that's what he expected or wanted, he should have remained childless.
I agree that I do feel people tend to reconsider whatever their parents told them as children more as they grow older, but so far as my dad remaining childless goes or that he should have done so, well that just wasn't a realistic prospect given his character (he even had an uncle who decided to leave his wife because she couldn't have children and had children with another woman subsequently, so important was it to him to have children). My mother wouldn't have married him either if she thought in any way he didn't want children, and they did successfully raise seven children, so no, that was never an option for them.
In any event I do think my father thought he was acting in his children's best interests by telling us: "Its every man for himself in this world", and I admit there was a contradiction in the way my father behaved which was that he spent his life helping and protecting his children.
What alternative piece of advice would you like fathers to impart to their children I wonder, given all the misgivings other forum members have expressed about thinking you can always rely on others to look after you, or generally trust folks to assist you in life?