Stay-
at-Home
Dads
 

Confidence in Competency


At 3:00 AM, three weeks after our son, Noah, was born, he was howling in misery (we hadn’t discovered the wonders of Mylicon, yet). Having tried everything I could to soothe him and failed, I actually said, “Well, we had a good couple weeks, anyway.” (Have you ever wanted to go back in time and give your old self a really hard smack?) I was faced with one of the greatest enemies any man can face: the feeling of incompetence.

In seven years as a Stay-At-Home-Dad, there have been times when I looked at the daily challenges of child rearing coupled with homemaking and wondered, “What was I thinking? I can’t do this!”

The ugly head of incompetence doesn’t go away easily, either. Thinking I was not equipped to do the job led to more self- doubt. This led to depression (maybe not the clinical brand, but that blue funk that just dragged everything down.) Feeling crummy fed the inadequacy and eventually, I was doing a lousy job parenting. I had become incompetent! I never actually sold the kids for scientific experiments, but I occasionally wondered how plausible a solution that would be.

It turns out that I am not a horribly warped person. I am just a man. According to Dr. John Gray, of “Mars and Venus” fame, one of the worst feelings for men is the feeling of incompetence. Men need to feel needed and capable to fulfill that need. We are problem solvers, go-getters, bull-by-the-horn takers. (Women might be these things, too, but I’m not talking about them just now). When we are struck with the sense that we cannot solve a problem, it irritates us.

Take, for example, getting lost. Men don’t ask for directions, says Dr. Gray, because that would be admitting that we are not competent enough to know where we are and how to get to where we are going. Like I always say, ‘Tis better to have been lost and found than admit being lost in the first place.

So, men do not like being inept and parenting can make anyone feel like they have stepped off a pier wearing a diaper bag filled with rocks. Before we go tattooing a big “L” on our forehead for being the absolute worst parent that ever sired, I find it useful to take a step back. Then take a step forward. Then a step back. Now we’re doing the cha-cha! Sorry.

When I honestly look at the job I am doing as a father, I conclude two things: The first one is that I really am doing a decent job of it. Perfect? Not by a long shot, but good enough to be confident that my kids will be okay. There are lots of things that I do that will help my kids be good and healthy people, the absolutely most important one being that I let them know that they are loved even if they pour Bull's Eye Barbecue Sauce on the family room carpet.

The second thing I realize about my parenting is that even with my failures, my children are resilient enough to survive and thrive. They are designed well enough to overcome if I said “no” when I should have said “yes”, and “yes” when I should have said, “are you out of your mind?!” In short., my kids will endure despite my shortcomings.

If, after analyzing yourself into a headache, you still feel like an incompetent parent, there is still one more step you can take. You could ask someone for advice. There is not a problem today that some parent hasn’t lived through and solved. Ask your parents. Ask your neighbor. Ask the couple who have adopted eight underprivileged kids. Someone is bound to have the answer for you.

And if you must ask someone for directions to navigate through your parental difficulties, I promise I won’t tell anyone.

©2008, Mark Phillips

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 Women, it's true, make human beings, but only men can make men. - Margaret Mead

Mark Phillips is a Stay-At-Home-Dad and freelance writer. Along with raising his four children, he is developing a franchise called “The Vacuum IS a Power Tool.” It is designed to help SAHDs maintain that which makes us men, instead of hairy Mom-substitutes. He earned a B.S. in Communication/Theatre Arts and teaching certificates in English, public speaking, and psychology from Eastern Michigan University. After six years as a high school English teacher and Director of Dramatic Arts at Powers Catholic High School in Flint, Michigan, he changed careers and became a Stay-At-Home-Dad. www.TheVacuumIsAPowerTool.com or E-Mail



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