
“When solving problems, dig at the roots instead of just hacking at the leaves.”
- Anthony J. D’angelo
A few days ago, on father’s day, I posted a letter here to my father. The response from Roc boys all over the world made me realize that although there are too many (or perhaps not enough) songs, books, talkshows, etc. about the men who cause us an injustice, rarely do we stop and appreciate the “good” ones, our men of honour, the solid rocks in our lives.
This week is dedicated our Roc boys.
One evening, during a concoction of conversation topics, One-DaBoy and I discussed the sensitive issue of paternity. And he told me about the various sly ways to establish paternity, if a man wants to be sure that his kids are indeed his. One-DaBoy is a rare gem with a very interesting thought process.
The first thought that crossed my mind was the question that if you are part of a child’s life from the start, would you really want to go to lengths to find out if you share DNA? And does it matter?
If your name is on your child’s birth certificate, is it truly necessary for you to establish paternity anyway?
After coming to the conclusion that establishing paternity is essential and will benefit your child in the long run for many reasons, we went on to discuss a number of other things but this conversation topic definitely left me with some food for thought.
On a semi-related topic, within the issue of paternity, a question came to mind: Can an unfaithful husband/partner be a good father?
It’s been said that the measure of a man lies in the relationships he comes to plant and cultivate over the course of a lifetime. And yet, as is the case with most things in life, have matters ever really been that simple? Even in instances where the parties involved are as close to a man, as say, a wife or a child?
Can a man who’s perceived as a lousy husband to his wife still be viewed as a good father to his children? Or are the two relationships uniquely distinct, ultimately yielding minimal bearing on the positive trajectory of the other?
Regardless of the differences between parenthood and partnerhood relationships, there can be no denying that an overlap exists, even if only as reflections of how much or little a man values responsibility and commitment – unconditional or not.
With that said, reality is break-ups, bad marriages, even divorces – all those things happen all day, every day – and each man has to chart his own course, find his own way in the relationships he enters into.
As a society, we seem to be getting better at parenting but worse at marriage and not only can the two relationships be separate and different – often times, they have to be.
No matter what the relationship is between the two adults involved, a father should be and has to be allowed to be a father.
Stay Fabulous
/Flygirl