Categories
Books memoir

Writing About Fathers

Writing about my childhood will necessarily include examining my relationships with my parents. With that in mind, I’ve been researching how to write about fathers. Here’s my summary.

Nina B. Lichtenstein wrote:

Some of us grow up close with our fathers, some of us not. Others become estranged as adults or find a way back to closeness as the years go by. There can be love, play, alliances, respect, and deep connection in father-child relationships, but there can also be defiance, struggle, abandonment, secrets, and abuse. And then there’s regret. How do we write through and with and about regret?

Think about how this often-complex relationship can bolster or belittle us, challenge and reward us.

The Meaning of Fatherhood

We need to work out what fatherhood means to us, what values and qualities we associate with the role. It could be about providing guidance, support and unconditional love. It could be about being a source of strength.

The Three Ps

Provider, Protector and Permanence
Or: Protect, Provide and Preside

These are the three roles typically associated with fathers. Did your father fulfill these roles? Did you expect him to do so?

Four Types of Fathers

  1. Those who play an active part in caring for and raising their children from day one.
  2. Those who are bystanders, who leave parenting to women.
  3. Those who would rather wait until their children are older and relatively independent before they begin to play a role.
  4. Those who are unavoidably absent or excluded from caring for their children.

Which sort was yours?

Lessons Learned From Your Father

List the traits, beliefs and peculiarities that you have acquired from him. These might be positive or negative. Also, what negative patterns have you tried to reverse?

Duties

According to Oilgrow, these are the ten duties of a father within a family:

  1. Provider
  2. Protector
  3. Disciplinarian
  4. Emotional support
  5. Role model
  6. Mentorship
  7. Quality time
  8. Breadwinner
  9. Teacher
  10. Companion – love, companionship, and support

Do you agree? How did your father perform the duties?

Characters (not only fathers) in a Memoir

Steven B. Killion says:

You are not the most important character in your life story—it is the other people in your life who give it meaning and who make it interesting.

I don’t agree. Yes, the other people are important, but you are the most important character in your story. After all, you are the only one who appears in every single scene written from your memory rather than from hearsay.

Readers, please comment. Do you agree with the points above? Do you have anything to add?

To end this post, I looked for a photo of my father and me. I found only one and well…

Categories
Books Reviews Social anxiety

They Don’t Know How

Hello again, all you lovely readers. It’s been a while. In the meantime, I took part in various activities, the most important being our daughter’s amazing and unique wedding.

Recently, I’ve been posting short excerpts from the wonderful reviews for Cultivating a Fuji on social media – Twitter and Instagram. This has caused me to reflect on each sentence. Here’s the one I posted today:

This is Martin’s story but there are multiple POVs to show not everyone thinks badly or only wants to ridicule him. People want to help… they just don’t know how.”

When I thought about it, I realised this is the whole point. Most people are kind. Most people want to help. But they need guidance, especially when faced with someone like Martin. He will never provide that guidance himself. He’s much too locked up inside himself.

That’s why I became passionate about raising awareness of social anxiety. It’s why I wrote my non-fiction book, Social Anxiety Revealed. It’s why I’ll continue to bang on about social anxiety.

Because the world is full of people like Martin who need help. It’s also full of people who want to help. But help will never be forthcoming unless those kind people find out how to provide it.

Social Anxiety Revealed is one source of useful tips. You can find this book at Smashwords, Barnes & Noble, Kobo and elsewhere.

Thank you for reading this post. One day, the world will understand better.