Live Simply Love Never

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Live Simply Love <support@livesimplylove.com>
Date: Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 8:25 PM
Subject: Live Simply Love Never
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com


 



Never

Posted: 16 Apr 2012 05:24 AM PDT

 

I started out the A-to-Z Challenge with the word Always—as in the things to always practice in your marriage. As an accompaniment to that list, here are five things to Never do in your marriage:Mountainbiker freeimage 3688576 300x224 Never

  1. Never utter the word “divorce,” especially not in an argument. Generally, you don’t mean it {and you’ll regret it later}. Allowing that word to penetrate your relationship will erode your trust for one another and plant an idea in your minds that this marriage may not be worth your effort. If either of you are really thinking seriously about divorce, there are COUNTLESS alternatives worth trying before you get to that point. {Here’s just one worth considering if you live in the DFW area.}
  2. Never withhold love to try to get what you want. That’s called manipulation, and it’s another tool that erodes trust. Instead, speak honestly about what’s upsetting you, and ask your spouse to engage in active listening so that together you can try to resolve the issue.
  3. Never walk out without an explanation. It’s OK to need time apart in the midst of conflict, especially if things are getting heated. But instead of playing the drama card, very calmly assure your spouse that you love him or her and you want to resolve the conflict but that you just need a little time alone to think and process before continuing. Then go and do that. {Avoid, using the time to distract yourself. Figure out your part of the conflict, and go back when you’re ready to admit where you were wrong.}
  4. Never speak slanderous words about your spouse, publically or privately. Instead, treat each other with respect, even if you feel he/she doesn’t deserve it. You are only harming your marriage if you run to friends or parents to complain about your spouse. And publically degrading your spouse is completely inexcusable and cowardly. {By the way, this includes venting on social media.} Be diligent to handle your conflicts on a regular basis so resentment doesn’t build up.
  5. Never seek solace with someone of the opposite sex. Sharing the intimate details of your marital struggles with a friend or co-worker of the opposite sex is a recipe for disaster. You may be tempted to entertain thoughts like “he/she understands me better than my spouse” or “he/she is a much better listener.” You might find comfort in the moment, but seeking out and creating emotional intimacy with someone other than your spouse sets you on a path you don’t want to be on. Instead, invest your energy with the person you vowed to spend the rest of your life with, and work together to heal and repair the challenging and broken parts of your relationship.

P.S. I am not the wise one here. These are ALL mistakes I’ve already made in relationships prior to our marriage. By God’s grace, since then, I’ve had the privilege to receive wise counsel from women more mature than me, and I’ve watched God heal many, many marriages of people who were willing to do the Always list and avoid the Never list.

P.P.S. I know there’s a possibility that one or more of you reading this list has committed one of these NEVERS. I just read an insightful post by Michael Hyatt about how to rebuild trust once it’s been broken. Don’t despair. All is not lost.

Except for the month of April, once a week on Mondays I am writing about marital conflict and communication in my Make-Up-Monday series. I welcome readers to share the conflicts they’ve worked through in their marriages, and when there aren’t any brave volunteers, I share some of ours. If you have submissions, ideas, thoughts or suggestions on specific conflict-related topics, please let me know. I’ll be picking it back on Monday, May 7th.

As always…I’d love to know what you have to add to this list in the comments. What are your “Nevers”?

Photo credit: © Mountainbiker | Stock Free Images & Dreamstime Stock Photos


© Editor for Live Simply Love, 2012. | Permalink | 7 comments | Add to del.icio.us
Post tags: , , , , , , ,

You are subscribed to email updates from Live Simply Love
To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
Email delivery powered by Google
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610

Live Simply Love AtoZ Summary To-Date

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Live Simply Love <support@livesimplylove.com>
Date: Sun, Apr 15, 2012 at 8:18 PM
Subject: Live Simply Love AtoZ Summary To-Date
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com


 



AtoZ Summary To-Date

Posted: 15 Apr 2012 06:07 AM PDT

 

So, in case you’re wondering what’s going on around here, I started the Blogging from A-to-Z Challenge on April 1st. Two weeks ago today! I know Sundays are officially OFF with the Challenge, but for those of you who are inclined…Here’s a list of what you might have missed since April 1st. All topics are related to marriage:

Always * Beloved * Conflict  * Date NightElation * Faithfulness  * Generous  * Husband  * Intimacy  * Jesus  * Kissing  * Love Languages  * Money

A to Z Badge 20121 AtoZ Summary To DateThere are close to 2,000 bloggers participating. You can find the list of other A-to-Z blogs here.

What have you enjoyed about the A-to-Z Challenge so far? 

 

 


© Editor for Live Simply Love, 2012. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us
Post tags:

You are subscribed to email updates from Live Simply Love
To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
Email delivery powered by Google
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610

Tool Time / Singles

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Smartmarriages" <smartmarriages@lists101.his.com>
Date: Apr 14, 2012 12:09 PM
Subject: Tool Time / Singles
To: "List" <smartmarriages@lists101.his.com>


- Marriage Matters: Tool Time
- TOOL UP AT THE NARME CONFERENCE
- WHY ARE SO MANY AMERICANS SINGLE?
________________________________________________
- Marriage Matters: Tool Time
By James and Audora Burg
Sturgis Journal
Apr 01, 2012  
      
Sturgis, Mich. —
            
“Every relationship starts out with a dream of what you think it’s going to be, and you either have the tool kit when you get to the hard spots where you’ll make it through, or you need to move on,” said actress Susan Sarandon in an interview with “The Daily Beast,” about the end of her 21-year relationship with actor Tim Robbins.

Ms. Sarandon sets up a false dichotomy with her statement. There is at least a third option besides having the “tool kit” or moving on, such as calling a time-out (or in some cases, a cease-fire) long enough to gather the tools to repair the relationship.

Better yet, how about a fourth option: proactively stock the tool kit when the relationship is on solid ground.

The exciting thing is new research demonstrates that marriage education itself is effective at improving relationships, without regard to which class a couple takes.

A study involving 17,245 Californians who invested anywhere from eight to 24 hours in a marriage education program found an average increase of more than 13 percent in relationship satisfaction immediately following the marriage education course; six months later, the satisfaction level rose to 14 percent higher than before the course.

The increased satisfaction level was likely a function of improved communication, which in comparison to before the course, increased 23 percent immediately following the training and 27 percent at the six-month mark.

The results were considered statistically “significant” (as opposed to being an anomaly) because the survey drew from a diverse participant pool: the couples involved included those with severe marital problems who were relatively “resistant” to change as well as highly-functioning couples who had “relatively little room for improvement.” Further, all ages and socioeconomic levels were represented, and 50 percent took the class in a language other than English.

The second significant factor is even more remarkable: more than a dozen different marriage education programs or curricula were measured, although all classes had in common a primary focus on teaching communication and conflict management skills.

Translation of the research babble: it does not matter what course you take, by taking a class, your marriage can improve. That is an unbeatable return on investment.

So why don’t people make this investment? It may be that marriage education suffers from a perception that it is boring, stuffy, or not relevant to their particular relationship. Although we freely admit that we tend to be marriage geeks, we can honestly say that we have actually laughed, had fun, and learned something helpful for our relationship at every marriage education event we have attended.

Collecting such “tools” has become a part of the culture of our marriage. After 14 years of proactive effort, our tool kit is pretty well-stocked.

James Burg, Ph.D., is an associate professor at Indiana University-Purdue, Fort Wayne. His wife, Audora, is a freelance writer.  You may contact them at marriage@charter.net
------------------------------
- TOOL UP AT THE NARME CONFERENCE
NARME has posted its list of 1, 2, and 3-day pre-conference Training Institutes where you can train and certify as a marriage and relationship instructor.  See the list here and start planning your travel:  
http://www.narmeconference.com/images/docs/NARME-speaker%20pre-conference.pdf
______________________________
- WHY ARE SO MANY AMERICANS SINGLE?
http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2012/04/16/120416crbo_books_heller?currentPage=all
_____________________________________________
- FOR INFORMATION about how to post to the Smart Marriages® newslist;
subscribe or UNSUBSCRIBE, or an archive of all past posts:
http://www.smartmarriages.com/newslist.info.html


_______________________________________________
SmartMarriages mailing list
SmartMarriages@lists101.his.com
http://lists101.his.com/mailman/listinfo/smartmarriages

Google Alert - "healthy marriage"

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Google Alerts" <googlealerts-noreply@google.com>
Date: Apr 13, 2012 11:31 AM
Subject: Google Alert - "healthy marriage"
To: <billcoffin68@gmail.com>

Web 1 new result for "healthy marriage"
 
FREE Healthy Marriage and Relationships Classes
Multipurpose Community Action Agency provides FREE Healthy Marriage and Relationship classes to individuals or couples. Topics include communication ...
louisville.craigslist.org/grp/2950347222.html


Tip: Use a minus sign (-) in front of terms in your query that you want to exclude. Learn more.

Delete this alert.
Create another alert.
Manage your alerts.

Live Simply Love Kissing

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Live Simply Love <support@livesimplylove.com>
Date: Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 2:34 PM
Subject: Live Simply Love Kissing
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com


 

Kissing

Posted: 12 Apr 2012 10:36 AM PDT

 

I have lots to say about kissing, but in the interest of keeping this brief for my A-to-Z Challenge visitors, I’m only going to focus on one aspect today: the 10-second kiss.

Smooch 300x272 KissingLast week my mother-in-law told me about a segment on The Today Show about kissing. You can watch the 4-minute video about the importance of kissing here. A big part of the segment is about the first kiss related to dating, but right about 3:00 minutes into the conversation they talk about the 10-second kiss {the article on the same page talks about it a bit more}.

What they don’t mention on the show is oxytocin, sometimes known as the “love hormone” {Google it, I swear this is true!} as the reason WHY kissing for longer than just a peck on the lips is important. When we cuddle, hug, kiss, and engage in other types of intimacy our bodies release this hormone that increases and reinforces attachment.

We first learned about this shortly after we were married. A counselor we knew suggested that engaging in long drawn out hugs {10-20 seconds} at least once a day would strengthen our marriage over time. The reason—oxytocin! Our bodies are actually created to chemically respond to the love and nurturing of a committed relationship. And longer kisses do the same thing.

Give the 10-second kiss a try tonight {10 seconds really is longer than you would guess} and let me know what you think in the comments below!


© Editor for Live Simply Love, 2012. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us
Post tags: , , ,

You are subscribed to email updates from Live Simply Love
To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
Email delivery powered by Google
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610

Grace survey

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Joe Cook <joec@dbu.edu>
Date: Tue, Apr 10, 2012 at 4:53 PM
Subject: Grace survey
To: CESNET-L@listserv.kent.edu


I am a doctoral candidate in the PhD program in Counselor Education and Supervision at Regent University. I am conducting a research study on the influence of relational grace or gratitude in personal relationships. As part of the research, I have set up a survey which will evaluate relational grace/gratitude in individuals based on responses to the survey items. Your perspective has much to contribute to this research, and I hope you will take a moment to consider participating. The entire survey will take about 15 to 20 minutes to complete, and it is completely confidential. The link to the survey is below.  Thank you for your participation.

https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/gracescalesurvey


Joe Cook
Director- Master of Arts in Counseling
Dallas Baptist University- North
214-333-5787


Adult Children of Divorce: Recovering Origins

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: CCPR <ccpr@johnpaulii.edu>
Date: Tue, Apr 10, 2012 at 5:16 PM
Subject: Adult Children of Divorce: Recovering Origins
To: CCPR <ccpr@johnpaulii.edu>


 

Dear Conference Registrants:

 

I am writing to let you know a few details regarding the conference next week, Adult Children of Divorce: Recovering Origins.  You can find the full schedule here.  Conference packets will be available starting at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, April 12, at the registration table in the lobby of McGivney HallAll conference sessions will take place in the McGivney Hall auditorium.

 

Parking regulations on campus will be relaxed for the duration of the conference, so that you will not need a permit to park on campus; however, parking is generally scarce on weekdays when classes are in session, so you may find it more convenient to arrive via Metro, especially on Friday.  Our building is a brief walk from the Brookland/Catholic University stop on the Red Line.

 

If you have any questions in the meantime, please feel free to contact me at your convenience.  We look forward to seeing you later this week.

 

All the best,

 

Meredith Rice

----------

Center for Cultural and Pastoral Research

McGivney Hall

620 Michigan Ave, NE

Washington DC, 20064

202-526-3799 (p)

202-269-6090 (fax)

 

 

 

Live Simply Love Intimacy

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Live Simply Love <support@livesimplylove.com>
Date: Tue, Apr 10, 2012 at 2:18 PM
Subject: Live Simply Love Intimacy
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com


 



Intimacy

Posted: 10 Apr 2012 09:15 AM PDT

 

It’s one of the most important aspects of marriage—intimacy and closeness—but it’s also one of the most difficult to talk about…especially if it’s lacking and you don’t know how to get there. Intimacy requires trust. It requires openness. It’s a deep desire within all of us to be fully known and to be loved anyway. And those things really only exist in a place where there is also no fear.

&copy; Yuri Arcurs Fotolia.com 19301488 XS 300x240 IntimacyFor some of you not-so-frequent-visitors, you might be surprised that the Husband and I did not have any physical intimacy in our relationship before our wedding night. We’d never taken each other’s clothes off. We’d never groped or fondled {words that still feel gross to me and not an accurate depiction in my mind of what intimacy in marriage should be like} each other. In fact, the only thing we’d engaged in was an every-now-and-then make-out session. But even that, we realized, was a pre-cursor to sex and something we didn’t want to taint our dating or even engagement—so for the three-four months of our engagement we didn’t do that either.

I say “taint” because that’s what it would have done to our non-married state. {I dare you to try and prove that sex doesn’t change a relationship, married or not.} And our commitment to God and one another was to wait on physical intimacy. To not borrow from marriage. To not drink too soon of the intimacy that was created for that union.

I’d been warned by friends with different beliefs that this was a dumb idea. That it was important to “test it out” before marriage to be sure we were compatible. And sure, I had some concerns about that. But I had a greater trust in God and His purposes in putting us together. I’d already decided there was nothing that would cause me to walk out of this marriage once the covenant was sealed. Therefore, I was willing to endure a “difficult sex life” if that’s what God had for us.

Now, I won’t say it’s been easy—there have definitely been bumps along the way. {This is NOT Hollywood, you know!} But one thing was remarkable to me—on our honeymoon we truly had the kind of intimacy mentioned in the book of Genesis—we were naked and unashamed. In fact, we joyfully pranced around the room in our nakedness. We went to the bathroom with the door open; we weren’t embarrassed or shy. We just were. And it was easy. And that was far beyond what I’d imagined or expected. It was an intimacy I’d never known, and it was beautiful. And it was worth the wait.

And everything else has eventually come together as it’s needed to. We’ve had to talk about difficult subjects, and share our fears and anxieties. Deal with some awkwardness and be vulnerable like we’ve never been before. But that’s OK because intimacy is a process. There is no finish line. It’s not somewhere you just show up. It grows over time and with trust and it deepens in our grief and trials. And some days it’s better than others {see any number of conflicts in my Make-Up-Monday series}. But still we pursue it because of the trust that’s been built and the reassurance of how much better marriage is when we’re in that place of closeness.

How has intimacy been a challenge or a joy in your marriage? 

Photo credit: © Yuri Arcurs Fotolia.com


© Editor for Live Simply Love, 2012. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us
Post tags: , , , , ,

You are subscribed to email updates from Live Simply Love
To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
Email delivery powered by Google
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610

Live Simply Love Generous

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Live Simply Love <support@livesimplylove.com>
Date: Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 2:14 PM
Subject: Live Simply Love Generous
To: billcoffin68@gmail.com

 

Generous

Posted: 07 Apr 2012 10:25 AM PDT

 

Are you generous with your spouse or do you find yourself withholding instead of giving? We are often generous with the people we care about, like our family, friends and neighbors. We are generous with those in need. But how generous are we with our spouse?

&copy; John Gavin Shurmer Fotolia.com 2154928 XS 300x200 GenerousI’ve been mulling this one over for a few days since I was struggling {again} to come up with a topic for today’s post. I can think of a handful of ways generosity benefits a marriage. If you come up with some others, help me out and share them in the comments below. Here goes:

 

Are you generous…

…with your time—both time together and time apart?
…with your forgiveness—are you quick to forgive?
…in listening when your spouse needs to talk—really listening rather than trying to solve?
…in your physical relationship—do you “give” more than you “receive” and if so, do you give with a joyful heart?
…with your vulnerability and honesty—are you sharing deeply from the heart?
…with your possessions—are your belongings “mine” or “ours”?

 What other ways can we be generous with our spouse?

 Photo credit: © John Gavin Shurmer – Fotolia.com


© Editor for Live Simply Love, 2012. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us
Post tags: , , ,

You are subscribed to email updates from Live Simply Love
To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now.
Email delivery powered by Google
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610

Are Fathers Valuable In Our Families? new post on Healthy Relationships 101 blog (see below)

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Mary L. Pepper <mpepper93@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, Apr 7, 2012 at 9:55 AM
Subject: Are Fathers Valuable In Our Families? new post on Healthy Relationships 101 blog (see below)
To: Bill Coffin <billcoffin68@gmail.com>


      Are Fathers Valuable In Our Families?       
 

              http://healthyrelations101.blogspot.com/





Are Fathers Valuable In Our Families?

When I was a young child, my dad often came up to my bedroom, sat on my bed and would read my sisters and I poetry.  My memories of these special times included Edgar Allen Poe’s poem, Annabelle Lee, “It was many and many a year ago, in a kingdom by the sea, that a maiden there lived whom you may know by the name of Anabelle Lee. ” When I became an adult, I asked my dad why he had chosen to read that type of poetry to us.  (Annabelle Lee is a morbid, sad story, not a Disney style or child-like story).   With a joyful face, my dad told me how he loved the rhythm, the cadence, the movement and the flow of the words in those particular poems.  My dad  took the time to be involved in his children’s life.  My 7 siblings and I benefited greatly from having a close relationship with our father.
 Do fathers have value in families? What contributions can they make?  How might they influence the well being of their children?  How might growing up without a dad affect the well being of their children?  And  how is the father’s role in a family being expanded and/or redefined?

  
Fathers are indispensable if society is to persevere (Popenoe, 1996).  At the Fourth National summit on Fatherhood, the guest speaker, President Bush, stated that raising children requires sacrifice, effort, time and presence. He asserted that children look to their father to provide protection, to provide discipline and care, guidance, and most importantly, unconditional love (2001).   Existing data show that father-child interactions are important for children’s development.  Father’s involvement both at home and at school have been found to be significantly related to children’s school success (Halle, Moore, Greene & LeMenstrel, 1998).  A father’s task is to help raise his children so that they can be constructive members of society.  A father needs to transmit to his children those cultural values they must have to succeed in life.  A noted psychologist, Henry B. Biller, said that the father is extremely important for the child’s intellectual, emotional, and social development.  A father is important for the psychological well being of his children including happiness, life satisfaction, and the absence of psychological distress (Popenoe, 1996).  Data from the Fatherhood Initiative shows conclusively that when fathers are involved in their children’s lives, their children evidence greater self-esteem higher educational achievement, a more secure gender identity, and a greater success in life (Levine, 2000).
  An involved father brings positive benefits to his children that no other person is likely to bring.  A father provides protection, economic support, and a male role model.
A father gives a child guidance, instruction, encouragement, care and love (Popenoe, 1996).  A father’s role is to be a protector and provider for his wife and their children.  .  Fathers also bring discipline and authority especially to raising boys.  A father is a role model for their sons and daughters.  This is done through identification and imitation.  Sons learn how to be a man from their father.  Sons identify and bond with their father.  Sons learn about male responsibility, achievement, about how to be suitably assertive and independent, and how to relate acceptably with the opposite sex  (Popenoe, 1996). Frequent opportunity to observe and imitate an adequate father contributes to the development of the boys overall instrumental and problem solving ability (Parke & Brott, 1999).  Daughters learn from their father how to relate to men, about heterosexual trust, intimacy, and differences.  Daughters learn that they are love-worthy from their dad as well as learning assertiveness, independence, and achievement  (Popenoe, 1996).  Finally, fathers are important in helping children make the difficult transition to the adult world.  Boys require an affirmation that they are “man enough”.  Girls require an affirmation that they are “worthy enough” (Horn, 1999).
     Children develop best when they are provided opportunity to have warm, intimate, continuous, and enduring relationship with both their father and their mother.

 Mothers and fathers have different but complementary parenting styles. They bring different qualities to children.  This is important for optimum childrearing.  In regards to discipline, dads often seem more powerful and firm. Fathers provide an ultimate predictability and consistency. Mothers are more responsive and adjust to the child’s needs and emotions of the moment. Mother’s provide an important flexibility and sympathy in their discipline.  Both dimensions are critical for an efficient, balance, and humane childrearing regime (Popenoe, 1996). In regards to interactions, men seem to stress physical and high energy activities while women stress the social and emotional aspects (Parke & Brott, 1999).   In regards to play, father’s play is more physically stimulating and exciting with a rough and tumble approach (Popenoe, 1996).  T. Berry Brazelton states that most fathers seem to present a more playful, jazzing up approach (Parke & Brott, 1999).  It is the way that children learn self-control (Popenoe, 1996).  A father’s play help children to learn how to express and appropriately manage their emotions and recognize other’s emotional cues (Parke & Brott, 1999).  Through father’s physical play and his caretaking techniques, a child learns competition, challenge, initiative, risk taking and independence. Mother’s play takes place more at the child’s level (Popenoe, 1996).  A mother plays more visual games with more verbal interactions.  In her caretaking role, she stresses the emotional security and personal safety. In regards to moral senses, there are fundamental differences between men and women.  Men stress justice, fairness, and duty.  These traits are based on rules.  Women stress sympathy, care and helping others.  These traits are based on relationships (Popenoe, 1996).  Mothers and fathers parent differently, but both can parent well and make a difference in their children’s lives (Parke & Brott, 1999).    
 Children learn about male and female relationships by seeing how their parents relate to each other.  Children learn about trust, intimacy, and caring between the sexes.  The parents’ relationship provides children a model for marriage (Popenoe, 1996).  If fathers treat mothers with dignity and respect, then it is likely that their sons will grow up to treat women with dignity and respect.  If fathers treat mothers with contempt and cruelty, then it is likely that their sons will, too.  Fathers are also critical for the healthy emotional development of girls.  If girls experience the love, attention, and protection of fathers, then they are likely to resist the temptations of seeking love and attention elsewhere- often through casual sexual relations at a very young age (Horn, 1999). 
  On the other side of the coin is the research of children who are raised without their father.  Generally, children from father absent homes have lower test scores, lower GPA’s, lower school attendance than adolescents from two parent homes (Parke, & Brott, 1999).  Children with absent fathers are subject to higher levels of physical and sexual abuse, neglect and emotional maltreatment.   Fatherless children experience significantly more physical, emotional and behavioral problems than do children growing up in intact families.  Many of these problems continue into their adolescent and adult years generating steeply elevated rates of juvenile delinquency, crime and violence, out of wedlock pregnancies, and substance abuse (Popenoe, 1996).  Prisons are populated primarily by men who were abandoned or rejected by their fathers (Dobson, 2002).  Seventy-two percent of adolescent murderers and sixty percent of America’s rapist grew up in homes without fathers (Parke, & Brott, 1999).  A few years ago, a greeting card company decided to set up a table in a federal prison, inviting any inmate who so desired to send a free card to his mom.  The lines were so long, they had to make another trip to the factory to get more cards.  Due to the success of the event, they decided to do the same thing on Father’s Day, but this time no one came.  Not one prisoner felt the need or had the desire to send a card to his dad.  Many had no idea who their father even was (Dobson, 2002).

     Children in single parent households are disadvantaged by loss of economic resources, too little parental supervision and/or involvement and greater residential mobility (Popenoe, 1996).  Patricia Fry in an article, ‘Fathers in America’, states that fatherless children do learn from their father.  They learn not to trust and they learn to live with the pain of rejection (2001).  Long time affects of absent fathers include the closeness children feel to their father when they become adults.  Only 31 % of adult children of divorced parents felt close to their father.  An overwhelming 77% of adult children whose parents are still married and live together felt close to their father (Parke & Brott, 1999).

     Now, that we know the value of fathers in a family and the flip side of the coin of what happens when the father is absent, what are some of the current roles that some fathers play in their family.   The quality of a father’s involvement is crucial.  Simply being there is not enough; being available and involved is what really counts ( Parke & Brott, 1999).  For those men whom have chosen to stay married and have integrated themselves into the fabric of family life, their role as dad is evolving (Levine, 2000).  As Ken R. Canfield in his book The Heart of a Father states “It takes quantity time to build a relationship of mutual trust, and trust is absolutely necessary for real quality time”.    Some fathers are choosing to be more involved in the primary child care (Popenoe, 1996).  They are walking the walk and talking the talk.  They are creating a balance in their lives between work, marriage, and children.  Because they are involved in their children’s lives, their children evidence greater self-esteem, higher educational achievement, a more secure gender identity, and greater success in life (Levine, 2000). The expanding role for fathers allows them to be more nurturing than in the past, to share in domestic pursuits and the day to day care of their children.  Being an active and an engaged father can be one of the most deeply satisfying and meaningful aspects of his life’s endeavors.  Children give men a perspective on what is really important in life as well as the important sense of interpersonal connectedness across the generations.  Children enhance these virtues in men:  patience, kindness, generosity, compassion and prevents the preoccupation with self (Popenoe, 1996). 
  Society at all levels can promote and encourage men to be active and involved fathers.
Wives can encourage their husband to engage in the daily childcare by relinquishing some of the control they have of that area.  Local agencies can help by giving men the tools they need to know in order to be involved fathers.  They can offer fathering classes that teach men about child development and basic skills needed for child care.  Everyone can benefit greatly from fathers being involved in their families (Parke & Brott, 1999).

The president of the National Fatherhood Initiative, Wade F. Horn asserts that the best home for a child is one where both the mother and the father are happily married, actively and lovingly involved in the life of their child.   Let's strive to give this gift to each and every child!
 Change is still needed in our culture’s attitude about the value and importance of a father in a family.  Fatherhood must be esteemed and promoted and become a valued,
integral part of our society. 

References
     Amato, P.R., & Rogers, S.J.(1999).  Do attitudes toward divorce affect marital quality?  Journal of Family Issues,20 (1), 69-86.
     Ballard, C. (2002).  Who But God?  The Institute for Responsible Fatherhood and Family Revitalization [On-Line].  Available:  www.responsiblefatherhood.org/
     Blankenhorn, D.(1995).  Fatherless in America:  confronting our most urgent social problem.  New York:  Basic Books.
     Bush, G.W. (2001).  Remarks to the fourth national summit on fatherhood.  Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, 37(23), 859-862.
     Dobson, J. (2002, March).  The essential father.  Family News, 1-6.
     Halle, T., Moore, K., Greene, A., & LeMenestrel, S. M. (1998).  What policymakers need to know about fathers.  Policy & Practice of Public Human Services, 56(3), 21-35.
     Horn, W. (1999).  No substitute for parents.  Child and Family, 22(3), 57-63.
     Levine, S. (2000).  Father courage – what happens when men put family first.  New York:  Harcourt, Inc.
     Parke, R & Brott, A. (1999).  Throwaway dads:  the myths and barriers that keep men from being the fathers they want to be.  Boston:  Houghton Mifflin Company.
     Popenoe, D. (1996).  Life without father:  compelling new evidence that fatherhood and marriage are indispensable for the good of children and society.  New York:  The Free Press.
     The Fatherhood Project Home Page.  Available:  www.fatherhoodproject.org/



‎"Never be afraid to trust an unknown future to an all-knowing God."