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Dr. Peggy Drexler

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Fathers and Daughters -- and Moms: Is There Room for Everyone?

Posted: 05/21/2012 12:10 pm

My father died of a heart attack when I was three years old. I went to sleep with a father, and by the time I woke, I no longer had one. My mother, in her grief, subsequently removed all traces of him. There were no photos on bookshelves; no fond holiday remembrances. Asking "What was Daddy like?" drew a vacant response: "He's gone. It doesn't pay to talk about it." What I learned about him I learned from poring over a trunk filled with his old photos and letters. I'd sit on a wooden box at the bottom of the basement stairs, staring at the photos, rereading words that I could quote by heart, recreating his life from the fragments he left behind. For a while, I convinced myself that he wasn't really gone at all.

Many years later, as my husband held our daughter in his arms for the first time -- the look on his face loving, intense, all-encompassing -- I looked on and knew that I'd never know that gaze myself. Not from a dad, anyway. It was hard not to feel sadness and a little self-pity, even as I was realizing one of my greatest dreams: becoming a mother to a beautiful baby girl.

I was delighted for my daughter, of course, as I watched her grow into a child who was adored, supported, and wholly loved by her father. But I was also jealous. As a pre-schooler, she was afraid to ride her bicycle without training wheels, and so my husband eagerly set aside a Saturday to teach her. But when the day arrived, my daughter was nervous. She had a stomachache. I told her she could stay home if she wanted -- there would be other days to learn to ride the bike. But her father pressed her: "No," he insisted. "I'm sure you can do this." They went and she returned ebullient, a broad grin on her four-year-old face. I was fulfilled by her obvious pride -- until I heard the voice inside my head. "Wouldn't it have been nice if you had a father in your corner? Someone who believed in you?"

A daughter's relationship with her father is complicated, even through adulthood. In my work, I've found that even the most successful, independent women have difficulty liberating themselves from the need for their father's approval -- even those women who might have grown up without one. Then we have daughters of our own, and of course we want them to enjoy relationships with their dads that were as happy as, or happier than, ours. But can a mom truly encourage a daughter to be close to her father without comparing her daughter's experience to her own or feeling left out entirely?

As my daughter grew, I watched as her bond with her father intensified. She was interested in his work; they shared similar tastes in music. One night when he'd taken her to work with him, my husband came home without our nine-year-old in tow. He caromed around our kitchen, pumping his fists in excitement. What on earth? Rather than returning home with her dad, he told me, she'd insisted on staying until the project was complete. No father could have been more proud. And again I wondered, Why not me?

Complicating matters was the fact that as mom I was, by and large, the family's primary caregiver -- all things to all people. Though my husband was an involved father, it seemed like his efforts were more of a favor to me -- an effort to ease my burden -- than a commitment to dual responsibility. I, on the other hand, was on-call 24/7. Which made it more difficult to watch when he and our daughter developed their bond separate from me. When our daughter was a teenager, my husband stopped working for a few months and insinuated himself into her life in the ways I had always occupied alone. Only better and more. After having breakfast with her every morning, he would take her to school, go on all class field trips, pick her up every afternoon and take her to practices or home to play with friends. For so long I had gently (and sometimes not so gently chided) him for not doing his share. But now I felt shut out of their closeness, and sad about it. It had been my province to know the names of all of our daughter's playmates as she grew up. She talked to me about friendship issues and difficulties in school. It was I who knew her food preferences and clothing preferences. Suddenly, I felt displaced and peripheral.

As a mature woman, I realized that my husband's break from work created a great opportunity for him and our daughter to spend time together. I knew how much it meant to each of them, how much the experience was worth. But I had to work hard not to resent, feel jealous of, and envy his now very central role in her life.

It was a natural reaction. As much as we can begrudge being forced to fly solo as parents or do more than half the work, the power or prerogative of being a mother is also something that we want to protect. Often anyone trying to contribute can be seen as intruding on our turf. Even when co-parenting equally, ultimately you want to be the one that your child calls to if he falls down. So as a mother, you're pulled by complicated and opposing emotions. On the one hand, you want help and don't want to feel on-call emotionally or physically all day, every day. On the other hand, you also crave the validation and connection that comes from being number one in your child's life. Let's face it. Most mothers feed off of being such a primary presence -- the person their children call in the middle of the night, because she's the one they feel safest with.

The simple fact is that more time for one parent almost always means less for another. Furthermore, mothers and daughters are wired for conflict, because it eases their inevitable parting. Intellectually, I knew all this. But emotionally, it's hard to take. And if it's true that the parents we had are the parents we'll be, there's a gap in my resume.

Yet as our daughter has grown older, so have I. I no longer wonder whether it'd be nice if I'd had for myself what my daughter enjoys today. Because in many ways, I do. Watching my husband parent her has given me a deeper appreciation for what fatherhood is all about, to experience it through her eyes. Because I consciously idealized a father for myself, ascribing him attributes that soothed me, I particularly treasure those qualities when I see them in my husband. I've told our daughter that her grandfather had a lot of energy, warmth, liked to laugh and was so loving, just like her own dad. I'm fortunate to be able to make that connection.

 
 
 

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02:35 PM on 05/31/2012
Thank you for this article! It really helped me. I had a present and not present father from 8 until 18. By the time he and my mother worked things out I was on my way to college and only my brother got his high school years with my father. I watch my daughters with my husband and at times feel the same way as you. "Why not me?" though my father and I are close now I hate he missed so many of my formative years. I love that my daughters can wrap my hubby's heart around their little fingers. Thanks for giving courage to my feelings.
10:30 PM on 05/24/2012
I lost my father much later in my life but my sadness was that my children didn't get to know how incredible of a human being he was. I could not tell my kids that my dad passed away because I was so worried that he would be out of sight and out of mind. I hope, one day my kids will be curious to want to know more about him and ask questions about him. I have learnt one thing from my loss is to make sure I appreciate all the good in people and life in general because we never know if we would have the opportunity to say thank you to that someone.
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jbs5022
07:25 PM on 05/24/2012
Comparatively, who can receive any advice, be well informed and feel more connected than a person who loves their Heavenly Father. Earthly fathers as we call them are supposed to be the epitome of God our only True Father. As a child I loved my dad, but his experience took me in a direction that eventually devastated my life. However he had no clue that what he had taught me. Was going to take into an area where it finally destroyed me. It wasn't until the time I was thirty nine years old and in prison from what my dad had taught me. That I got to meet my Real Father in Heaven. The most phenomenal encounter I have ever had. There's no symbolicness between my earthly genetic father and My Heavenly Spiritual Father. The day that He appeared in my cell from above, became a day of great rememberance. Above anything that my earthly dad had done. God is good all the time. His overzealous intentions are always there for us in any situation. His love is abundant and far above that of women. Because its very intriguing to say the very least. It mounts up with wings like eagles and soars with breathtaking power. Leaving no mistake as to Who He is. Its an indelible over shadowing that makes all the differences in this world. Let alone, in heaven, amen. Try Him and you will see, He's there waiting handsomely for you in all His splender and glory.
Savannah5
Happiness and Peace
02:50 PM on 05/24/2012
I am sorry for her early loss of her father. It made it harder for her when her mother wouldn't share stories of her father with her. It made it harder for her as a parent.
But in the end, I think she learned alot about herself.
01:42 PM on 05/24/2012
When I began reading this article I started seeing the same as others, the selfishness that seemed apparent when she began discussing the parenting and role of her own husband with their daughter. My initial judgment was bitter towards her resentment of her own daughter. In the end I was relieved to see she learned to let it go, and appreciate how lucky she is to have what her family is. While I experienced the menagerie of emotions reading this from sympathy, to disgust, to bitter, to relief, when I stepped back and processed the whole story for a few minutes I have to admit that all-in-all I actually respect her bravery in being honest about what she truly felt. Many are judging harshly by her having these feelings and thoughts but, remember to look in the mirror before you judge so immediately. NONE of us are perfect, and I'd almost guarantee that ALL of us have had thoughts or feelings that, if we wrote them out truthfully for all the world to see, others would judge us similarly harsh. I appreciate someone actually being honest about being a human being, feeling the confusion, heartbreak, resentment, and every other emotion she openly admitted to. I'm sure she's not alone in the gambit of emotions she's experienced, and I'm sure somewhere out there, her honesty helped one other person feel 'not alone' and see hope and encouragement.
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giftsthatpurr
zestful life
12:55 PM on 05/26/2012
Fanned. Appreciate your insight and empathy.
01:24 PM on 05/24/2012
From reading this it sounds more like her mother let her down...drowning herself in sorrows and negativity and erasing her father. This article is confusing....it talks about how its insanely important to have a father in a young girls life as she will grow up lacking...however it uses an example to where she did not have a strong mother to be in that corner for her. I am a single mom, my 3 year daughter is positive, beautiful, full of life and intelligent. I teach her to ride bikes, I teach her to use a screw driver and paint our house as well as express herself through canvas art, I teach her how to defend herself and how to be compassionate and strong....I do it all! And she is amazing. I don't know of a time where she was sad (minus occassional tattling on the dog for swating her w/ it's tail lol) Its all in the parenting, always....if you have a grief stricken mother, what kind of parent is she going to be ? This is a sad article, but I am telling you from a very successful family w/o a father figure, kids turn out great...I am actually adopting an older child soon so we can save a girl from a bad past and take her out of the foster system, We have a ton of love to give and I want to do good w/ the short life we have.
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pslcitizen
I intend to live forever. So far, so good.
12:51 PM on 05/24/2012
That's sad that her father was essentially erased. Even if I couldn't of handled it myself I would of at least put the most important items to remember him by aside for the kids.
12:03 PM on 05/24/2012
I cannot imagine what it would be like being 4 and going to bed having a daddy and waking up and him being gone. I also cannot understand why your mother removed all his images and did not talk to you about him... that had to be heartbreaking and something a child would not understand. I think your mother made some really bad choices. She had issues dealing with his loss and her way of dealing with it was to remove it and all remembrances of him. That is definately not what you needed. I think this is why you grew up feeling such a horrible loss & longed for infomation about him. You needed to feel close to him. ALL understandable. As far as your daughter and husband are concerned... the feelings you had were not jealousy, they were the emotions you had been harboring all those years and moments you wanted to have with YOUR father. Perfectly understandable. It is totally normal to feel happy for your daughter while you yourself have your heartstrings tugged wishing you had those moments with your dad. In a way, it keeps your fathers memory alive... find comfort in that. Don't beat yourself up for your feelings, you're allowed to have them, just understand why you are having them. Also, don't read more into them than what they are... you miss your dad, you wish he was here, you wish you had those special moments. You're not alone.
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Dan Crabtree
11:32 AM on 05/24/2012
Just replayed Mike and the Mechanics "In The Living Years".once again to remind myself how importanrt and short life can be..very powerful song...even today....
11:14 AM on 05/24/2012
My father died of a heart attack when I was three, too, and the words in this post really resonated with me. My dad's absence left a big hole in my life, and I yearned to fill it, yet it was impossible. Without him there, I never got to see what love between a committed couple looked like. I was left with a mistrust of all men, because I had no familiarity with a man as I grew up. As a result, I've struggled with intimacy issues my whole life. Many people don't realize how important having a father is to our emotional development. So fathers out there...be there for your daughters! You make a BIG difference in our lives!
10:49 AM on 05/24/2012
I totally understand feeling a little left out. My dad is still alive, but he was totally uninvolved with us as kids. He was a great provider and my parents are still married, but kids was mom's domain and he really had zero interest. So when I decided to get married, I was going to insist that dad be involved. I had missed that with my dad. And I got that. My ex was totally involved until my daughter was a teenager and his eye wondered off elsewhere and she didn't want him involved. It was terribly painful for my daughter for whom daddy was her everything, I was totally the second choice. I felt pangs of jealousy over the years knowing that I was the one doing all the work and he was the one for whom she held out the hope. Now her relationship with him is difficult, but still the one she covets, while we are closer and she adores the man who was there when her dad wasn't. Dad's need to realize how important they are from a true place, not just when it serves their purpose.
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JiveNJingle
Don't be a skvaddernosse...
10:49 AM on 05/24/2012
Does she realize how--even if never verbalized--her sick feelings of jealousy are incredibly damaging to a daughter? Does she think her daughter doesn't realize that her mother is jealous of the relationship she has with her father? Does she think her daughter won't become more defiant, more difficult, more spiteful as she grows up, all in efforts to protect that relationship with her father?

I do. I live(d) it. I can tell you, My Dear, that your daughter, whether you realize it or not, is VERY tuned in to your jealousy. I'm sure it's almost palpable to her. It will get ugly unless you seek counseling to get it under control, or make a conscious effort to encourage her to spend as much time with him as possible until you CAN get your jealousy under control, just so as not to damage her emotionally. After years of therapy, I can attest to the emotional wreckage that a mother's behavior can cause.
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BiggpussJr
pissin em off one comment at a time.
10:30 AM on 05/24/2012
I enjoyed reading this. The author went from being slightly jealous to realizing that she gets to witness all that she missed and appreciating it. I actually wished that I had spent more "fun" time with my daughters and had been less the disiplinarian. I am glad they turned out the way they did, but I was more the protective father than the friendly one. If I could go back I would spend more "fun" time with them.
10:04 AM on 05/24/2012
My father committed suicide when I was four. I have no memories of him-and honestly, I'm glad I don't. From what I've been told, he seemed like...well, a waste of skin, in my opinion. Careless, womanizing, uncaring. My step-father is a good guy as far as working hard is concerned, but when I was a kid he failed in most other fatherly aspects. He was an alcoholic, verbally abusive to pretty much everyone and physically abusive to my mother for a short while. No, I didn't really want or need a father-the relationship I have with my mother is more then enough for me. It's incredibly rare that I actually want approval from my step-father, and the feeling of wanting it fills me with more bitterness than I like.
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on1wheel750
10:01 AM on 05/24/2012
ive never been an emotional person, mostly cold and detached from people,family etc,,,,,,my little girl completely changed me in 4 years time, from the day she was born and i held her in my arms ive been a new better person. i would sacrifice anything and everything to make her life better. a parents love cant be described in words it has to be felt