Tag: raising sons

  • Fatherhood as Exposure

    My first son, Fadi, was born on November 5, 2016.

    I held him carefully. He was small. He was quiet.

    The room felt still.

    I did not feel fear. I felt responsibility.

    Responsibility does not speak loudly. It settles.

    I understood that someone would now grow by watching me.

    Not by listening. By watching.

    That changed how I saw myself.

    I could no longer describe who I wanted to be. I had to become visible.

    Fatherhood did not accuse.

    It revealed.

    It showed where I was steady. It showed where I was inconsistent.

    Children do not ask for explanations.

    They respond to patterns.

    I began to notice my patterns more clearly.

    The way I reacted. The way I delayed. The way I avoided small discomforts.

    These things were no longer private.

    They were being observed.

    Years later, on October 9, 2022, my second son, Ford, was born.

    By then, I had changed in some ways. In other ways, I was still forming.

    Holding him felt familiar. Responsibility returned, but heavier.

    Not because of pressure. Because of repetition.

    I now had two lives watching.

    Fatherhood did not make speeches.

    It made mirrors.

    I saw myself reflected in small behaviors.

    Patience or impatience. Discipline or delay. Presence or distraction.

    Exposure does not humiliate.

    It clarifies.

    I did not become different overnight.

    I became aware.

    Awareness did not fix everything.

    It removed excuses.

    Fatherhood did not demand perfection.

    It required consistency.

    Consistency takes time.

    I am still forming inside that responsibility.

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