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*ring* Hello? "Hi. This is your ex-wife." "Hi, umm... You got the child support check, didn't you?" "Yes. That's not the problem. Junior is skipping school, failing 9th grade, doing drugs and getting in fights. I can't deal with it, he's coming to live with you."
I recently read (and later watched) The Road. I found it reminiscent of the society I see. Dads are useful in case of emergency, valued for our ability "to deal with it". The line spoken by the protagonist; "All I know is the child is my warrant and if he is not the word of God, then God never spoke." really stuck with me.
This child is my responsibility. Period. Especially now that the shit has hit the fan. Everything else is secondary.
My youngest child has a disability. The skills that mom brought to being primary stay-at-home parent to his two older neurotypical brothers weren't portable so I left the workforce to be the stay at home parent. At school, I noticed something odd. My son spends much of his time in the general ed classroom, and some in a special education learning center. When I volunteer in his general ed classroom, all of the other volunteers are moms. When I volunteered in his special ed classroom, most of the other volunteers are dads.
Does anyone else perceive a similar reality? If so, is it a dad thing? Do we feel that we're only needed in a crisis situation, or is it something else? Is there an externally-imposed social expectation that when the wheels fall off, it's up to him "to be a man" and fix it?
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