As we know, Father's Day comes around once a year for most people. For us,
we have 2 because the US has a Father's Day in June and Australia has a
Father's Day in September. Therefore, as we have fathers in both countries, we
have 2 Father's Days and this is special.
The Meaning of Father's Day
The meaning of Father's Day to me is to celebrate someone who has always
supported, loved and been there for you no matter what. It’s the feeling of
being secure and knowing that no matter what you've done, your father will
always be there for you.
That doesn't mean that there won't be fights, disagreements or punishments
as children need these for boundaries are while growing up. In many cases,
these will bond a father and a child together and as both get frustrated,
upset, and angry but it all works out in the end because of the love, respect
and feeling of being secure. These relationships make us who we grow up to be
and we pass beliefs from one generation to the next.
As for all the great things Father’s Day means, it also has the other side
of the coin for some – those who think it’s their right and to show “affection”
by physically, sexually and mentally abuse children. In my view,
no one should go through
the physical, mental or sexual abuse, but if we face reality, there are people
out there who do and think that is their right and it’s no one’s right. Many countries are backing this view up with various against abuse agencies in many countries - from abuse of
children and
spousal (Australia) and
children and
spousal (US). If you suffer from one of these, please report it to the authorities because that's the only way to get them help and ensure that it doesn't happen to others.
Ranges of Relationships
There are ranges of relationships from seeing them every now and then to
having contact with them every day all day. Each relationship is different;
however, sometimes people on either end thing it’s either too much or not
enough. The difficult part is being able to be truthful about what you want
from the relationship and being able to communicate that to the other person in
this case – your father.
I’m not saying that it’s an easy task because all relationships are hard
work, but sometimes they fail and that communication, no matter how hard you
try, will continue to fail but sometimes the communication
will work and everyone will feel better for it. I can now see you
thinking, well how can we get the communication to work? Honestly, I don’t
know. I think it stems from the type of relationship you had while growing up –
if you had a great relationship and feel you could share
things then it will
probably work. However, if you had the type of relationship where you were told
one thing and something else was done or felt undermined at every turn in
different ways, the communication probably won’t work.
In closing, in my opinion, even if you had one of the latter types of
relationships, where communication was very hard to do, I would still probably
keep trying. Let’s face it, we all only have one father – sometimes we get
another try by having step father’s and father in laws – but the fact remains
your genes will only have come from only one female and one male. Remember that
once that male, or father, dies and you don’t have a chance to communicate with
him, you lose the relationship and all the history that he is passing down via
views and history from that side of your family. I know that trying to keep
those communication lines open is very hard (and in some cases very tiring!)
work but just keep asking yourself, who’s really going to lose out in the end?
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Here's a picture of my father and I in 2011. |
What your view? Do you agree or not agree to my point of view? Please
comment and let us know what you are thinking.