Dads and Daughters
Dads and Daughters
Dads and Daughters
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Faulder, Liane. "Dads and Daughters." Health Issues 8. Ed. Gilda Leitenberg Et. Al. Toronto, ON: McGraw-Hill
Ryerson, 2002. 74-78.
Secunda says were still light years away from having most fathers taking an active role in their
daughters lives. And she says thats a problem.
Girls dont feel theyre important if they dont get attention from their fathers, said Secunda. A
loving mother isnt enough to make up for a fathers deficits.
Kathi Kilgour is a sessional instructor in family studies at the University of Alberta who recent ly
completed a masters thesis on fathering. She says there is a lot of talk about dads being more involved with
fathering, but in practice, many dads are still hid ing behind the newspaper.
I dont think for the most part men spend a lot of time with their children, and less so with their
daughters, says Kilgour.
Its not that fathers dont love their daughters... I just dont think they think about (the importance
of their role) as far as their daughters are concerned, she says.
But Kilgour, who did intense interviews with nine fathers about their fathering philosophy as part of her
thesis, says shes hopeful that dads are changing their approach to raising both sons and daughters.
I think fathers are aware that the relationship with their children is something they have to build on
and even though theyre not yet the TV dads they are still making the effort.
She says this is particularly evident in the way fathers are trying to be physically affection ate with
their children. Thats something they never had with their own fathers and they missed it, says Kilgour.
David Hannis broke the traditional father mould when he quit his job as a civil servant to stay home
with his first daughter some 11 years ago.
Hannis was a house dad for three years and says that experience has helped him connect with both of
his girls, Katherine, 11, and Kristina, 9.
Hannis has always encouraged his girls to try new experiences, even when they were toddlers at the
playground. He says his wife used to be distressed when he would allow their youngest to climb way, way up
on the high slide.
I began right there by telling her it was OK to do that stuff, says Hannis, 46, a social work instructor
at Grant MacEwan Community College.
Hannis says he and his wife, social worker Carol Cass, have a strong interest in gender equality.
I never forced Katherine to do anything but I always encouraged her to do the more boyish things.
She played with dolls and stuffed animals and still does. But there was also Lego and shes equally comfortable
with computers and Game Boys, says Hannis.
Hannis says the No. 1 thing he feels girls (and boys for that matter) need to cope in a modern world is a
healthy dose of self-esteem.
Indeed, research on girls and boys shows that while the two sexes have a similar amount of self-esteem
between the ages of seven and 11, by the time girls hit puberty, their self-esteem has begun to nose dive.
Self-esteem is the starting point for me, says Hannis. He tries to instill a feeling of self- worth in his
girls by giving them responsibilities at home and encouraging them to take risks.
Self-esteem comes from having a sense of your competence and not your incompetence, he says.
A girl with good self-esteem and a solid sense of her own place in the world is the sign of a wellfathered daughter, says Victoria Secunda, author of the aforementioned Women and their Fathers.
Secunda says there are other things dads can do for their girls, like teaching them how to expect to be
treated by men.
Ron Nalewajek, an Edmonton engineer, agrees. He hopes a healthy father/daughte relationship will
help his two girls feel positive about how men can treat them, make them feel like they deserve to be treated
well.
I think its important for girls to know there are men in the world who do care that women be treated
equally, say the father of Gina, 11, and Mara,
David Hannis says he hopes hes providing a positive male model for his girls, one that will help them as
they select a part ner in years to come.
I would want my daughter to select men who are socially aware and aware of other peoples needs..
.who are compassionate, nurturing, supportive men who would allow her to become self-actualized and not
crush her into some other role that she wasnt comfortable with.
Lyle Weis says he feels positive about the world that await Erica when she grows up and hopes hes
giving her the tools she needs to succeed.
I would question whether really is a mans world. I think its very much a world thats u for
negotiation. Especially for girls who know what they are doing. I dont mean they become manipulators. They
become navigators, says Weis.
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Faulder, Liane. "Dads and Daughters." Health Issues 8. Ed. Gilda Leitenberg Et. Al. Toronto, ON: McGraw-Hill
Ryerson, 2002. 74-78.
A closing comment from Murray Armstrong, who urges dads to be aware not only of what they can
teach their daughters. . .but what their daughters can teach them.
Raising children Is very threatening because they con front our weaknesses and challenge us to get in
touch with ourselves, he says.
Daughters are often the ones to teach dads about their own feelings.
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