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Dear
Fr. Matthew @ the Abbey,
Hello, I’m a homemaker, married for 12 years with 3
daughters, 10, 8 and 7. I've had to do the whole
diaper - bottle thing by myself because my husband
refused to do it, i.e. it's "the woman's job." Now I
help them with their homework, take them to and from
school, attend all the school, extra-curricular and
religious obligations by myself. Problem is, he's
pressuring me for a son. My hands are more than full
with what I have and I have no desire in my heart to
have another baby. But he just won't let up.
I feel I don’t have the patience to go through it
again because he never helped with diapers or
feedings 1st time around. He told me it was "my
responsibility because he couldn't do that because
he works and needs his rest." Do I do what he wants
just to make him happy? S. |
Dear S,
You need to have a talk with your husband about the role of
a father. He seems to be using Archie Bunker as his role
model for fatherhood. Remember the TV series All In the
Family? It is not enough for a father to beget a child and
then claim that his only responsibility is to work a
forty-hour week and bring home a paycheck. A father must get
involved with his family.
You should tell him that while he is at work you are not
sitting around idle, drinking coffee. Rather, caring for
children is a constant occupation. If he is at an office
job, he is seated with few disturbances. You, however, must
get up every ten minutes to look after this or that concern
of a little one, which is much more exerting. You could ask
him if, after you put in your forty-hour workweek, you
should stop and say "That's it for the week for me."
Parenting requires teamwork. Both parents must get involved
with the family. That means everything: diapers, feeding,
bathing, putting to bed, homework, school and religious
obligations, and chauffeuring.
Tell him you are exhausted because he refuses to do his
share of the work of raising the family. If you received his
support, then perhaps you would not be so exhausted, and
would be disposed to have a fourth child. But before you can
be certain of a change of heart on his part, he needs to
give concrete evidence. He can start by bathing and putting
the children to bed three times a week. On weekends he can
do the chauffeuring and shopping. After six months of this,
then you can reconsider your position.
What if the fourth child is another girl? Your husband
should examine his motives for having a son. Does he want a
trophy to demonstrate his virility? Or does he want to
invest himself in the rearing of a boy into a young man? A
child is God's gift to a marriage. We accept the gift God
sends us.
There are consequences to child neglect, if the father is
absent or distant from them. Children require the direct
involvement of both mother and father.
You might consider taking a two-week vacation and have your
husband take care of the children for those two weeks. Then
he might appreciate all that you do much more.
Cordially yours,
Fr. Matthew Habiger OSB
To contact Fr. Matthew with a question on NFP, email him at
mhabiger@kansasmonks.org
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