- Oct 31, 2008
- 20,859
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- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Catholic
- Marital Status
- Married
- Politics
- US-Republican
I'm curious about something. My step kids dad is not in the picture, he's always skimped on his child support, when he lived near them he still faltered on picking them up on time every other weekend for an overnight visit (if he showed at all). His inability to be a father has left my wife with a lot of guilt which has compelled her to spoil my step son, and now he's grown up he has a spoiled attitude, rude behavior, he's lazy, entitled, and lacks integrity.
I shared a write up of some strict house rules I mean to impose to whip my family into shape (they all need it to varying degrees). They sleep too much during the day, don't get outside enough, and are too lax with their eating habits (including when they eat). I mean to change all that when I'm head of the household again and I told this person "I intend to make my step sons life difficult" because he needs it more than anyone.
As I was discussing this with that person, I noted that my wife doesn't think her son is spoiled because it's off-set somehow by the "hard life" he's had without a father. The person I was sharing this with countered that an absent father doesn't a hard life make, per se. That there are a lot of people nationwide who have grown up without fathers but their lives weren't hard, or if they were that's because they actually suffered whereas my step son hasn't. He's always had all of his needs met and plenty of luxuries given (I mean, when my wife and I were first dating I noticed the lengths she went to to find him a Playstation 5 - well beyond what most parents would do).
Anyway. Measured against our Catholic ethics and morals, would you say simply having an absentee father automatically makes for a hard life?
I shared a write up of some strict house rules I mean to impose to whip my family into shape (they all need it to varying degrees). They sleep too much during the day, don't get outside enough, and are too lax with their eating habits (including when they eat). I mean to change all that when I'm head of the household again and I told this person "I intend to make my step sons life difficult" because he needs it more than anyone.
As I was discussing this with that person, I noted that my wife doesn't think her son is spoiled because it's off-set somehow by the "hard life" he's had without a father. The person I was sharing this with countered that an absent father doesn't a hard life make, per se. That there are a lot of people nationwide who have grown up without fathers but their lives weren't hard, or if they were that's because they actually suffered whereas my step son hasn't. He's always had all of his needs met and plenty of luxuries given (I mean, when my wife and I were first dating I noticed the lengths she went to to find him a Playstation 5 - well beyond what most parents would do).
Anyway. Measured against our Catholic ethics and morals, would you say simply having an absentee father automatically makes for a hard life?