Our first Fatherhood Foundation National Council meeting in parliament House, Canberra, had 11 representatives. Barry Leaver, who has a heart for street kids and has fostered hundreds of children, came all the way from Queensland to be with us. Everyone else was from NSW and Victoria. We met with Paul Calvert, President of the Senate (letter enclosed), Ross Cameron, Minister assisting Family & Community, Senator Bill Heffernan, Danna Vale, Minister for Veteran Affairs, and Larry Anthony, Minister for Children. Our proposal for a National Summit on Fathering was well received. Paul Calvert in particular was very encouraging and offered us his practical assistance. We know many other parliamentarians who are keen to get behind such a summit. The Fatherhood Foundation has a wonderful door of opportunity - we just have to come up with the goods and make the proposed National Summit on Fathering, 2003, happen. We see this as an ongoing national event to promote social and political reform.
Warwick Marsh
We welcome our good friend Ron Hellyer who is helping us as an assistant editor for the fathersonline.org newsletter. He is a passionate father with a dream to encourage Aussie men to become fathers of excellence. Like us all, he knows what it’s like to try, and what it is like to fail. Ron’s five children are the story of his success. Ron and his wife Margaret live in Broken Hill, NSW. Ron is a management consultant who works for private enterprise and government. You will find his feature article both honest and inspirational. Why not drop him an encouraging email at Ron Hellyer: rentacrd@pcpro.net.au.
Letters
This week we have included two fairly lengthy letters. The first (and shortest) is from the President of the Senate, Mr Paul Calvert. We are thrilled that there is interest from our politicians on this important issue of fatherlessness in our nation.
The second is a heart wrenching story from one of our readers.
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* Dear Fatherhood Foundation
I write to congratulate you on your achievements with the Fatherhood Foundation, and to thank you for sending me the information about the Foundation’s activities and principles.
Thank you also for your kind words and support for the work of the Federal parliament. Sadly, it is rare that such recognition of parliamentarians is so freely given. I know exactly how hard my colleagues work and, as you put it, ‘most people in the general public do not understand the sacrifice involved’.
I agree with you about the importance of fathers in our families and indeed throughout Australian society, and hope very much that Australian fathers can aspire to be ‘the best dads in the world’.
Your strategies to help encourage and support busy and single dads, such as the weekly inspirational email project, are to be commended and I will do my best to publicise these initiatives in my home state of Tasmania, where I have had some involvement with men’s support groups.
I have also attached, for your information, a copy of an article by Sydney stockbroker and Federal Treasurer of the Liberal Party, Mr Malcolm Turnbull, titled ‘The Crisis is Fertility, Not Ageing’ published in the August 2002 edition of the journal Options. You may find this article of interest in the light of the recent Intergenerational Report, released by the Treasurer with the 2002 May Federal Budget papers.
Kindest regards,
Paul Calvert, President of the Senate
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* Dear Fatherhood Foundation
I, like I guess, so many others, saw your advertisement on the television. I visited your web site, not out of curiosity, but looking to see if others like myself might find some answers or help with my 'plight'.
I am divorced, though not through my own choosing. I read with impassioned interest the article by Roland Foster, who has, I believe, set his sights on one of the largest contributing factors to 'fatherless children'.
I have been in the unfortunate position of being married twice. After my first marriage produced 3 beautiful children and failed, I spent several years searching for the answers. In that time, I paid maintenance, and also managed to purchase a home, which I dedicated to my children. I told them that this house was theirs, and indeed it was.
After several years, I married again. Within a short period of time, we had a delightful daughter. My wife was sick for a while, and I became both mother and father. I fed, bathed, changed, taught and loved our daughter, for both of us. Unfortunately, I was involved in a motor vehicle accident, and several months after the birth of our daughter, I was hospitalised.
After what seemed a lifetime, but was only a couple of months, I returned home. Within a few days my wife left me, taking our daughter 'shopping'. She returned home without my daughter, having secreted her away. She picked up clothes for herself and our daughter, and left. I was devastated.
I hit what was probably the lowest point in my whole life, even actively considering suicide. I tried to make contact with any form of help group, but there weren't any. Not one. Not even any government social welfare type agency to help me. And when I was kicked out of my home, and I was on a disability pension, and nowhere to live, I couldn't even get bond assistance to move into a flat. Things were to get much worse. After the dust settled, I found that the home that I had purchased and dedicated to my other children, who were now young adults, was to be awarded to my now ex-wife for property settlement. No consideration for the fact that I had the home before I got together with my ex-wife. No consideration for my other children. Just, 'pack your bags and hand over the keys.' And worse.
I tried to gain contact with my daughter, spending thousands of dollars on legal fees. And for what! My ex-wife refuses to allow me to see my daughter, even flaunting a court order I have for telephone contact once a week by either not calling at the appointed time, or failing to call altogether. And a right of recourse? Not on your nelly. I tried, but was told that there was very little that could be done. Consequently, I have seen my daughter once in two years.
What justice? I digress.
I do, however, believe there are a number of other things that may play an important role.
I see that the role that each parent plays in the growth of his or her children has changed. I see that the traditional role of fathers has been undermined by the insistence and growth of independence, both financial and emotional, a government /publicly funded social support network that says 'if you are not happy and fulfilled, then leave', and a financial network that ensures that mothers are fully supported in their decision to leave.
I feel that it is very sad that the words 'until death do us part' really mean, 'until I get sick of you I'll stay'.
What ever happened to putting the effort into a marriage to make it work? I think that every person contemplating marriage realises that the rest of their life, every second of it, will not be milk and honey. We all understand that as we grow as an individual, our values, attitudes, needs and wants change. When you have made the decision to spend the rest of your life with someone else, you must see that there will be times that you must forsake your own needs or wants for the greater good of that marriage.
A couple of years ago, I heard a song by a Christian musician called Don Francisco. He was singing about his marriage and the relationship he had with his wife. He began to sing of his love for his wife, and said, 'Love is not a feeling, but an act of will.' This statement struck me deeply, and I have taken it into my life and developed the theme. If you consider what you are doing, every minute of the day, you are probably making hundreds, if not thousands of decisions. Everything from, ‘Will I have coffee or tea?’ to ‘When was the last time I held my wife/son/daughter’.
When you stop for a minute, and consider that love is an act of will, or a decision to love someone, how hard is it to become self circumspect and begin making decisions purely for yourself? Isn't this when the decision not to love your partner has already been made?
Then, surely, we should tip the scales slightly the other way when making all these decisions, and place our own interests behind those of our partner. This will allow us to grow with our partner, and not grow away. By making these decisions with scales tipped toward our partner, then as we find that she/he receives and grows with the love that we give, then so do we. For by meeting the needs of your partner, we too gain in the reflection of the pleasure displayed by our partner.
As fathers and men, we need to ensure that our family’s needs are met. This does not just mean financially, but most importantly emotionally.
And the best way to do that? With Love.
I believe that a network should be established to not only support fathers and fathering, but to help grieving fathers come to terms with the loss of their families, whether it is through bereavement or a separation.
Thank you for beginning the long road to the recognition and acceptance by our society that fathers are people too and need help in being just that - Fathers
Kind Regards,