In (Un)Honor of World Cup
I’m not a soccer fan. Although I played it a lot as a kid, I can’t stand to watch it. Sure, the World Cup is on, and all these gazillion people are watching, and there are watch parties, and scarves, and… blah. My kids enjoy to kick the ball around, and it’s fun to run around with them, but again, watching it is like watching a bad novela (Spanish soap opera) in slow motion. Nothing ever happens, you can’t understand what they’re saying, and it’s all fake. The worst part, hands down, is the flopping.
The falls these players take are so ridiculuous I can’t even take it. There’s a whole bunch I could write about here, in regards to sportsmanship and virtue, authentic masculinity, dedication, determination, etc. etc. etc. Instead, I don’t want to give it much due, so I’m going to post this “oldie but goodie” video. This is intended simply for a good laugh. Blast away, Barry!
USA is set to play Belgium in the 2014 World Cup. I want to believe that we will win, because we’re America.
TrueMan up!
Hand-helds in Little Hands?
June 29, 2014 by admin
Filed under Blog, Faith, Fatherhood, Virtue
“Keep hand-held devices out of small children’s hands.” It seems like a common-sense approach to me, but I am constantly see small children (younger and younger every day) with hand-held devices. I even see it in Mass, which boggles my mind. The damage being done is mostly under the surface, so maybe we aren’t really aware of just what’s happening. I recently read an article from a pediatric occupational therapist and thought I’d summarize what she wrote.
*DADS: Before you read any further, and this post becomes hard to read b/c it hits too close to home, keep in mind that we didn’t have these devices. We played outside. We skinned our knees. We got dirty. We lived an adventure. Get your kids away from the screens, and send them outside! This is an opportunity to step in and make some life-changing decisions for your children.
- Rapid Brain Growth: she said that “early brain development is determined upon environmental stimuli, or lack thereof.” Think about it… nowadays we have all sorts of issues that never seemed to exist “back then”. ADD, ADHD, hyper-activity, impulse, etc. A cure? GO OUTSIDE.
- Delayed Development: imagine a few inches of a screen vs. an entire outside playground with toys, bikes, balls, and the like. Physical, mental, emotional, relational, development is hindered behind a screen.
- Epidemic Obesity: nothing to add.
- Sleep Deprivation: when we’re constantly plugged in, it’s hard to shut it off. Kids need sleep (in pretty sizeable quantities) to develop properly, especially at young ages.
- Mental Illness: apparently the increase in child technology overuse is shown to be related to a drastic increase in depression, anxiety, ADD, etc. (I don’t know if I’m sold on this one, but it wouldn’t surprise me.)
- Aggression: content leads to action. What our kids consume they will become. (You are what you eat.)
- Digital Dimentia: kids who can’t pay attention can’t learn. (Again, I’m not sure about this one, specifically, but I’m sure it correlates.)
- Addictions: I have no doubt in my mind that this one is 100% fully absolutely without a doubt true. Let’s see… addiction to junk on the screen or addicted to the outdoors? GO OUTSIDE!
- Radiation emissions: I’m convinced that there’s a conspiracy going on where cancer from radiation is in and comes from everything.
- Unsustainable: these methods, of overuse of technology starting at a crazy-young-age, by which our children function, grow, learn, and develope aren’t sustainable.
Let’s link this to virtue, because everything should. To be virtuous, and to instill this in our children, we must possess TEMPERANCE. Temperance moderates our attraction to pleasure. We should find ourselves somewhere in a moderate level of use.
Look… I’m NOT a technology hater. I’m not trying to point fingers… that’s not what we do here. I have multiple laptops, a tablet, a smart phone, a flat screen, Roku TV, and obviously have a presence online. However, when it comes to my kids, they don’t spend time on my hand-held devices. They do, however, spend some time on learning sites (we like ABCMouse.com when they’re young), and do math-fact-games, etc. on an old laptop. They watch the occasional movie (our family favorites are “The Sound of Music” and “Mary Poppins”.) But, and this is the point here… it’s regulated. They spend exponentially more time outside, in the fresh air, without their eyes buggin’ out staring at a screen. They also spend a ton of time reading books. Every. Single. Day. My kids are young, but hold conversations with adults, are polite, have imaginations, and are well-spoken. It makes a difference.
OK – now it’s time to think about our own use. OUCH! Am I right or am I right? Adults won’t be as effected in terms of the developmental pieces, but our noses in screens has a negative impact on us, too. Same principle applies… GO OUTSIDE!
TrueMan up!
Daddy’s Rule – No Boys! It’s Not What You Think
From the time that I learned I was having a daughter (she’s almost 7 now), I began to formulate a rule for her. I now have 3 daughters, and the rule is the same for all of them. The rule… very simple: no boys.
As soon as this simple rule came to be, it was often laughed off by those who heard of it. They assumed it to be some silly new-dad sort of over-compensation for fear of raising a daughter in this crazy world. It was assumed to be sarcasm, and folly. Many who thought they knew me associated my burly, rough, sometimes crass and overtly confident exterior with this rule as if I simply wanted to lock my daughter(s) up in the basement, never to see the light of day.
This couldn’t be further from the truth.
Men – if you’re a dad, you should know that there’s nothing more important for a father than getting his children to heaven. A major stumbling block for many of our children will be their life-choices, especially associated with choices about their relationships (friendships, intimate, romantic, marriage, etc.) This particular area is not one where we can sit on the sidelines and hope that our children naturally make good choices. We must be totally invested in them, from the word ‘go’, and know all the details as they grow.
How then do I justify this rule of “no boys”? It’s very simple. The opposite of manliness is childishness. Manliness equals virtue. So, when a man (read as “virtuous man”) comes into OUR lives… at a MUCH later date… and proves himself worthy of my daughter’s attention, involvement, affection, and potentially her ‘yes’ to marriage, it will be time for her to embrace her vocation to marriage (should it be so.) I’m not, in the least, afraid of her vocation, because it comes from God and will be a major contributor towards her sanctification. [FYI – I’ll discuss the topic of “courting” (versus dating) in a coming post.]
The “10 Rules to Date My Daughter” lists, and “Applications to Date My Daughter”, etc. etc. etc. aren’t where we should be. We also shouldn’t be on the “Her Body, Her Rules – feminist father” side either. (See a good post by Tom Hoopes in response to a recent pic floating around the interwebs.) These fail to honor our daughters and their abilities, which speaks poorly of us as fathers. We should be on the side of total investment in teaching our daughters that they are loved, that they are princesses (more on this below), and that they are worth the very best.
“That they are princesses” is important to explain. Disney has hijacked the princess for the past 20+ years, and it appears that they will continue to hijack it for many more to come. Our daughters don’t understand what “princess” truly means, they merely see bad examples of rebellious, poor-decision-making, spoiled little girls in those movies, instead of what a princess really is… the daughter of the King. Jesus is King, and because He’s God, and we are His (God’s) children, thus we are welcomed into His royal family, and therefore, we’re all princes and princesses. Princesses deserve the very best, by sheer nature of their birth, and that’s what we must instill in our daughters. If our daughters know their worth, and how to make good decisions, we won’t have to worry about their choice in a spouse because it will be right.
I could go on and on with this topic, but I won’t. Just make sure that if you’re a dad, that you spend time investing in your daughters each and every day. And remember, “No Boys!”
TrueMan up!
Guide to Virtue
June 20, 2014 by admin
Filed under Blog, Evangelization, Faith, Virtue
Various Kinds of Dads
June 14, 2014 by admin
Filed under Blog, Faith, Fatherhood, manliness, Scriptural Examples, Virtue
I was just washing the dishes (yes, I do dishes) and was thinking about my parenting style, what kind of Dad I am, and it brought to mind a bunch of different kinds of fathering-traits.
Some thoughts on the kinds of dads that I’ve either exemplified, or other kinds of dads I’ve come across.
- SPORTS-CRAZY DAD – The dad that just can’t be easy going at the games, and when
games aren’t going on, they’re living vicariously through their kid as if it was the pros. - The “I DON’T KNOW HOW TO TALK TO MY KIDS SO I DON’T TALK TO THEM AT ALL DAD” – Dads who are either not educated enough on various topics, or who lack communication skills, or who just won’t take the time to learn about their kids so they fail to talk to them at all, about anything.
- The “I DON’T UNDERSTAND GIRL-STUFF SO MY DAUGHTERS AND I ARE COMPLETELY DISCONNECTED DAD” – Similar to the above, but specific to daughters and “female issues” – of all kinds. And there’s lots.
- SCREAMER-DAD – Everything gets this dad going, in a bad direction, and he just screams about it. Less than effective, if you ask me. Think: “Don’t make me stop this vehicle!” or “Do it, or else.”
- INTIMIDATION-DAD (“IntimiDad”) – IntimiDad uses his size, stature, and position of authority to try to force his children to do things. I typically see this with toddlers. It doesn’t work. Again, think: “Do it, or else.”
- OVER-COMMITTED DAD (works too much or is involved in too much) – I’ve written many times before about what kids really want and need from us. They want us, our time, and that’s how they see and experience our love. “Kids spell love T-I-M-E.
- TEACHER-DAD – This dad is patient and discusses various things with his children so that they learn from him. Even when he doesn’t think his kids are listening, he teaches, simply to plant a seed and begin the discussion. I think I’m this kind of dad most of the time.
- SWEET-DAD – This dad is emotionally sensitive, and takes the opportunity, especially with his daughters, to be sweet. This isn’t overly sentimental, this is the right amount of sentimentality because let’s face it, sometimes our kids just need it. Our daughters need sensitivity, and at the right time in the right amount, so do our sons.
- GIFT-GIVING DAD – Don’t buy your kids love, ok sir? Don’t make it “okay” that you’re not in their lives simply because you buy them stuff. Now, if your gifts are thoughtful, and you bought it for them because you know them and know they’d really like the thing, and really appreciate it, and that they’ll know you know them, then good on ya.
- APATHETIC-DAD – I see this all too often, unfortunately. This attitude can extend directly to the children because he just doesn’t care about them (either because he’s too ego-centric, self-centered, or just that insensitive) or because he’s flat out lazy. “Mom’s got it.” “Mom’ll talk to ‘em.” “Honey, you’ve got this one, right?” Stop it.
- PROUD-OF-MY-KID-NO-MATTER-WHAT-DAD – Thank you for not putting up pretentious walls, facades, or displays surrounding your kid. They’re your kid and you love them and are proud of them no matter what their accomplishments, likeability, or style.
I’m certain that I could write and write and write on this topic. There are so many kinds of fathers out there, and so many traits (good and bad) that could be discussed. Many of them we have discussed in the past and will continue to discuss in the future.
Remember an important concept to TrueManhood… our children learn what is right and wrong by watching us. If we want our boys to grow into TrueManhood, and our daughters to meet and marry a TrueMan, then we must show them what that is. “Jesus answered and said to them, “Amen, amen, I say to you, a son cannot do anything on his own, but only what he sees his father doing; for what he does, his son will do also. For the Father loves his Son and shows him everything that he himself does, and he will show him greater works than these, so that you may be amazed.” John 5:19-20. A major component here is how we treat our wife. Being a great-TrueMan-dad, means being a great husband first.
Thanks to my dad, Tony, for being an absolutely awesome dad! I have many fond memories of my childhood, and am so blessed to have him help me to raise my kids now, but there’s a concept that I always return to when I think about my relationship with my dad, and it’s this: he always SHOWED me how to be a man. He lived it. He didn’t have to say a lot, he lived it. I saw, first and foremost, that he loved/s my mother. That is who he is, as a man; he’s a husband, and all else stems from that.
TrueMan up!
Google Might be Out, but Porn is Still In
June 10, 2014 by admin
Filed under Blog, Evangelization, Faith, Fatherhood, pornography, Virtue
In a story that started buzzing yesterday, Porn Harms reported that Google has agreed to stop advertising sexually explicit material. Here’s a story from Breitbart.com. I’m glad to hear this news, but I realize that it’s merely a small (tiny, miniscule, maybe even irrelevant?) step in the fight against internet pornography. On a positive note, they have removed all of their pornography apps from the Google Play store, a very positive step forward!
It wouldn’t really matter if Google dropped, blocked, and deleted it from their services; porn is available. It’s so available that it pops up when we don’t want it to, when we don’t expect it to, and in completely harmless situations, like when our children utilize the internet. If you’re a man, there are countless things you can (and should) be doing to help prevent yourself from falling into the trap of internet pornography. However, when children are involved, we can’t sit by acting as if nothing is happening, because it is. The likelihood that your child, anywhere over the age of 3, has seen pornography in some form is astonishing. Ignorance to this fact is never the answer.
The reality is that parents must teach their children the truths about porn, the human body, anatomy, and sexuality. The only way to win back purity in our insane culture is to teach the truth and to teach it openly to everyone, including our children. Age-appropriate education is vital. There are various ways to talk to your children, starting at a very young age, about their bodies, about appropriate behavior and touch, about sexuality. As children grow, that age-appropriate information changes, develops, and increases. It is a misnomer to call any form of sex-ed “the talk”, as if it happens once. Insteadof “the talk”, it should be “the on going series of education, information, encouragement, explanation, and truth about our bodies, sexuality, and reproductive organs”. That series should include the appropriate information, and shouldn’t leave out the consequences of poor choices and poorly formed consciences.
Notice that I’m not saying that we should ban sex and never talk about it. That obviously hasn’t worked. The puritanical approach towards sexuality can’t last and causes rebellion. Sexuality is too important, too special, and too powerful to suppress. Notice, too, that I’m certainly not suggesting that we let our kids go hog-wild sexually, as if there’s no consequence to their choices. Instead, just as the Church teaches in Her infinite wisdom, we should embrace human sexuality, with full-knowledge of the purpose and plan, and interact within that intended purpose. Freedom exists there.
I’ve come across many parents as I’ve taught on this topic, and as I’ve presented at parishes across the country. My presentation “Helping Parents Protect Their Children from the Internet and Technology” has shown me that many more parents need to know the truth, be equipped with resources and information, and be instructed on how to talk to their kids. It’s never too late, but that doesn’t mean you should continue to wait. Parents – have the conversations with your kids, and do it today. Oh, and Dads… this isn’t Mom’s job. It’s your job. Do it.
TrueMan up!
My Jesus Year
June 9, 2014 by admin
Filed under Blog, Evangelization, Faith, Fatherhood, manliness, Scriptural Examples, Virtue
Jesus lived for 33 years. During His time on earth, Jesus saved the world. Pretty huge shoes to fill – impossible shoes to fill, actually. I’ve just celebrated my 33rd birthday. During this, my “Jesus-year”… hopefully NOT my last year on earth… I will remain focused on true manhood.
During my life, I’ve been incredibly blessed. I’m married to a great woman, the mother of my four incredible children. I have, and have had many, a great job. I’ve been to 49 of the 50 states in our spectacular country. I’ve successfully completed 18 years of schooling. I played college sports. I’ve bought and sold homes and vehicles. I’ve met countless numbers of awesome people, and have some of the world’s best friends. I’ve spoken to thousands and thousands of people, been on numerous radio programs, and helped write a book. Although these and so many others neat things have happened to me, none of it matters if I don’t attempt to fulfill God’s call for my life, the call to live true manhood. It’s not about these worldly accomplishments; it’s about who I am and how I’ve lived.
Jesus was THE TrueMan. Simply put, all that Christ did can be reduced to one simple concept… love. That is the prevailing mark of a TrueMan… that he loves (verb). In the most authentically masculine way, Christ loved. That’s because He was, is, and always will be love. This isn’t some lame modern-day version of teddy bears, glittery hearts, and boxes of chocolates. This is the real version of love, to do the greatest good. To give your life for your friends. This is TrueManhood.
During this year, I pray that I’ll be able to grow as a husband first (my vocation), as a father, as a leader, and as an evangelist. I also hope to accomplish some long-standing goals for this ministry. To follow in Christ’s footsteps and make this year the best it can be. My impact won’t save the world, but I hope that it, in even a small way, is able to positively influence the lives of men. One of my goals is to expand TrueManhood’s retreat ministry. I also have the goal of expanding our scope and reach, gaining back ground that was lost between 2011-2013. The problems we discuss here are numerous, and there aren’t enough positive voices out there in this fight. We’ll keep doing what we do, hopefully with “bigger and badder” videos, more impactful content, more frequent posts, more guest contributors, and a wide-array of resources to help men along their journey towards TrueManhood.
Regardless of how old we are, brothers, we are called to TrueManhood. This call is something special, and the world depends on us to live up to the call. As I go into my Jesus year, I’m praying for many things, but specifically, my prayer would be this: “Jesus, my Lord. I love you. Thank you for your example to me for what it means to be a man. I ask for guidance, strength, discipline, and courage to pursue TrueManhood with my whole soul. May my efforts be yours, may my will be yours, may my heart be yours. Amen.”
TrueMan up!