Practical Dad
PracticalDad: Knowin’ How to Do Stuff…
One of the better, truer commercials on television is actually for ED - and no, I don't have a bathtub in the backyard. In these ads, guys in their 40s are presented with different situations and simply handle them as the announcer comments, when you reach a certain age, you just know how to do stuff...Pulling a horse trailer and the pickup gets stuck in the mud? Hitch the horses and let them pull you out. Engine overheating and in the desert? Just add water at some roadside cafe.
Simple.
That's kind of the role of a father as the kids get older and begin to think that they know everything. Something goes wrong and Dad gets the call and if he's smart, he takes the opportunity to pass along the institutional knowledge that comes with age, if not with trace teams of horses.
That's the situation this morning as Eldest heads off to school in the old car. Because her schedule actually requires some traveling, she drives an old car and lo and behold, she crawls behind the wheel and turns the ignition and is greeted by the sounds of silence. The battery is officially dead and will have to be replaced. Daddy, Mom's gonna take me to school but can you have the battery fixed for when I get back? Gotta run, bye!
Yes, but you've actually going to do it with me so that you can learn.
The result was a quick trip to the auto supply store for a battery and then home to assure that I've got the sockets that fit the nuts on the battery. And then...nothing. When I finally pick up Eldest, it's back home where she spends maybe 15 minutes replacing the battery - taking into account learning how to use a ratchet set - and then is off again.
I could honestly have finished the job in less than 10 minutes but it's more important that Eldest learn how to handle these things in preparation for a future out of the household. These are the kinds of things that most teens don't know and would wind up calling home about when they're off in the real world. It takes more time and effort, assuring that I've got things and that they're right so that I don't look like the village idiot, but teaching is ultimately one of the most important things that any father can do for their kids.
ARTICLES BY CATEGORY
Basics for Dads
- Some Thoughts on Becoming a “Stay-at-Home Dad”
- The Little Things - Bathtime Songs
- Yes, Dad, It’s Okay to…
Child Development
- Reading with the Kids - When Do I Stop?
- Brain Development and Television
- Teens and Independence: Balance
Child Health
Child Safety
- Comments on Becoming an Adult Male Volunteer
- Lessons from the Sandusky Allegations
- PracticalDad: Permitting Self-Defense
College
- PracticalDad: Critiquing the FAFSA
- PracticalDad’s College Financing: Taking a bite out of the elephant
- Vocation or Avocation? Parents and Advising on College
Commentary
Communication
- Explaining Real World Consequences
- Teachable Moments: Torture, Politics and Honking
- Keep Talking, They’re Listening. But What Do the Youngest Understand?
Dad and Mom
Discipline
- Controlling Your Kids
- Unpleasantries: Discipline and Teens
- PracticalDad Discipline: (Re)Grounding the Kids
Economics
- PracticalDad Price Index: February Retail Grocery Basket Cost Declines
- PracticalDad Price Index: January 2012 Prices Steady
- December PracticalDad Price Index: Prices Up Again
Family / Personal Economics
Family Management
Father Lessons
- PracticalDad: Knowin’ How to Do Stuff…
- Kids and Public Behavior
- PracticalDad: Honoring The Other Parent, Honoring The Other Child
Housework
Humor
- PracticalDad Slang: Of Opies, Forcepushing and Duckpecking
- If You Give A Mouse A Cookie, v. 2
- PracticalDad Physics
PracticalDad Solutions
- Playing With The Kids: How Badly Do I Want To Win?
- PracticalDad Solutions: Uniform Hooks
- “Do I Have To Go?” Taking the Kids Along
School
- Another Look at the Report Card
- PracticalDad and School: Austerity Comes Home
- Kindergarten: Ready? Get Set, Go
Youth Culture
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