Damien Foster (25/2)
is right about pregnancy and car crashes. I didn’t make my
decision to have children until my girlfriend was pregnant. But,
he is wrong to assert that the reason young men end the
relationship after the crash is because they don’t have an equal
say in determining the structure of family life.
Young men don’t hang
around long enough to even find out if they can develop an equal
and loving partnership with their girlfriend and their new
child. For men to turn around and try and lay the blame on women
for their refusal to commit to relationships is symptomatic of
the problems with the gender debates. This isn’t a battle. Men
and women need to work these things out together.
Young men flee from
the love of pregnant girlfriends and the joy of a lifelong
commitment to a new family unit because the single lifestyle is
sold to us as more appealing. In recent weeks on this page
parenthood has been touted as being boring, expensive and
limiting parents personal desires.
The ‘freedom’ of
singledom is lauded as providing the edge in economic advantage.
It is plastered across men and women’s magazines. The messages
are clear. Single people are more beautiful and happier; every
weekend needs to be one big dance party; you are the most
important person in the world
The rise of
individualism has left us with a generation of young people
meeting their own needs and desires before anyone else’s.
A new family, a
committed relationship and the challenge and exuberance of
parenthood is far less desirable. Young men don’t want an equal
say in relationship because there is very little in society
convincing them that they want a relationship to begin with.
Society is wrong to
deliver this message. Young men are being hoodwinked by
marketeers into looking for happiness in all the wrong places.
Parenting delivers a happiness and life experience that a
single, consumer driven life cannot.
My first son was
three in January, and his little brother is 16 months old. I
couldn’t have made a better decision. In many ways, we were
fortunate. Our family supported our decision. They concealed
their fears and tried to ignore society’s dismal prediction. As
new experiences and expectations were shared, relationships with
our own parents grew and flourished. The responsibility that the
newfound circumstances imposed upon us helped us reduce debt and
opened up employment opportunities.
Basically, I grew
up. Something many young men see as a very scary prospect
indeed. I know, because I did.
It has been called
the Peter Pan syndrome after the boy who didn’t want to grow up.
It is a problem that further isolates young men. It fuels
self-obsession. By telling young men they don’t want to grow up
you cement the idea that they shouldn’t and don’t have to.
The solution is
two-fold. Young men need to realise they can contribute more to
society than they currently are. And society must stop
stereotyping young men and start entrusting them with
responsibility.
We need someone to
sell the positive images of young men back to them.
While some young men
may still be at home and wasting their life away on X-box, there
are also others pursing worthwhile careers and committing to
families and relationships. These young men need to be held up
as role models.
The focus of my life
has turned from selfish to selfless. I now have fewer choices
and so I consider them much more carefully; fully aware that
every action I take impacts on many people – most often our
children. It’s a perspective that you don’t see when your sole
concern is yourself because even if you are single, your choices
are impacting on many other people.
Young men can no
longer keep moaning that feminism has left them without a role.
There is a role there, but instead of searching for happiness in
a string of lust-driven relationships and trying to consume
their way to happiness, young men need to commit to
relationships.
Our society needs to
start selling the positives of being a father and a husband.
Young men need to start to override the mantra from those older
men who have been selling us the single life as their
relationships end in divorce. Young men have the ability to
forge a new approach to their relationship with women and
children.
Young women are
looking for it and young men need to come to the commitment
party. Don’t listen to the jaded and cynical voices of
baby-boomers that have been there and done that. The next
generation can always improve on what has been before.
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