T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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20.1 | yup it is ! | CEODEV::FAULKNER | moderator | Mon Nov 17 1986 13:22 | 7 |
| father's behavior is as instinctive as mother's behavior
as you pointed out through the ages men have had relationships
with women in many different ways but during all of recorded history
there have always been strong familiar relationships all over the
world.
Man is a social animal and prefers his peers around him.
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20.2 | nope they don't! | ROYCE::RKE | A little levity goes a long way | Mon Nov 17 1986 17:38 | 17 |
| Fathers intinct with the women may be instinctive..........
.......which I doubt......but there is no instinctive bond between
a new human baby and its sire (as there reputedly is between a woman
and her infant). There is generally a stong bond BUILT up between
father and children....otherwise little finger symdrome would not
exist 8^).....But to say it's instinctive I feel is misleding...and
misguided.....Dads who love their children (and don't we all) tend to
attribute that love to natural instincts and not to the love, affection
and trust that is forthcoming from forsaid sibling(s)...That nobody
doubts there is a bond between the father and children, is fact but
my vote would be for forged links...not intincts...
There are too many arguements against them.....fathers deserting family
Instant family fathers.....to name but a two!
Go at That then....
Richard.
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20.3 | I think they do | QUARK::LIONEL | Reality is frequently inaccurate | Mon Nov 17 1986 20:12 | 15 |
| I'd argue strongly against the position that there is no instinctive
bond between father and child. I feel instead that the bond is
usually kept from forming by what the father feels his relationship
to the child should be.
All I can say is that when my son was born, and I held him just
moments after he was born, I sure felt something instinctive.
Today, three years later, there's still a close, tight bond between
myself and Tommy. It is strained by my not being with him half
of the time, but each time I'm with him again, it's as if we never
parted. I feel truly sorry for those fathers who don't enjoy a
similar relationship with their children.
Steve
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20.4 | We don't get to choose, but | CEDSWS::REDDEN | learning for profit | Tue Nov 18 1986 08:28 | 4 |
| I would rather be loved by a father that decided/chose to love me rather
than a father who was responding to instincts. Responding to the
base note question, it appears to me that the level of instinct varies
primarily as a function of the fathering a man experienced.
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20.5 | | ROYCE::RKE | A little levity goes a long way | Tue Nov 18 1986 13:38 | 8 |
| re -1
Well old boy you don't have to worry...paternal love is just that,
and don't let anybody tell you that he's forced to love you, cuz he
ain't!
So there!
Richard.
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20.6 | Some thoughts | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Tue Nov 18 1986 16:02 | 30 |
|
It seems to me that most men only love and feel father instinct
for the children that they have with women that they love - or at
least loved at the time they fathered the child (such as an ex-wife).
Men who father children with one-night stands or women they didn't
really care for usually don't seem to have any love for the child
or desire to make sure that it's cared for. There are rare exceptions
to both of these, but they are certainly few and far between.
I think this is because it is so easy for a man to walk away from
a pregnancy with a woman he doesn't want to have in his life. He
can have sex with her, get her pregnant, and walk away, and never
even come back to see the baby if he doesn't want to. On the other
hand, a woman who gets pregnant by a man who was a one-night stand
or somebody she wouldn't want to marry, still goes through 9 months
of pregnancy with the baby growing in her body, and then has to
go through the trauma of childbirth. It's pretty difficult not
to realize that you are a mother after all that regardless of who
the father was.
I think maybe that nature forces women to realize that all the children
they have are theirs, whereas men can kind of pick and choose when
to let the father instinct flow.
Those are just my observations and thoughts since I'm not a man
and didn't have my child under negative conditions - her father
loves her.
Lorna
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20.7 | a real bond | PUFFIN::OGRADY | George, ISWS 297-4183 | Tue Nov 18 1986 22:05 | 8 |
|
I have to agree with Steve. There is a special bond between a father
and child. Its definitly instinct. I held my daughter and son
in their first minutes and that intangible bond was created.
GOG
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20.9 | With you suzanne, I concur | ROYCE::RKE | A little levity goes a long way | Wed Nov 19 1986 03:19 | 2 |
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20.10 | I also concur | VOLGA::B_REINKE | Down with bench Biology | Wed Nov 19 1986 16:31 | 6 |
| Like Suzanne I believe we choose to love a child, both men and
women. We have one "homegrown" and four adoptive children. We may
have taken a little longer to learn to love the adopted kids -
but we love them all equally now.
Bonnie
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20.11 | For adopted fathers only | CEDSWS::REDDEN | learning for profit | Wed Nov 19 1986 16:40 | 5 |
| I wonder if the choice to love a child may be helped by the child
loving the father first. I think I believe it is. Assuming that,
and assuming the childs love is less a matter of choice and more
a matter of instinct (for young children), it might be that the
father's love is indirectly instinctive.
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