T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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485.1 | | SX4GTO::HOLT | Robert Holt ISVG West | Sat Aug 11 1990 15:32 | 2 |
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Either its a genetic deficiency or else its a vestige of primate days..
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485.2 | for any number of reasons | SA1794::CHARBONND | in the dark the innocent can't see | Mon Aug 13 1990 09:20 | 1 |
| Embarrassment ?
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485.3 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Mon Aug 13 1990 09:57 | 21 |
| You don't see men going around displaying their emotions
of sadness, disillusionment, despair, regret, bewilderment,
etc, very often, do you? So why would you expect anything
different on *this* issue?
If the man admits to his emotions in *private*, that is, to
himself, he may well be miserable over having "left behind"
a child that he fathered.
Lots of men have bought the culture's message of being "tough,"
so they don't even admit these feelings to themselves. And the
price they pay for this is depression, and the anger that follows it.
What most of us see is the anger, and the anger fits the "tough"
image, and so we think that men are callous, unfeeling creatures.
For that matter, a man doesn't have to have given up the child
for adoption to feel miserable about his fathering (or lack of
fathering). One of the griefs of passing beyond mid-life for
men is realizing how badly they screwed it up.
Bill
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485.4 | Guilty on Both Sides | SALEM::KUPTON | I Love Being a Turtle!!! | Mon Aug 13 1990 09:58 | 41 |
| Bonnie....
We hear more of men leaving children behind than we do of women.
In today's society, more and more women are deserting the family
than ever.
To answer your question I think it needs to be addressed in
two parts:
1. Men who leave children today. There are several answers here.
In many instances men won't acknowledge children because they really
have never had contact with them. A woman gets pregnant and the
father may be young or unemployed and he splits. Divorces cause
huge rifts and men just won't face ex-wives.
2. Amerasian children aren't claimed because many men can't
be sure that the children are theirs. I spent alot of time over
there and I can say from experience that most of the women were
looking for a better life at the time. Stories of women who were
brought to the US by military personnel was cause for hope. Because
Americans took a lot of responsibility, women would get pregnant
for the support check. Many women (hookers) lived with different
guys from different ships when they weren't working the bars. Even
if a GI was in an area and had a relationship with a woman, she
could have gotten pregnant the day after he left with a differnt
GI. It's just that she had one guy's picture and not another's.
Some have legitimit claims. They lived with a guy for 6-10 months
and were pregnant before he left. Many guys made empty promises.
A lot of guys don't even know that they left children behind. We
left there 15 years ago............
The easiest answer I can think of is that men don't carry a child
for 9 months. Men don't give birth. That may be why some men feel
it's easy to walk away.
On the other hand, women walk away. The "new age" woman looking
to "find herself" and pursue life, leaves her spouse and children.
I guess we can reverse the question and say, "How can a woman just
turn and walk away from her children?"
Ken
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485.5 | | IAMOK::MITCHELL | Heliophile Bathysiderodromophobe | Mon Aug 13 1990 11:17 | 43 |
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> <<< Note 485.0 by WMOIS::B_REINKE "We won't play your silly game" >>>
> To me as a woman, it seems that men are very callous about
> children born out of wedlock. That they don't care about
> the 'by blow' they left behind in Veitnam, or the kid they
> engendered on a brief encounter one night after a party in
> college or high school etc..
Most of the men who had a child out of wedlock while
in Vietnam, don't even know that a child exists. From
what I heard from the vets is that the girls over there
had sex with them for money or favors, which equates
to prostitution.
As far as a brief encounter in high school/college, there
are the same amount of girls who gave the child up for
adoption, without a second thought or aborted the child.
There are many cases of young adults finally tracking
down their natural mothers, only to have the mother tell
them to leave them alone.
And, what about the men who got a woman pregnant and
wanted to marry her, wanted to be a father and the woman
either aborted the child or went away to have the baby to
give it up for adoption?
> for any woman, leaving such a child to adoption is a painful
> memory, but it appears that to many men leaving a child behind
> is quite easy.
That is a very biased and unfair accusation. There are women
who have left children behind without so much as a twinge
of pain or regret.
I feel there is an equal amount of non caring about a child
between men and women.
kits
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485.6 | | HLFS00::RHM_MALLO | dancing the night away | Mon Aug 13 1990 11:23 | 5 |
| Well said, Kits!!
I think there's very little to add, I'd say, but then again, I'm just a
man with no children (known or unknown off).
Charles
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485.7 | a story | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Mon Aug 13 1990 11:37 | 52 |
| I know a woman in her 30s, who after her adoptive father died,
went in search of her birth parents. (She did this with the
support of her adoptive mother.) She found the birth mother,
made contact, visited with her, the birth mother visited back,
both of them got together with the adoptive mother, and they
all went public in a very joyful, tear-filled ceremony in the
church community of the adoptive mother. The woman began to
visit with her birth mother... In the process she learned
who the birth father was and contacted him. He came to visit
her, visited with the adoptive mother, etc. The woman and her
birth father were very close and loving to each other. As a
friend of the adoptive mother, I got invited along on some
gatherings and can attest that the father was a nice guy, very
expressive of his love for his daughter and was happy to see
her and to see how she had fared in life.
The birth mother was able to explain why she was given up for
adoption and was also willing to ackowledge this daughter in
her current life, introducing the daughter to her half-sister
and the birth mother's friends. But after awhile, the woman
realized that the birth mother was not "there" for her in the
same way that her adoptive mother was there for her. It was
not a matter of how far apart they lived, it was the personality
of the birth mother. She did not "relate" (to her other
daughter, either) in the same way that the woman could relate
to her adoptive mother.
The birth father was much better at "relating" to the woman.
They became very close, in some sense a lot closer than she
had been to her adoptive father, who was not a very emotionally
responsive man. However, the birth father never admitted her
into his public life. He required that she write or call him
at his business address and he insisted on visiting her, rather
than having her visit him. The woman realized after awhile
that he was very much controlled by the women around him (his
mother, wife, sisters, etc) and it would have been impossible
for him to bring her into his life with these women.
After a year or more, the woman began to see less of these
birth parents (the birth mother moved across the country) and
she began to see how different her life would have been had she
grown up with either (or both) of her birth parents. I haven't
talked with the woman for a couple of years, but I think the
relationships with her birth parents have dropped off to an
exchange of birthday/Christmas cards.
The other thing that happened is that the relationship between
the woman and her adoptive mother is closer than ever.
Bill
I don't know what goes on in the head/heart of the birth father...
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485.8 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Aut vincere aut mori | Mon Aug 13 1990 13:54 | 11 |
| I never understood this either. My wife's parents seperated when
she (my wife) was two. My wife has never heard from or seen her
father since. This is amasing to me. I've been tempted to try and
track this guy down just to ask why.
On the other hand I know an other man who almost comes to tears about
the baby he didn't have because the women he made pregnant had an
abortion. There are all kinds. Of course for myself I have as much
trouble understanding women who abort as I do men who abandon.
Alfred
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485.9 | one hypothesis | AIS13::MARTINO | Martino isn't my name! | Mon Aug 13 1990 15:21 | 13 |
| I think that maybe one reason a man can more easily leave a child
behind is because it may not seem as "real" to him as it does to
the mother. What I mean is, if a woman ends up pregnant, she is
the one who carries the baby and goes through nine months of physical
changes- the baby is very real to her- it is a part of her, in the
very physical sense. The man, however, has just deposited his sperm
and moved on. He doesn't have any sense of the baby as being *real*
or *alive*- he just sees the problems this child may cause, and
leaves.
NO, I don't feel that all men are like this- it is just a theory.
kkay
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485.10 | $0.02 | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Mon Aug 13 1990 16:08 | 24 |
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1) I agree with most of what Kits said in .5.
2) Some men are just plain jerks. It makes it harder on the ones
of us who *do* care about our children (not necessarily from Nam).
3) For some men, there is just nothing they can do about it. I've
seen reports on television about the difficulty that men who
*do* want to take responsibility for their Vietnamese children
have in getting them. Many who do try are just not capable
either financially or emotionally to keep up the fight.
4) For some men, seeing their non-custodial children reopens some
very deep emotional wounds. For some, the only way to keep from
going nuts is to just walk away. I still recall how difficult
seeing my own children was after not seeing them for over two years.
Although I was extremely happy to see them, the emotional turmoil
during that time was intense.
5) It is more 'socially acceptable' for men to walk instead of keeping
up a turmoil (not necessarily of his own choosing) with the ex.
fred();
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485.11 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Mon Aug 13 1990 16:47 | 34 |
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RE: .9
I agree, KarenKay. Newborn babies weren't very "real" for me.
It was a long time ago, but I remember my kids (three) growing inside
my wife and all the changes that she was going through, and basically
I was far more concerned for her, than for the kid. She almost died
(heart stopped) on the delivery table with the first one (badly administered
anesthetic, but we didn't know that until much later) and then had
a kidney infection, so my anxiety during the gestation of the next
two was much worse... And then when each baby was out, my wife and
other women would all be cooing and oohing and aahing and deciding
whose nose the baby had and whose eyes, chin, etc... They all
looked exactly the same to me (and I still have baby pictures to prove
it) and the "same" in this case meant blobby, blotchy, squinty
"baby." I did not start to bond to them until they began to look
more like what I thought a human being was supposed to look like and
until I saw them doing "human" things (grasping, looking, gurgling,
and all the normal bodily functions, etc). And then when they
started "smiling", crawling, standing, and of course talking.
I'm not saying this is "right." I think I'd be different these
days and I'd credit the changes in the culture that encourage me
as a man to be emotionally involved with kids as well as other
things. So, if I were having kids these days, I'd probably be
more "attached" at an earlier time. But if my experience from
years back is anything like other men's experience, I'd agree that
the woman's privilege/burden in carrying the baby to term gives
her the advantage/disadvantage of bonding earlier, with the
joy/grief of having a healthy baby or losing it (through miscarriage,
abortion or giving it up for adoption).
Bill
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485.12 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | Later, I realized it was weird | Mon Aug 13 1990 17:08 | 38 |
| re .9, I think I agree with you. I've wondered about this before. I
can't understand how either men or women can just walk away from
their own children, and sometimes live their entire lives without ever
knowing what became of their own kids. I do think that more men than
women have done this, and think the main reason is that it is easier
for men to just walk away. I've noticed that usually men only love and
care about the children they have with women they are in love with,
whether it's their wife or not. But, most women seem to love and care
about all their children regardless of who the father is. If a man has
a brief fling or one night stand and later finds out the woman is
pregnant he is likely to wonder if it is his kid, and he can't be
expected to really love and care about a child if he doesn't even know
if it's really his. But, even if a woman doesn't know who the father
of her child is, she obviously knows that *she's* the mother regardless
of who the father was. Also, as .9 said, women have to be pregnant for
9 months, regardless of how well she knew the father, and women still
have to give birth, and these are very bonding situations usually.
It has also been easier for men to walk, in the past, because society
has traditionally placed more expectations on mothers than on fathers.
In the past, people didn't seem to think it was that unusual for
unmarried fathers to abandon their children. But, it there has always
been more censure placed on women who abandoned their kids. They were
considered unnatural, horrible people, etc.
Personally, I've always felt that I could never give a child up for
adoption because I couldn't stand to know there was a child of mine
somewhere in the world and I didn't know where it was and how it was
doing and acting as it's mother. I'm also not sure if I could ever
have an abortion either, although I will always be pro-choice for other
people. (I think I could only have one if I found out the child would be
retarded.) But, if I were a man, and I were very young, and I didn't
like the woman, and I really didn't think there was much chance the
child was mine..... I don't know, maybe I'd walk away, too, in that
situation. But, as a woman, I would *always* know it was *mine.*
Lorna
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485.13 | a sore point | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Mon Aug 13 1990 19:04 | 11 |
| Many times the man has no choice about whether to walk or not. With
today's divorce laws and the Court's attitude towards men and custody,
a father can find his children in another state when he comes home
from work and there isn't *&^% he can do about it. By the time
he finishes paying "child support" there may not be much left
financially to maintain a long distance relationship whith his chidren.
This kind of *&^% was supposed to have gone out with the Emancipation
Proclamation, but today it's called No Fault Divorce.
fred();
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