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https://studentshare.org/other/1406975-becoming-a-father.
Becoming a father brings in pride that one wants the whole world to know so that even a father who is not very good with words would try his best to express the overwhelming joy and pride he feels.
One important matter fathers have to accept that makes them really proud is the responsibility placed on their shoulders. Probably the greatest test of a man is his strength and power not on physical things but on his character, to be able to face the challenges and responsibilities of being the head of the family. Being a husband is one thing, pretty much easier than being a father, for the latter calls for a responsibility done on top of the former. The presence of a child or children in a home is commonly seen as that factor that completes a family and yes, it is probably true.
All fathers experienced being a child and whatever knowledge and observation they had that molded their opinions of fatherhood is manifested when they exercise being a father as well. Thus, fatherhood calls for an opportunity for a man to prove himself like his father, be better or worse, depending on what principles his character has been founded on. The magic of a baby makes wonders in a man, though. No matter what one would have been through would just be changed by the thought of becoming the best father one could be for a sweet innocent child who drives the clouds away.
Satisfaction of one’s self is completed when given the chance to give back the best things given him and impart more of the good things deprived of him. The arrival of a baby surely brings changes in a man from the inside with the thought of having reproduced himself, a matter for one to be really proud of. For this, one’s passions can be redirected, one with a focus, an objective, and not just an intense emotion recklessly expressed. Work, for a father, would have a new meaning. It is not just earning money to meet the basic needs of a person rather the purpose of which is making his family happy by meeting their material as well as physical needs.
A proud father stands in the midst of noise and bickering and still has the energy to smile. Play is important to him, as spending time with the family, and expressing his passions in a way that might make a mother frown. As Harmon Killebrew told of his family when their dad was playing with them in the yard, his mother said, ‘You’re tearing the grass’ to which his father answered, ‘We’re not raising grass. We’re raising boys.’ Of course, it is not always an easy task being a father, a husband, and a breadwinner when time becomes like a chip of diamonds one needs to equally share with his loved ones. It is the greatest challenge. Yet the challenge becomes lighter when one looks back to whatever he experienced in his childhood and becomes resolved to be the father his child could one day be proud of.
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