Rob Watson was recently asked why he identifies as a “gay dad” rather than “just a dad.” This is his answer…
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It was supposed to be a simple revelation of ideas, not a confrontation. A friend of mine, Henry Amador, blogger and founder of Dadsquared, addressed a topic in a piece called “The Battle Cry of the Gay Dad” for The Next Family. He captured the essence of the extra effort those of us who are gay dads have gone through to become fathers. He said, in part:
“Only now we too are grown. We finally fit into our skins. We have passed your foolish tests and questions with flying colors. If we made it and we are here and we have children that call us dads then we have leapt over hurdles never imagined. We, like all other groups that have suffered at the hands of another, have risen above it. We have taken ownership of who and what we are. We have come to identify with what we are. We have come to be proud of what we are. So you ask, why do I call my self a Gay dad? Well because I made it and that is what I am.”
I felt moved by his words and related to them. I felt compelled to share them, and soon thereafter, was being called on to defend them.
Another blogger and supporter of equal rights sent me a text. “Where does the battle end? Isn’t the ultimate victory call to call yourself a dad—without a qualifier?”
Here is my response, to him and to the world.
There are many paths to fatherhood, and there have been many great types of fathers. Unfortunately, there also have been the accidental and unwilling fathers, as well as the fathers who showed up and then checked out. Do we need to qualify each dad as to which of those groups he is a member? No. It is true that gay dads by definition are “intentional dads” in the vast majority of cases. Not only must we have sought to become one, but we usually had to plan, invest and sometimes train to qualify to become a dad. Does this inherently mean that a “gay dad” is better than a “regular dad”. Not always. I trained for three years, and fostered a number of children before getting my own. When they came into my life, I was not a parenting novice.That being said, there are no dads that I care to go up against in a competition. I know many awesome dads, most with some talent or other that I do not possess.
I do not call myself a “gay dad” because I think I am better.
Many dads walk into roles in their families that are handed to them. Parents of previous generations, popular culture, televisions, movies and even self-expectations have molded the roles. Gay dads have the entire parenting spectrum as an option. Gay dads may be “bread-winners”, “home-makers” or a combination. We work with our partners and pick up the parts of the parenting role that suits our talents or abilities. Many modern families with more and more stay-at-home-dads are doing the same.
I do not call myself a “gay dad” because I feel freer of gender identified roles.
Science is now telling us that gay dads are neurologically different than either straight moms or straight dads. A new study by neuropsychologist Ruth Feldman and published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences observed that “gay fathers raising children with their husbands seemed to be both mom and dad, brain-wise. Their emotional circuits were as active as those of mothers and the interpretive circuits showed the same extra activity as that of heterosexual fathers.”
I do not call myself a “gay dad” because my brain apparently resembles the breadth of both a mom and a dad.
It should also be noted that I also do not call myself a “gay dad” in the day-to-day activities with my kids. In my talks with my boys I do not say, “Well guys, it is because I am your gay dad.”I am just “Dad.” I do not walk into my son’s classroom and introduce myself to the teacher by saying, “Hi! I am Jesse’s gay dad.” I am just “Jesse’s dad.”
I do not call myself a “gay dad” every day.
Throughout the 1990s the Catholic Church called gay people “intrinsically disordered”, and declared that same sex parents were doing “violence” to their children. There are many who still believe these concepts. Currently, if I moved my family just a few hundred miles east, because I am a same sex parent, our legal family protections would be thrown into turmoil and protections for my sons would change. In Texas, two partners fathered a set of twins and neither of them were permitted to be listed on either birth certificate. Throughout the country, many kids who come out to their families are not only not told that someday they too could become “gay dads” if they wish, they are thrown out of their homes and make up the largest percentage of homeless teens in the country. Last year the Boy Scouts of America sent a survey out to all its participants asking whether I was worthy to be considered safe around other families children. The answer they got was “no.” Often when my writings are published, I am criticized by strangers who say things like “your children were underprivileged by being placed in foster care, haven’t they suffered enough without you depriving them of a mother?”
This is why I write as a “gay dad.” I write as one because gay dads are criticized, demoralized and discriminated against. I write as one because gay families are not yet seen as equal legally or socially. I write as one to give hope to any young LGBT people who are inspired to hold parenthood as a goal in their hearts.
I will write as one until a whole generation of people do not see being a “gay dad” as any different from any other parent. I will lay out the details of my life so that “gay dads” can become known and seen for the blissfully ordinary creatures that we are.
I will write as a gay dad so that if it turns out that one of my sons identifies as gay that he will not feel that life has dealt him a raw deal. In that moment he will see himself as completely whole and able to achieve his dreams.
He will see that, if he wants, he can grow up and be… just like his dad.
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Originally appeared on evolequals.com and is republished on Medium.
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Love this, Rob! Thank you so much for sharing this!!
Those big bad Catholics yet again …. They never seem to catch a break.BTW, they aren’t too keen on people living together without being married, sex before marriage, Divorce and a hole slew of other things and that’s why I remain a faithful Catholic. Sorry I have to cut this sort, I don’t want to be late for mass. Oh,before I forget, that AIDS hospice that was established by a group of nuns, I guess those AIDS patients could have had a peaceful death some at one of the liberal built Hospices … oh wait they didn’t build any of… Read more »
Own it. The Catholic Church have always been a bad influence and one of the biggest, if not the biggest one in the past. In fact, not only simple “influence”: you had to follow their rules or, well, you would just het killed. http://www.alternet.org/belief/50-reasons-boycott-catholic-church …and that list if only about our own times. The Catholic Church wasn’t against slavery and actually opposed people of different races to marry. Now they say they were wrong (when weren’t they?) and accept marrying a white and a black person, for example. Now, what about you: do you believe people of different races should… Read more »
LOL, No such thing as Catholic fanaticism …. One is either Catholic or not Catholic and I choose to be Catholic. It’s like the time when the media asked Cardinal George if he was a “conservative.” His response, was simple …. a Catholic is neither conservative or liberal, he’s simply Catholic.
You did not reply to any question I asked. Not that I believe you can without sounding as a hypocrite or very bad person.
Maybe you should try again?
Opposing condom use, birth control, and equal rights for gay people is not what I’d call tolerant. The Catholic Church needs to focus on the worldwide pedophilia they perpetrate against children and their culpability in the death of many HETEROSEXUAL AIDS victims in Africa for telling them that condom use is a “sin.”