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Time Well Spent
I’m well aware of this, but I don’t have
time to watch three hours of gifted athletes running up and down
the Astroturf, spinning past defensive linemen. I have a
family.
My motto is: sports will have to wait. I do that by taping the
games for viewing later—after the kids are tucked in on
weeknights or before dinner on weekends when the kids are getting
cleaned up.
Saving time—or finding time for
ourselves—is pretty touch for fathers these days.
We’re always last in line… but that’s
OK. It comes with the territory.
A father’s duties include loving his wife and
children, providing strong leadership, earning a living to support
the family, and imparting spiritual values to his kids. And
that’s just the short list.
How can we carve out more hours with the family? Browse
through this menu of ideas from other men:
If possible, rearrange your work schedule. Herb is an
orthopedic surgeon in Akron, Ohio. At 43, he is getting his
practice established, but Herb knows the medical profession can
gobble up hours in huge chunks.
“How do I spend time with my kids?” said
Herb, repeating the question. “I’m not a
morning person, so I’ve changed my hours around. That
way, I don’t have to go into the office right away. I can
eat breakfast with my kids and take them to school. I’ll
start my surgeries at 1 o’clock in the afternoon and go
until 7 p.m. or so.”
Make mealtime a priority. Eating together is a time to
reconnect. It promotes communication, which promotes discussion,
which promotes sharing, which promotes love. Did you ever notice
that when you flip on the TV? You want some sort of communication,
even if it’s one-way.
Brad, a New England father, says when his family sits down for
dinner, he asks each child, “What was the best thing that
happened to you today?”
“Doing that stimulates talk, and everyone has to
listen,” says Brad. “That way, we begin the
dinner conversation with a positive focus, and I try to remember
something each one said so when it’s time for nightly
prayer, I can say, ‘Thanks, Lord, for helping Jeremy pass
the test.’”
In the last year, Brad has also tried to spend some
unscheduled time with his kids. Sometimes he’ll
knock on the bedroom door and ask to come in and just talk.
“It’s amazing how kids will open up
then,” he says.
Turn off the TV. What article worth its salt
wouldn’t suggest this? It’s a fact: letting the
hours vaporize in front of the “boob tube” is a
waste of time.
Do “Daddy dates.” Westy, a Wisconsin
father, says he can think of nothing better than taking his
9-year-old daughter out for breakfast or dinner. “She
knows the only reason we’re going out is so we can
talk,” says Westy. “We probably get as much
conversation in during that one meal as we do all week. We sit
across the table from one each other and converse; there are a lot
of questions and answers going on. These ‘Daddy
dates’ tell my daughter that she is very, very important
to me.”
A good time to start “dating” your child
is around 8 or 9 years old. “Don’t wait until
he or she is 15 years old. That’s too late,”
says Westy. By spending individual time with your child, you build
a friendship, so when the
really big discussions pop up later (love, dating and sex),
a foundation has already been laid.
Include your children in your vacations. You’d be
surprised at the number of families who vacation without their
kids. When Randy, a Texas rancher, and his family go on vacation,
they drive. That way, Randy is certain they’ll have
plenty of time in the car. (Believe it or not, that’s the
way he wants it!) One of the kids sits with Dad in the font seat,
and as the scenery passes by, long discussions ensue.
Volunteer to coach your child’s sports team. When
you make that commitment to coach, it forces you to spend time with
your children. That’s the way Jeffrey, a Sacramento
father, slices out hours with his four children (ranging in age
from 3 to 15). He has coached baseball for eight years, from Little
League through Pony League.
If you can’t be a coach, then cheer from the
grandstands. Max, an attorney, said he always wanted to take time
to be with young Max Jr., but he (Max Sr.) wasn’t the
athletic type. “I didn’t coach, but I went to
all the Little League games, where I could encourage him. And when
he started playing high school football, I was there, even for his
J.V. games that started at 3 p.m. I was glad to have a job with
flexible hours.”
Max adds that he and his wife had made an early commitment to
go to
everything at school: recitals, sports, and band
concerts—you name it. “Even if the kids tell
you they don’t want you to show up, they really
do,” he says.
Make the best use of your recreational time. Some recreation
eats up a lot of time. Take golf, for instance. When I play, it
burns up most of a Saturday. Even if I’m a member of the
“dawn patrol,” I’m still not home
till noon. So I decided golf will have to wait.
That’s why I play a lot of tennis, but
I’ve had to cut back there, too. Usually, I’ll
play one or two mornings a week before work, starting at 6:15 a.m.
I figure it’s better to play while the kids are still
sleeping than to practice my backhand after work when
they’re home.
Finally, remember that your kids are keeping tabs on you. When
1,500 school children were asked by social scientists John DeFrain
and Nick Stinnett, “What do you think makes a happy
family?”, the children didn’t list money, fine
homes or big-screen TVs. No, the answer most frequently offered was
“doing things together.”
“I once saw a sign in the nursery,” said
Herb, the orthopedic surgeon. “It said:
‘Children spell love L-O-V-E.’ You
can’t buy your kids’ affection unless you spend
your time with them.”
By author and speaker Mike Yorkey. |


