garymdietz
Dads of Disability: Stories for, by, and about fathers of children who experience disability (and the women who love them)
Dads of Disability: Stories for, by, and about fathers of children who experience disability (and the women who love them)
Couldn't load pickup availability
This is not a 'how-to' book or a book of '5-ways to do this' or '10-ways to do that.' Rather, this collection uses a storytelling approach to illuminate the emotional lives of these fathers. Dads of Disability will begin or extend the conversation between and amongst fathers, mothers, extended families, care circles, and individuals with disabilities themselves.
This book is for fathers and mothers. For friends and support circles. For care professionals. For teachers. For friends trying to understand their neighbor's challenges. For anyone interested in the variety of the emotional lives of fathers whose children experience a disability.
Regardless of the age of the father, the child's challenge, or even the gender of the essayist (remember, they are not all men!), Dads of Disability strives to paint pictures of a variety of different men who have one thing in common-they deeply love a child who experiences a disability.
Topics of essays and poems include:
- A woman who chooses to live with her ex-husband to enable her children's father to continue to be in their life on a regular basis.
- On his way back from an airplane lavatory, a man gets into an interesting discussion with a flight attendant about fatherhood.
- A husband's rising in the middle of the night is finally understood and accepted by his dedicated and supportive wife.
- A father considers running away, but he visualizes his own, now-deceased father teaching him why he needs to stay with his daughter.
- A senior citizen reflects on his family's care of his late brother.
- Over time, labels come to have different meanings to a father.
- A father's accepting and helping with his child's sensory challenges helps him accept that he has the exact same issue.
- A poem where hoodlums can't stop a man from enjoying his iPod.
- A life filled with adaptations is explored in a reminiscence of the same event by a mother, her husband, and their adult child.
- A 3 year-old teaches us all a universal lesson in fewer than 60 words.
And many more...