WHEN KIM’S DAUGHTER Caz was three, a stranger asked her where her dad was. She simply answered: “I don’t have one.”
Kim, from Cape Town, fell pregnant at 18, and the father was out of the picture from the beginning.
“I was advised at the time to raise her with a very clear understanding that she didn’t have a dad.
“There was no secrecy around it. If there was a Father’s Day thing at the school my dad or one of my friends would step in.”
More questions arose when Caz was seen and heard about how babies are made.
Kim says, “She came storming out of school and said I’d lied to her. She does have a dad. I then had two tricky conversations – how babies are made, and the concept of what fathers are. I explained that biologically he made her, but he’s not a dad. Providing a sperm or an egg doesn’t make you a parent. A father is a very present person. I had my own father to point to as an example of a dad.”
The two-together-parents with 2.4 kids set-up is rare in South Africa. There are many children growing up in very different family configurations and many with fathers who are – whether through choice or circumstance – absent from their lives.
It brings up the question of when and how to talk to your child about their father, and what to say.
If the conversation hasn’t arisen before, it’s likely to come up when children start preschool and begin to pick up that other kids’ families are different.
If your child doesn’t share easily, he might not ask, and you might want to initiate the conversation.
Either way, your child might have questions like: Why don’t I have a dad? Who is my dad? Why doesn’t he live with us? Can I meet him?
Kim’s advice to anyone in her situation is to go with the facts. “Don’t make up a story.
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Esta historia es de la edición January/February 2020 de Your Baby.
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