Celebrating Fathers with a Fatherless Daughter

Simplicity of Grace

‘A mama, a papa, and a baby.’

My two-year-old says as she brings me three different sizes of stuffed animals. This concept of family, what a family is supposed to look like is new to her. After a few movies, she’s realized our little mother-daughter unit is not the same as her favorite characters.

Being a single parent, I didn’t think we’d have conversations like this for a long time. I tell her some families have a mama and a papa, others just have a mama or a papa, or some have two mamas or two papas. And no matter what a family consists of, all that matters is the family’s love and happiness. A lot of that information goes over her head and she reverts back to her mama, papa, and baby pretend play.

As I sit and watch her play like this, I worry about her future and if she will think it’s negative she doesn’t have a ‘dad’ in her life. I think she’s happy with just the two of us, but moms always worry.

With Father’s Day nearing and with my daughter noticing talk of dads, my worry for my fatherless daughter has increased… until I realized family is so much more than a mama, a papa, and a baby.

Through this journey of motherhood, I realize ‘father figures’ are not always biological dads.

My daughter is impacted every day by men in her life that choose her. By widening the scope of what makes a family, she has never missed out on having a ‘dad.’ She has a grandpa who protects and plays with her. An uncle that chases her around and helps her fix things that are broken. A great-grandpa that makes sure she has everything she needs and cheers her on. There are countless of other ‘uncles’ who watch over her, ask about her days, and continually want the very best for her. She might not be ‘theirs,’ but there isn’t a shortage of love and fatherly influence.

So on this Father’s Day and every day, I want to say thank you to all of them for showing my daughter what a dad is supposed to look like. Thank you for choosing her when hers wouldn’t. She has soaked that impact up more than I could have ever imagined.

Thank you to the dads the make a difference in their children’s lives and the others that aren’t theirs too.

To my daughter and other children who don’t have involved fathers, I hope you see that there are so many that love you and want the best for you. A family isn’t just a mama, a papa, and a baby, but a group of people who pick each other and support them unconditionally.

Originally published on Newsymom.

34 thoughts on “Celebrating Fathers with a Fatherless Daughter

  1. Thank you for sharing this. I grew up fatherless, so this really spoke to me. There’s a really great book I recommend, “The Family Book” by Todd Parr that is about all different types of families.

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  2. Beautiful story, full of wonderful insights and life lessons. Indeed, fathers are not just biological dads and they come in many forms — a single mom, an adoptive dad, grandfathers, and so on. Thank you for sharing your story.

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  3. Such a touching story. But, I love the way you are educating her and the fact that she has so many men in her life that love and protect her. And you are absolutely right. Moms always worry but you are the best mom she can ever ask for.

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  4. Pingback: Prayer Theme for June 2021: Our Father – Belgian Ecclesia Brussel – Leuven

  5. What a beautiful and heartfelt post. It reminds me of all the beautiful souls who have also become my “adopted” family through the years, and how grateful I am for them, as well as my own parents. Thank you for writing such a moving post.

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