Work It, Dad!

with Avi Spivack

Hi, I'm Avi, and I try to put the work and the dad together, with mild success. This is all about trying to give you a view from what it looks like on the dad-man's side of the world, and I hope you find my ruminations humorous because I try not to take myself too seriously.

Knowing what matters most

Categories: General

No Comments

Let’s go through my day today, a typical Monday, to determine if I am spending my time in a meaningful way…

8:15am: bring kiddo to school; she is sooooo happy to get into that classroom, at least I know why we paid so much to live in a good school district

8:30am: drive to work, add to global warming epidemic (Sorry, Al Gore)

9am: arrive at work, Starbucks run (yes, already, before I even sit down at my desk)

9:30am - 1:30pm: “one-on-one” meetings, multiple phone calls, conference calls, and a lot of writing down of notes that I will never again reference

1:30 - 2:30pm: lunch = salad with chicken while “recruiting” a friend and ex-colleague to come and work for me

2:30 - 5:15pm: more meeting-calls, document writing, and the like (10-minute conversation with colleague about recent sporting events, including the NFL draft)

5:15pm: rush home to meet the carpet salesman so he can tell me how much it will cost to replace the water and mold-damaged carpet that I had to dispose of

6 - 6:20pm: watch my daughter eat dinner, laid out by my mother-in-law (while the carpet man finishes the contracts and makes jokes with my daughter)

6:20 - 6:40p: Play Zingo with my daughter (best 20 minutes of my day)

7pm: early bedtime for the kid, now that vaca time is over

7pm - present: laundry, more work, phone call with a friend…

and those 20 minutes made it all worth it (even though I didn’t win - but we did tie!).

How was your day?

Marketing to men (part one)

Categories: General, Media, My Life

No Comments

Raise your hand if you watched the Super Bowl?

Didn’t think so.

Now raise your hand if you watched the Super Bowl commercials on the web on the day after the Super Bowl.

Maybe a few more?

Well, I watched the Super Bowl (the football game) AND all of the commercials, and there were a few that surprised me, intrigued me, made me smile, and made me think (not all of them made me do all of those things, only some). My next three posts will dissect three of those commercials, all of which center on manhood, and the brand’s desire to strike a nerve with the men watching the game and attract them to the brand’s product.

The first one is the Dodge Charger (a car). The ad is titled “Man’s Last Stand.”

Before I give you the link to go and watch the ad itself, I would like to comment on the title - what does it mean? The implication is that “man” (all men?) have been emasculated (yes, I love to use that word, it has such a nice ring to it) by the females of the world. We have played the “female rules,” and because we do, we will - like General Custer - have one last stand (I bet you can guess what it is - The Dodge Charger!!!).

Okay, go watch it and then come back: click here for Man’s Last Stand

Wow, right?

So here’s how a man watched it:

Many of the “rules” that the men state are ones that I follow:

I eat fruit as part of my breakfast.
I shave (everyday).
I put the seat down.
I listen to my wife’s opinion of my friends.
(But I am not very quiet…)
I go to work. I sit through meetings.
I put my underwear in the basket.

BUT…

What strikes me (and frankly, kinda worries me) is the TONE of the commercial - it is one of disdain, of bubbling rage, that all of us men are raging animals that need to drive a big, loud, fast car in order to express our masculinity…and for us some of that might be true, but this comes very close to crossing a line - and that might be the point, to be memorable, but is it offensive?

I won’t deny that we do need to have testosterone-filled outlets: going to a basketball game and yelling loudly (great scene in my favorite guy movie, “I Love You, Man” where they go under the Santa Monica pier and just yell), beers with the guys, or listening to grunge rock - whatever floats your boat - but does it mean that we feel like caged, domesticated animals, forced to live in a female-constructed universe where our car is the only thing we can truly own? And if so, did Dodge connect to the Super Bowl viewers?

I wonder.

What do you think - should I go and buy a Charger?

The rise of the househusband

Categories: Media

7 Comments

Behold a new term in the realm of the American domestic lingo: the “househusband.”

I am not sure if the NY Times will take credit for inventing a new word and adding it into the mix - perhaps they were somewhat uninspired and just swapped “husband” for “wife” in the much-more-used “housewife” (which these days might cause some level of nausea, depending on who you ask).

But give this a quick read.

It is a blog-like exchange between David Brooks and Gail Collins, as they discuss the changing landscape of American domesticity and - by extension - gender roles.

Are “househusbands” really the future (as the title suggests)?

I have to say that in my current company, I would provide a resounding NO. Not only are most of my colleagues men, nearly all of the mens’ wives do not work (and stay at home with their multiple children).

But I would seem to be in the minority, as the blog-exchange relates, and as the unemployment and employment statistics state fairly clearly: many more men have been laid off and are out of work and women now outnumber men in the workforce.

Having been laid off myself (for 4 months), I know the mental impact it can have (even after being re-employed), but what does it mean for a family to say that it makes more sense for the man to stay home full time?

In the Times piece, Brooks says that women/mothers are more “naturally nurturing” - do you agree? Does a man become emasculated if he cannot work (or if his family situation dictates that he should not work and allow his wife to make all the money)?

I would guess that it depends on the man. I don’t know if I would feel emascualted, per se, but I do know it would be extremely discouraging to be unable to work - though perhaps I am ignorant in this thought process.

I do know that in our broad circle of friends, I’ve only met one stay-at-home dad (or “househusband”), and while I’m not sure what that means as far as the trends in the rest of the country, I am eager to find out whether this will indeed become a movement - that us guys must be able to be the domestic, nurturing ones because the gender seesaw has tipped the other way…perhaps permanently.

Do you have or know a househusband? How does it work and what do you think about the future of mister moms?

Men just say dumb things (deal with it)

Categories: General

5 Comments

Exchange in our kitchen this morning.

My lovely wife: “It’s funny, maybe you guys are all the same…my (guy) friend says something to me and then like 20 minutes later he’s like - man, I wish I had never said that.”

Me: “Um, yeah, of course.”

Brilliant comeback, huh?

I mean, should I lie? I find myself saying many boneheaded utterances during the course of a day, the week, any given month…things I certainly wish I could take back.

So, do us members of the less-advanced gender really say more stupid, regrettable, and inane things than the women of the world?

I believe that is probably true.

But please, enlighten me, humor all of these readers: what is the single dumbest thing your hubby (or any other man for that matter) has said to you (or just in or near your presence)? C’mon, make me laugh.

Do you date other couples?

Categories: General, My Life

4 Comments

Get your mind out of the gutter - I am talking about PLATONIC couples dating, and honestly, it has been one of the most interesting topics that I’ve considered over the last few years, especially since the birth of our daughter:

As a modern, urbane (and insane) family with one five-and-a-half-year-old girl, how do you find friends who:
(a) have a husband who your husband likes*
(b) have a wife who your wife likes*
(c) have a kid (or kids) who your kid(s) like and is of a similar age
*In some cases, both spouses need to like both of the other spouses, but frequently it’s okay if you do the gender split.

I would argue that in today’s hurly-burly world, it ain’t easy to do.

You could try kupple.com, but do you really want to visit a site that claims: “Every soul has a mate. Every couple has a match.”? (Apologies if you are a member, but not sure I could stomach that, especially because the photo on the homepage is a bunch of bologna - those 4 people are NOT friends, let’s just be honest, k?)

For us, we’ve been on many couple/family dates, and many of them just don’t work - usually the kids are compatible enough, but you do a nice brunch somewhere, the women talk, the men talk, you smile and say let’s definitely do this again - and then you never do.

The synergy just isn’t there.

No magic.

Sometimes you can point to a reason, but most times it’s just straight-up incompatibility…

Just like regular dating, you can’t force it - either it works, you have some chemistry or you don’t, and for so many of our play/couple dates, we were trying to force it.

And so, we have a few couple/family friends, but what really seems to work (for us) is having couple friends WITHOUT children, or even single friends. Because then, it’s not about the kids: holy cow, what a novel idea?!

It is sometimes so nice to not discuss children and their activities and their development and their ever-growing list of needs…instead - as we did this weekend with child in tow - we had a lovely brunch with an unmarried, childless couple, and we really didn’t do kid talk (even though she was right there the whole time, but not at the center of it all).

What we seem to have learned is that it is wildly refreshing to have different (and sometimes overlapping) sets of couple friends - those that are more for US and those that also benefit child; and if you can make it all work and find those magical people, kudos to you! (even if it’s on kupple.com).

Good luck out there - it’s not easy to find good couple/family friends!

Teenage premonitions

Categories: My Life

2 Comments

Please raise your hands out there if you have teenagers.

Thank you.

And how many of those teenagers enjoy your company?

And how many of them give you a verbal lashing on a daily basis?

All of you?

Lovely.

So, here’s the current state of my five-and-a-half-year-old:

[Hands on hips, squinty eyes, erect posture] “I am NOT happy and you are NOT making me happy so that means I will never be happy!” Oh, the daggers.

And I can just feel teenage-hood knocking on my door, coming in for a glass of iced tea, and staying for awhile, right until this wicked-tongued kindergartner has her car keys and is dating a dude named Armando with 17 tatooes.

Please tell me that is not in my future.

Yes, I will be honest with you - it’s a brand new year and my little girl is springing up before my eyes; reading, playing the piano, understanding stuff, and developing a serious ‘tude, which is a grand precursor to her formidable teenage years when she will be destined to despise her parents but still require money and transportation so she can exist in her suburban euphoria while her deadbeat rents hope that one day she starts to like them again.

Please tell me it’s not that bad.

Please tell me that the boys will be polite and they will actually be studying when they say, and that Facebook really isn’t such a mindsuck and dangerous online jungle…please oh please.

But I know that my teenage premonitions are real.

Which is why I am so thrilled when I get a hug and a kiss and a swift ride down the mountain on the sled, clutching my dear daughter as the cold flakes shower down onto us, and I just want us to be frozen right there, forever, until we tumble off sideways, laughing, perfectly.

I don’t want to lose that.

The naked dilemma

Categories: My Life

7 Comments

I dated a girl in high school who once told me that her father walked around the house naked, or at least naked from the waist down (which is kind of all that matters), and I will be honest, I was SHOCKED - both that she told me this and that she told me this and did not see fazed by it; she even asked me why I was surprised, wasn’t this something that occurred in my house as well?

Um, actually, no.

Now don’t get me wrong, I have nothing against nudity, and I frankly hate the buttoned-up and covered-up American way of life (except when it comes to our love of porn). I am not one to run off to the nearest nude beach (Boston doesn’t have too many of them), but I am somewhat reserved and I just don’t like getting naked in front of other people…even my family.

So, here’s the setup: my daughter and I share a bathroom, my wife has the master all to herself (because I am smelly, hairy, six-foot-tall primate) and that is fine with me.

What is not so fine is that every morning, at some time between 6:43am and 6:58am, I am in said shred bathroom performing my morning hygienic rituals and my daughter knocks on the door because she has to pee (fair enough). I am typically at the sink shaving, clothed in boxer shorts (minimally), or boxers and a t-shirt. But many times I am fully undressed on my way into the shower, and you can pretty much draw the picture should my daughter walk into the bathroom while I was in transit…

Another interesting scenario is when she enters the bathroom and I am already in the shower. She does her business and then goes back to her room, no harm done.

BUT…

Last week she decided to be “funny” - she left, closed the door (my signal to exit the shower and grab my towel to dry off my primate-ness), and then she reappeared as I was in full-on drying mode. And yes, she took one look, gave me a look of shock and awe and confusion, and then she closed the door and left. No comment.

The questions here abound. When she was 18 months, I took my daughter swimming and I changed into my bathing suit in front of her. She barely knew English at the time, so she said, in Russian, “look, Papa has a tail.” How would she know what was going on there?

But now she is 5 and a half, and the curiosity is mounting…should I cover up or explain to her what’s going on with the difference in body parts?

When my wife was on a business trip she said she wished I could mommy; I said that would be tough to do, so she replied that the only reason I couldn’t do so is because we have different voices.

Of course my thought was: that’s not the only reason, little girl…

And so I continue to cover up, wondering when she will ask me about it, or when she’ll stop letting me give her a bath because she won’t want me to see her in the birthday suit - it all makes me wonder about how we deal with and discuss sexuality and genitalia, and it also makes me laugh.

Because what else can we do as parents except laugh, to survive it all.

What’s the naked truth for you and your family?

Familial mingling

Categories: My Life

2 Comments

Let the holidays begin!

Yeah, yeah, I know this is SUCH an overused topic, but it is oh so relevant, so, cmon, entertain me for a few hundred words, won’t you?

I almost wrote this same post on the eve before Thanksgiving, when it was unclear how my family (and some of their friends) and my wife’s family (and some of their friends) would somehow be able to mingle successfully for roughly 4-5 hours on the most American of Turkey Days.

I feared the worst (though I tend to be an optimist).

Not that I expected a raucous food fight or a shouting match, but you never know when BOTH families come together with a lot of wine and pumpkin-based dishes.

So…how did it go?

Shockingly smooth, a wonderful time had by all, free from (major) controversy. And that’s about all you can ask for, right?

Great piece in the NY Times about how family gatherings can tend to bring out the worst in people - the criticism, the cajoling, the inappropriate humor (we all have one of those uncles, don’t we?), so somehow, I thought my blood pressure (and especially my wife’s) would be skyrocketing…

Just goes to show you that you should always THINK POSITIVE.

And try to do as little travel around the holidays as possible.

What did you do this Turkey Day and did you mingle your families?

The sick-family circus

Categories: General

4 Comments

From Mom/Kid to Me.

That’s how it went, and pretty quickly, too.

I was dumb to think that I could pound 5,000 mg of Vitamin C every day and avoid it, and now here I sit, sniffling on the couch, sucking a Cold-eeze, coughing up small insects, and counting the minutes until I will pop my two nightly Nyquil (oh greenies, how I love thee!).

At least I have Monday Night Football in HD.

So normally, this particular bout of family sickness would not have been an issue: we would juggle the mornings, afternoons, or whatever, while sick kid slowly recovered (thankfully, this was just a chest cold), and played the “work from home” card.

Of course, last week I was on a business trip, wife and kid were both sick, and then wife had crazy work stuff to do so I stayed home for 2 days, and (drumroll please) this would be the first test as to whether my new job (which is now 6 weeks old) would live up to its promise as “family-friendly.”

The verdict?

I am still employed. (thank you, thank you, I’m here all week).

In all seriousness, the billing stayed true: I emailed my team, told them I would be home, and not a peep, all good. (by the way, I should own Leap Frog stock, and whoever invented wi-fi should win a Nobel).

Uh-oh, coughing child…time for Benadryl?

How do you cope now that the Northeast’s cold/flu season is officially hitting us HARD?

Working fathers want more time with their kids (um, duh)

Categories: Media, My Life

2 Comments

And you wonder why we get a bad rap?

Men are workaholics. Men/Dads would rather run off to work than spend time with their children. Fathers aren’t *real* parents.

Check out this article from The Guardian, whose first line is: “Working fathers are struggling to juggle the competing demands of family and career, according to a report that shows that they are just as uneasy with their work-life balance as mothers.”

Is that really a surprise to anyone?

“The report…suggests that the long-running debate over the pressures experienced by working mothers, who strive to “have it all” – children and careers – is just as relevant to working fathers.”

My response? Duh.

Plain and simple: if you have two working parents in a household, it will - bar none - be a struggle for both parents to make life work. For it to be *news* that fathers want to see their kids and have to deal with work stigmas and all the other crap is - frankly - a bunch of crap. This is non-news.

Will there ever be “balance” between work and family? No way. Will there ever be true parity in responsibilities? I say hells no.

Perhaps I am a primitive being, but tell me you have true equality and I will drop to my knees and bow.

You divide the work. You do the best you can to balance. But if both parents work, there will inevitably be a constantly shifting scale. If you have the option for one spouse to not work, the division of labor is very clear, and in the majority of cases, that is the mother (though the number of stay-at-home dads is growing, slowly).

But I think this “study” - while somewhat admirable for pointing out that us men actually deal with the work-home balance thing too - shows that we still view us dads as secondary; and perhaps we are, but please, don’t tell me that these are somehow shocking results.

What I would like to see is a study that polls employees across a broad range of industries and that honestly elicits the truth about how “flexible” or “parent-friendly” each company is. Many firms sell themselves to employees as flexible, but once you’re in the door, it becomes a different story.

This whole issue is less about who has more guilt or deals with more bull, and it’s really about whether our employers are enabling the possibility of a closer balance between work and achieving a fulfilling home life (or maybe just a “sane” one).

Would love your thoughts on this issue - has anyone figured it out yet?

Subscribe to blog via RSS

Search Blog