Posted on Jul 27, 2014
MAJ Deputy Director, Combat Casualty Care Research Program
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I think I'm about the worst dad around. I was gone for most of my son's first year, so now I do nothing but cater to him. He's learning at 18 mo's that all he has to do is cry and I'll do whatever he wants. Anyone else dealing with this? I would like to play the "tough dad", but I can't. I feel guilty for not being there early on.
Posted in these groups: Children logo ChildrenImgres Deployment
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MAJ Deputy Director, Combat Casualty Care Research Program
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Hurricane jacob
My greatest wish and greatest pain pre and post deployment - I call this, hurricane Jacob:
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MAJ Deputy Director, Combat Casualty Care Research Program
MAJ (Join to see)
10 y
Hurricane2
Hurricane Jacob, 2:
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SFC Mark Merino
SFC Mark Merino
10 y
Jacob has serious squeezy cheeks! MAJ (Join to see) Good job dada.
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PO1 G. Leslie /Stiltner
PO1 G. Leslie /Stiltner
10 y
Spoil away its not a bad thing as long as you apply discipline when needed!!
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MAJ Deputy Director, Combat Casualty Care Research Program
MAJ (Join to see)
10 y
SFC Mark Merino He's popular at the commissary because of those cheeks. He gets pinched and squeezed weekly.
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SFC Mark Merino
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You and most other guilt ridden dads MAJ (Join to see) It isn't natural to disappear for as long as we do/did. When I got home the first time my little man was terrified because he had no idea who I was (....or maybe he figured out he would grow up to look just like me?) Anyway, All of you who still wear a uniform are subject to experiencing that hardship again. It is only natural for you to want to spoil the kids rotten. Just beware of the spouse ho has to deal with the aftermath if you have to deploy again. All that doting might make us feel better and the kids feel good, but the whiplash effect can be painful on everybody. Of course, I'm divorced now and my input requires intense scrutiny.
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MAJ Deputy Director, Combat Casualty Care Research Program
MAJ (Join to see)
10 y
MSG(P) Michael Warrick Been obsessing about this a bit lately. The idea that when we die we don't remember anything. And we're remembered for maybe a generation. The idea of being gone forever is a tough one - and why I do my best to spend and remember what I can now.
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SFC Mark Merino
SFC Mark Merino
10 y
That's dark MAJ (Join to see). Are you a spiritual man?
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MAJ Deputy Director, Combat Casualty Care Research Program
MAJ (Join to see)
10 y
SFC Mark Merino Depends on what you call "spiritual". I just call'm like I see'm. I've wished for years that I could "believe" like my religious friends.... just can't. Too much evidence to the contrary. But I am "spiritual" in the sense that I believe in treating everyone as equals and as you would your brother/sister.
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SFC Mark Merino
SFC Mark Merino
10 y
MAJ (Join to see) ...just sounds a bit like you are on the cusp of having a spiritual crisis of what happens next. Is this it? What defines me? Etc...With a job like yours, I see that almost like an occupational hazard.
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CPT Richard Riley
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Maj, I guess to me it depends on how you define 'spoil'. Your kids are all unique and a part of you. You miss them when you're gone and away from them tremendously. Of my 6 kids, I was only away from my oldest two girls for about 11ish months - they were 4 and new at that time. All these years later what I remember is a great sense of never wanting to let them go again. You don't need to feel guilty for doing your job. You show them you're responsible, you show them they can depend on you & you'll keep your word.

Being with them, hugging them, spending time with them, letting them know just how much you love them is not spoiling them - that is just being a dad. 'Being a tough dad' seems to me to have more to do with discipline ... every parent and couple have their own way of approaching that. Being fair and consistent in how you discipline does not make you tough, and you're not 'spoiling them' unless you mean spoil them with love and that is not a bad thing at all.

You do your best to reassure them that you will ALWAYS be there for them, even if there may be a time that you are physically away from them, you are always and forever with them. That will never change. This isn't exactly the same, but the premise is similar .... as they grow up and sleep in their own room, there are times when they seek you out in the middle of the night because they just want to feel safe and close. You explain that just because they are in their own room, they do not have to worry that you are not there. As they get comfortable with sleeping alone in their room they slowly realize that mom and dad are right there in the house with them and it's really easy to get them so the fear or anxiety of being separated from you lessens ... and in time, they become very comfortable with their room.

Military families face this all too often. It is never easy, but it can be solved in a way that the kids KNOW without a doubt mom and dad love them forever and they will always be your kids. That never changes. --- SO, when he cries, comfort him, console him and let him know that you're always there - it doesn't have to be buying him something or taking him somewhere. Spoil the heck out of them with time, love, interest, and support in what they do. That will pay off now and years into the future.
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