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Thursday, 3 April 2014

Rethinking A Father's Point Of View

By Saleem Rana


Adam Dolgin, a blogger and website owner, who is dedicated to raising awareness about a father's point of view when it comes to equal parenting spoke to Lon Woodbury and Liz Mcghee on Parent Choices for Struggling Teens, a popular radio show hosted on L.A. Talk Radio.

The host of the program is Lon Woodbury, who is an Independent Educational Consultant, and he has helped family members with struggling teenagers since 1984. He is well-known for his online websites and blog sites on parenting and for his industry publication called Woodbury Reports. His co-host, Elizabeth McGhee is the Director of Admissions and Referral Relations at Sandhill Child Development Center. She has more than 19 years' experience working with child development issues.

A Brief Bio: Adam Dolgin

Adam Dolgin is a father and the founder of a website called Fodder 4 Fathers. His primary interest as a blogger is to get fathers and mothers to talk and share parenting techniques. One reason for the popularity of his blog is that he is eager to bring up issues that most people would rather avoid when raising children. In fact, he is something of a social media phenomenon in his own right, with about 50,000 followers on his Facebook page. He actively shares his experiences and observations with other non-traditional fathers and mothers.

The Changing Times: A Daddy's Viewpoint

A father's point of view is changing. Adam rapidly made it clear that the perception of the job of a dad is changing among younger married couples. He shared just how he is taking pleasure in having a much better relationship with his children than dads have done for centuries.

Adam is intensely involved immediately with parenting. He is very much a part of a little publicized movement of fathers who are actually good at changing diapers, volunteering for nightly feedings and taking on the role of stay at home dads. He believes that there is a joy in this hand on approach that fathers in previous generations missed out on.

By building a stronger bonding connection with their child, daddies enjoy the feeling that mothers alone used to feel when first introduced to the duties of looking after an infant. This involvement makes a new degree of delight, intimacy, and sharing for the couple itself. His dad's viewpoint is becoming a popular new perspective for broad-minded parents online.




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