I've picked a fight with my own team. Men, it turns out, hate me.
I recently wrote a largely satirical column about how sperm banks,
cloning and the increasing financial independence of property-owning
women are making men (and fathers) virtually obsolete.
Men, apparently, are NOT going silently. With the exception of a few
touching e-mails from women about how they depend on their husbands, I
was bombarded with angry e-mails from dudes around the world (or at
least America and Australia).
One began: "Dear Mr. Katz (or should I say Ms. Katz)."
I liked that one.
Others acted like evil armchair psychologists, analyzing why I'd commit
such "male bashing." One suggested my problem was I wasn't slapped
"upside the head" enough by my father when I was young. Another used
twisted logic to argue that I hate myself, and therefore because I'm a
man I hate all men.
I didn't understand the importance of men and fathers in raising a
family, readers said, and this was because my father didn't love me
enough.
A blogger posted this about my allegedly anti-man views: "It is anger
towards something. Maybe his father was never there for the family? And
I don't mean he was just off working, I mean actual neglect."
Sooooo, since you asked for it, this, in a nutshell, is my story. Analyze all you want -- I certainly have.
The guy I call Dad began as my mother's boyfriend. Then they married
(with my permission, by the way -- I was 3) and he became my
stepfather. Later I changed my name to his last name, making him my
stepfather-with-the-same-name, which was confusing to my friends in
fourth grade. And finally he adopted me, which might be the best thing
that ever happened to me. And yes, he certainly loves me enough.
But it gets more confusing. He has two daughters from a previous
marriage, who were my stepsisters but are now my real, non-biological
sisters. They each have a half-brother and another stepbrother.
When I was growing up -- and my birth father himself has even suggested
this -- it was better for me that it was just me and my Mom (and later
me and my Mom and Dad) rather than the traditional nuclear family with
him in the house.
With the exception of a gaping eight-year hole smack in the middle of
my childhood, I have spoken to my biological father about once a month.
The last time I called him by name I used the term "Daddy," but that
was 22 years ago and at this point the term has worn off. So I don't
call him anything anymore, which is occasionally awkward.
But none of this is at all dysfunctional, and it's not even really that traumatic. In fact, I'm lucky I got my Dad.
I just got a Christmas card from a friend who has two adorable sons of
two different nationalities -- they adopted their first child thinking
they couldn't have a baby, and then they had a second child the
old-fashioned way. Another friend, a father of a 10-year-old girl from
a previous marriage, is raising his girlfriend's son as his own -- she
was single during her entire pregnancy, and they began dating right
after she gave birth.
Mothers and fathers no longer fit into the easy categories that my hate
mail suggests. And yet love still exists beyond the old school mom-and-dad-have-two-kids situation.
My pro-men pen pals are right that upbringing and family life can be
the most important factor to a child's well-being. And I think they're
right that in an ideal world, a child is best in a family with two
parents. Logistically and financially, this makes the most sense. If
one of the parents is a dud, you've got the other.
But a lot of times, living with two parents who despise each other is
really the biggest problem of them all. And if one parent leaves it
doesn't automatically mean the kid is going to get a step-this and a
half-that and therefore end up in county prison doing 6 1/2 for
possession.
And yet I still turned out alright. Just ask my live-in girlfriend and our cat.
Even we call ourselves a "family."
This column appeared in the Courier-Post and Gannett newspapers nationwide.
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