Anonymous wrote:Emotional intelligence. Empathy. Kindness. Patience. A sense of humor.
Someone who is responsible. Takes his "duties" seriously. Demonstrates through actions what it is to be good. And smart. And disciplined.
Anyone rigid in their thoughts or uncompromising or easy to anger will be a problem and a terrible father.
I don't necessarily agree that family history is destiny. Often times it is. But sometimes it creates a wellspring of empathy and an acute awareness of what not to do.[/quote]
Agree with the bonded ×1000!
I am proud thay DH and I make it a point to be better than our parents. They were all pretty good, but we are definitely an improvement.
Anonymous wrote:Rigidity of any kind (“stubborn streak”), nitpicking tendencies, unhappy childhood, lack of empathy, need to one up everyone, seeing compromising as “bending to someone’s will”, enmeshment issues with family of origin, being overly thrifty. Any kind of anxiety. Any kind of self-destructive behavior. Any kind of critical worldview (even self-directed critisism). These are huge red flags. Even if the trait is benign/mild pre-kids, it will amplify 100x with the stress of small children and can make you and kids miserable. A good boyfriend, travel mate, roommate can be a total nightmare as a partner.
Look for someone easy going, responsible and flexible, for whom having kids is very valuable and who is ok with the partner being in charge during initial infant stages.
Anonymous wrote:Most people will parent similar to how they were parented. I would look at their family of origin.
We all want different things out of our partners too, we don't all want them to be dads the same way. Some people just want a good financial provider. Others want an energetic dad who is on the floor playing with kids, whereas some people don't care about that. I too think that you set the stage early for what you expect from your spouse. My spouse didn't grow up getting read to. I cut that out quick and he now enjoys reading for 30 min to them. He also does 50% of kid chores and we take turns with different things. DH and I listen to child discipline books and discuss them together.
Anonymous wrote:What are his parents like and what's his relationship with his parents like?
Anonymous wrote:About half of adults come from divorced homes, so I guess you should eliminate half the population.
Anonymous wrote:About half of adults come from divorced homes, so I guess you should eliminate half the population.
Anonymous wrote:Most people will parent similar to how they were parented. I would look at their family of origin.
We all want different things out of our partners too, we don't all want them to be dads the same way. Some people just want a good financial provider. Others want an energetic dad who is on the floor playing with kids, whereas some people don't care about that. I too think that you set the stage early for what you expect from your spouse. My spouse didn't grow up getting read to. I cut that out quick and he now enjoys reading for 30 min to them. He also does 50% of kid chores and we take turns with different things. DH and I listen to child discipline books and discuss them together.