Anonymous wrote:Do they have a pet? Look at how they treat the pet.
Anonymous wrote:You don't. But, you can try and guess based on the type of personality he has.
1. Is he calm.
2. Does he think things through or does it react too quick.
3. Is he good around other kids.
4. Is he patient.
5. Is he smart in terms of knowing how to problem solve.
6. Is he responsible financially.
7. Does he have good interests and hobbies.
Anonymous wrote:NO ADDICTION. No addiction to drugs, drinking, smoking, sex, porn, video game, weapons, speeding etc.
Anonymous wrote:I watched him with his family, nieces and nephews and that was a good clue. On our wedding day I heard that early in the morning he was watching cartoons in bed with the little ones. His comfort level with kids was very special.
Anonymous wrote:Most men will be good fathers. Men really love their children. My ex husband was a cheater and did not meet my emotional needs at all. However, the man is a fantastic father. He always put our kids first. He always make time for them. In fact the hardest hurdle during our divorce was about child custody. I have never seen him cry until he realizes that he won’t be seeing his children every single day of the week.
Anonymous wrote:What are his parents like and what's his relationship with his parents like?
Anonymous wrote: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.
Sometimes anxiety makes people BETTER. This is not a red flag. My DH has anxiety a d it made him take parenting classes and implement his learnings. He passed his anxiety on to our kids (it's genetic) and we produced 2 perfect straight A students who really are role models. Don't get me wrong perfectionism/anxiety comes with challenges, but often it produces BETTER results.
Anonymous wrote:A good father is also a good husband/partner. Does he proactively participate around the house when it's just you two? If he doesn't, and you find yourself doing most of the cooking, cleaning, housework...it won't get better when there's a kid.