Mothers are not the only ones out there who put intense pressure on themselves to do and be everything as a parent.
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Michelle Zunter

On the day my daughter was born we felt relief and joy. She had arrived and she was healthy.

But three days later, my husband lost his job. He was suddenly fired without warning. It was an unexpected blow to our plans.

This time in our lives became the most stressful and anxious we had ever faced together — and with a newborn baby to boot. I still had a portion of my own income coming in while I was on maternity leave but it was not enough.

My husband was exhausted, defeated, and suddenly had to leap into action to find a new job. The high of our daughter’s arrival was overshadowed by the frantic need for money. Our hearts sank. Our morale weakened.

Nights with one or both of us staying up with our new baby added extra fatigue to what was already a tense situation. I could see my husband was starting to feel discouraged and hopeless. Throughout this time I was fighting my own battles with exhaustion and breastfeeding but my husband was also in his own private hell.

This man I married is a phenomenal father to his own son (my stepson) and I knew he’d also be a divine father to our little girl. But he suffered during those early days of my daughter’s life. He battled depression and fear. The pressure of wanting to provide for all of us weighed him down immensely.

“Even when you’re part of a two-parent partnership that sense of failure and inadequacy can creep in.”

My husband’s desire to be a bread winner for us all was something he felt deeply. In those days and weeks after my daughter was born, he saw himself as a failure — unable to give us what we needed. Nothing I could say to reassure him worked. This was an emotional burden he put on himself.

My point here is simply that mothers are not the only ones out there who put intense pressure on themselves to do and be everything as a parent. There are many dads out there who also feel that sense of desperation when they see themselves as failing for their children or family.

While it’s true that many parents out there are doing it alone as single moms or dads, it’s also true that even when you’re part of a two-parent partnership that sense of failure and inadequacy can creep in.

None of us know what we’re doing. We can read all the parenting books in the world and still lose our sh*t when the baby is actually born and crying all night long. There’s no book that can prepare a mother or a father for the hell that is a baby who won’t sleep and cries incessantly. None.

There’s no shortage of blogs or articles out there about moms and the struggles we go through. I write about my own issues all the time. There’s increasingly more awareness about postpartum depression which is fantastic and I hope people begin to recognize it on a more consistent basis.

I just want to put it out there that dads feel it too. They get depressed. They get emotional. They get angry. They get scared. Parenting is just as overwhelming at times for a dad and we all need to keep that in our pockets to remember.

My husband did make it out of his own trials and tribulations and now owns a successful business which we run together. I’m beyond proud of him.

Those weeks and months after my daughter was born were dark and scary when they shouldn’t have been. Those days almost broke us as a couple. But we made it and now we know what we can make it through together.

So for those dads out there or moms who have boyfriends/husbands hustling every day to make ends meet and care for their family — just remember to acknowledge their efforts and let them know they’re doing an awesome job because dads feel it too.

You can visit Michelle at her Lifestyle blog, The Pondering Nook & also catch her co-hosting at The Broad’s Way Podcast. Feel free to follow The Pondering Nook on Facebook, Pinterest, Instagram & Twitter.

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