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My one and only daughter is 9-years-old and she has filled my soul with an incomprehensible joy. Of course, I absolutely love my sons, but the father-daughter connection is and should be distinctive. Here’s some stuff I’ve gathered so far about raising a little girl to someday become a wise, confident and Christ-centered woman.
1) A father cannot and should not be like a mother. Let me explain. I think a father sometimes gets intimidated by the natural closeness his daughter longs for with her mother and therefore he resist to pursue her deeply. He simply defaults to let the daughter-thing be for the “women-folk.” This is a catastrophic mistake for a father. Absolutely, he should encourage the mother-daughter relationship in all its special wonder, because mom is the natural template for what a woman, wife and mother looks like. But, he should not back away from his daughter just because he is not wired the same. Instead, he must own what unique bond he will have with her that is different, but not superior, to her mother.
And what is that bond? Simply put, character and confidence. A father will teach his little girl how to live, think and feel the way God does. And also, he will instill a humble confidence in her that she is beloved and beautiful to God, the world and her father. His words and actions, especially in her childhood and teenage years, will deepen the waters in her emotional and spiritual well.
2) A father shows his daughter how a man should treat her. If a father wants his daughter to respect herself and expect other men, especially a potential husband, to do likewise, then he has to set the bar by his own example. She will first study the way he loves and respects her mother. How does he care for and romance mom, or not? Does dad talk to mom like she’s cherished in the family, or is she demeaned and/or ignored? Also, a daughter will take her cues from how he acts towards her personally. When a father chases after his daughter’s heart, mind and attention honorably, then she tests future boyfriends and potential husbands through her father’s character grid and not infatuation or insecurity.
3) A daughter will seek two critical things from her father throughout her lifetime. Yes, a girl will become a woman, meet and marry a man and leave her father’s household. She will take another man’s name and mutually submit to his vision and leadership over her former patriarch. She will eventually hear her husband’s voice over her father’s voice, and she must do so in order for a new family to successfully emerge. And yet, she will forever seek these two elements from her father, even when the man is dead and gone. What? His wisdom and his love. Even when she is a grandmother, she will tell stories about the truth and proverbs imparted by her father—“My father used to say to me…” What’s more strange is that even absentee and jerky dad’s sometimes get memorialized by their adult daughters, because she longs to remember him with grace and redemption. She will also replay the few or thousand times her father expresses his fondness and affection for her. Some advice: Somehow, show your daughter everyday that you love her, think she’s beautiful, and so does God.
There are countless more things to unpack, but these are the ones I’ve started to wrestle with. Add some others to the comments below, if you’re compelled, but before you do that here’s a freebie: Watch this Tim McGraw video. Note: watch alone or you might have to explain the man-tears.
