by JOE HOCKEY
Dealing with “the guilts”? Get over it, dad.
Oh to be able to sleep in until 7am!
That, at least, is how I feel at 5.30 am on those mornings when I wake up after way too little sleep to find at least one of our three children demanding their share of me.
Ignatius, aka. Mr Personality, a few months short of his third birthday, is in his cot singing LMFAO’s recent hit “Party Rock Anthem” with an occasional burst of the chorus of “Wheels on the Bus”.
Adelaide, her mother’s daughter, knows what she wants and gets it when she wants. She carries her seven “kittys” around the House with a purpose not to be challenged early in the morning by a transient father.
And seven-year-old- Xavier, who jumps into bed for a cuddle, has his lines down pat… “I love you Daddy. Why are you always going away? Can I watch the TV?”
These are my children, and this is my life.
Despite that groaning feeling when they wake me in that fashion, I cherish that morning ritual and wouldn’t have it any other way. Nevertheless, I am always hit by terrible guilt when I usually walk out the door at 6.45am and head off to work.
My wife and children may not believe it but when I walk out the door I really feel “the guilts” – every single day.
And the truth of it is, that guilt stays with me throughout the days, the months and the years of my life that I am away as an absent father.
I often wonder if my own father felt the same way when he and mum were raising me and my own siblings.
I grew up in a small business family. Mum and Dad had to run the business six days a week.