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EBSCOhost

9/16/13 3:25 PM

Record: 1
Title: IN SEARCH OF DADDY.
Authors: Hamilton-Wright, Kimberly J.
Sykes, Tanisha A.
Source: Black Enterprise. Jan2004, Vol. 34 Issue 6, p90-90. 1p. 1 Color
Photograph.
Document Type: Article
Subject Terms: *FATHERLESS families
*AFRICAN American children
*SINGLE mothers
*FAMILIES
Abstract: Highlights the number of African American children who lived with a single mother in 2002. Impact of fatherlessness in the Afro-American community; Information on how to heal the wounds of fatherlessness.
INSET: B.E. SUCCESSPERT SPEAKS.
Full Text Word Count: 758
ISSN: 0006-4165
Accession Number: 11685881
Database: Academic Search Complete
Section: Motivation
HEAL THYSELF

IN SEARCH OF DADDY
YOUR GUIDE TO MAXIMIZING YOUR MOST VALUABLE ASSET--YOURSELF Even in adulthood, fatherlessness has long-lasting effects
In the African American community, single mothers abound leaving many black children to grow up without experiencing a father's love. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 48% of black children lived with a single mother in 2002. The outcome can be debilitating when these children grow into adults who feel hurt and rejected, leaving them with a void to fill.
Wilbert Hurt, 43, an accountant with Verizon Wireless in Alpharetta, Georgia, witnessed early on the painful aspects of his father's impact. After years of physical abuse, Hurt's mother left his father, having suffered a miscarriage after a violent episode. Hurt was 6 at the time. "My father gave me life and I respected him for that. He was a hard-working man. But the violence that he subjected my mother to affected me in not wanting to be like him in that way," he says.
For many, the widespread effects run deep. "One of the impacts of fatherlessness in the African
American community is generational. There is an absence of role models of what being a good father http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/delivery?sid=752bb1e2-d5f4-497c-8f8d-1a0218d2ef29%40sessionmgr111&vid=4&hid=112 Page 1 of 3

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9/16/13 3:25 PM

is," says George R. Williams, executive director of the Urban Father-Child Project of the National Center for Fathering in Kansas City, Missouri. "We don't know how to be a good father, which sometimes leads us down a destructive path."
In addition, there are self-esteem issues to conquer. "Individuals who grow up without a father in the home struggle the most with self-identification, which makes it difficult for them to have relationships with other people," says Joyce Morley-Ball, an Atlanta-based psychotherapist and certified marriage and family therapist.
As a young adult, Hurt worked through the effects of his experience, though he continues to deal with the tendency to overcompensate. "I think I do too much for my children because I didn't have a dad there," says the father of four girls. "I don't want my children to feel that hole in their heart like I felt."
Men are not the only ones struggling with this issue. LaTrease Birdsong, a 26-year-old teleconferencing company customer service representative in Dallas, was raised by her mother alone. "Growing up without my father has made it really hard for me to trust men," says Birdsong. "I have a hard time trusting any man, regardless of who he is." So what's the reason for such a lack of trust? "This is because each one--the adult man and woman--is trying to find affirmation outside the person who was supposed to quench their father thirst--their dad," explains Williams.
Getting past the hurt and frustration of fatherlessness can feel insurmountable, but there is room for healing and reconciliation. In her book Whatever Happened to Daddy's Little Girl? The Impact of
Fatherlessness on Black Women (Ballantine Books; $13.95), author Jonetta Rose Barras says a first step for people who have grown up without their fathers is to recognize that it did have an impact. "In the feminization of society, we have very much downplayed the impact of fathers," says Barras, who grew up fatherless.
For more information, read Absent Fathers, Lost Sons: The Search for Masculine Identity (Shambhala;
$19.95), and log on to www.fathers.com and www.dadi.org.
PHOTO (COLOR)
~~~~~~~~
By Kimberly J. Hamilton-Wright
EDITED BY Tanisha A. Sykes, E-mail: sykest@blackenterprise.com
B.E. SUCCESSPERT SPEAKS
Author Jonetta Rose Barras offers these pearls of wisdom on how to heal the wounds of fatherlessness:
• Admit that it's an issue. Many of us have gone through life pretending we didn't need a father. Let's just face the truth and admit that it hurt growing up without one.

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• Recognize the impact. Do an internal survey of your life. Say, "Here's how I think it [my father not being there] affected me." With men, it affects their relationships with women--in terms of knowing how to be men. With women, it's "How do I identify a decent man?"
• Decide if you want to reconcile with your father. Develop a plan. Will you call, write, or visit him?
[Express] what his absence has meant to you. Have consistent, non-threatening conversations with him to regain or reestablish trust and to bond.
• Reconcile with a deceased father, or bring closure if both parties are not interested in recommitting. Write down episodes related to the father's absence that are inconsequential. Put them in a container where they can be burned. There is a wholeness that comes from the physical expression of ridding our lives of negativity.
--Kimberly J. Hamilton-Wright
Copyright of Black Enterprise is the property of Graves Ventures LLC and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use.

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