Posts About ‘men’

Digital Dads Exposed: Jonathan Fields

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

Digital Dads Exposed is a monthly interview series that highlights the unique perspectives on manhood and fatherhood held by those we at Digital Dads have come across in our travels.

This month we have the multi-talented Jonathan Fields who I have yet to meet in person, but have a lot of respect for based on what I’ve read and heard. His newest book, Uncertainty: Turning Fear and Doubt Into Fuel for Brilliancecomes out in September and I can’t wait to read it. Based in New York, he is a serial entrepreneur and speaker. His latest venture TribalAuthor.com just launched and is filled with tons of helpful information for authors.

 

What is your perspective on what it means to be a man living in todays world?

Wow, big question! Honest answer – I can speak to my own experience, but I don’t feel qualified to say what it means to be a man living in today’s word. My challenges, aspirations, circumstances and experiences are so unique to the way I live my life. What I can share is what it means for me to be a man in my own life. And, for me, it’s a bit of a whacky blend of deep convention and deep unconvention.

On the traditional side, I feel like I need to be a champion for my wife and daughter, honest, hard-working, loving, compassionate and lead by example. On the unconventional side, I’ve chosen to earn my living as an entrepreneur and author, which means constantly embracing the unknown and taking risks, trusting in my drive, competence and sense of mission to provide for my family.

I’ve also made a very conscious choice to build my living around my ability to be unusually present in my family’s life, and that’s meant leaving serious money and opportunity on the table more than once. But it’s also allowed me to be there far more than a conventional path allows most husbands and dads. That’s everything to me. I can always find a way to make more money, can’t do that with time

Growing up, what has influenced you the most and shaped the man that you are today?

My dad is a professor who’s been researching human cognition going on 50 years. He could retire anytime…but why? He loves what he does, why would he stop. My mom has been an artisan most of her life, dancing, potting, jewelry-making, beading. So I was raised in a household that valued education and knowledge, but also had a healthy dose of hippy freak to it.

There’s no doubt these experiences have led me to look at the world a bit differently, then exploit that unusual viewpoint to create art, business, solutions and experiences. That’s pretty cool. Though it did take a bunch of years for me to begin to see how me being different was an asset. Truth is, I’m still working on that shift.

While I had plenty of friends, I also spent a lot of time alone. Either painting under a single light bulb in a corner of our basement, building things or just walking around on the beach, which was at the end of my road. Probably also explains why I love being around water, even if I don’t have a huge pull to be in it. The coast is where I feel a sense of homecoming.

In the moments you are able to pause and reflect, what activity do you normally gravitate towards?

For many years, painting, playing guitar, and outdoor activities like mountain biking, hiking, yoga and trail-running. Unfortunately, a series of injuries have made some of the more aggressive approaches to exercise more of a challenge over the last 5 years, so I’ve been exploring gentler approaches to movement. And while I’ve practiced meditation on and off and even taught it for years, over the last year, it’s become a central part of my daily practice, too, along with writing.

What is your parental philosophy?

Old school when it comes to respect and work ethic, but not overly protective…and downright mushy when it comes to being close with my daughter. Manners are important. Kindness is key. Compassion is the seat of connection.

I also don’t expect my daughter to do as I say, not as I do. So I do my best to walk the walk and let her learn more by example, than by instruction. And I believe in giving my daughter the room to challenge herself, to work hard, sometimes really hard, to make decisions and either enjoy the rewards of good ones or endure the consequences of bad ones. And also to appreciate the fact that the quest itself can be the real reward.

I often wonder if we do a disservice to kids when we try to constantly protect them from trying and failing. When we step in and keep saving them from a project or choice going bad. Because when we do that, they never get a real understanding of the relationship between choice, action and consequence.

And, maybe more importantly, we take from them the amazing experience of having to work hard to figure something out, trying, failing, trying again, coming closer, trying yet again, then finally figuring out a way to succeed…of their own accord.

That experience, while tough, is so incredibly empowering. There’s an amazing sense of accomplishment and confidence that comes from challenging and rising above adversity, especially when it doesn’t come easily. It cultivates creativity, problem-solving, persistence, self-reliance and confidence in a way that can never happen when we stop the train the moment we see it going off the rails and set if gently back in the station for them.

Sometimes our desire to keep our kids from laboring and making mistakes takes from them some of the greatest gifts we could give then, had we just allowed them the leeway to work it out themselves.

What do you appreciate the most about being a father?

Hugs, kisses, sharing in my daughter’s life, insights, experiences. Unconditional love. The way it’s created opportunities for my wife and I to deepen our own connection. Honestly, everything.

What is your favorite activity (or activities) to do with your children?

We like to build stuff. My daughter’s always been really dexterous and had an unusual ability to operate and see things in 3-dimensions from the time she was itty-bitty. My wife would kill me for revealing this, but when she was 4 or 5 years old, her favorite show was Pimp My Ride.

She loves building stuff and seeing stuff built. We also like to paint side-by-side on easels, too. Last summer, we all spent a month in Hong Kong, Bali, Australia and California, so now we all pretty much all have the bug to travel, too. Oh, and then there’s another favorite activity…nothing. Just hanging out, lying on the couch and meandering our way through conversation.

What is the best way for a man and father to impart wisdom to his children?

Live the wisdom you want your child to adopt. Talk alone doesn’t cut it. Be present. Treasure your spouse or partner, too, and let your kids experience that.

What piece of technology impacts you most during the day (and is that impact positive or negative)?

As a writer, blogger and digital entrepreneur, I’m pretty connected to my laptop, though my iPhone has been making a serious run at it lately. The impact can swing from very positive to very negative, so I try to keep a practice of checking in on myself regularly and asking if having my technology around is limiting my ability to be present.

I’ve also turned off all push notifications on everything, nothing comes to me until I go looking for it. And, to the chagrin of most people who know me, I rarely answer my phone either until I’m ready, because I often work in strategic bursts and dont’ want to interrupt my creative flow (at least that’s what I tell them, lol).

How does technology shape the way you raise and influence your children?

Technology influences her in two ways. She sees me using it, so it’s a regular part of her life. And I am around all the time to have conversations about how to use technology in a way that lets her do what she wants to do, but also keeps her life relatively private. She’s also become a daily user and is amazing at figuring out how to accomplish what she wants.

My daughter also sees me interacting with people all over the world all the time via twitter, Skype, Facebook and my blog. She’s come to expect that I’ll know a bunch of people pretty much anywhere we travel in the world, and she’s usually right. So, she sees it as a tool not just to get information, but to create connections. Skype, in particular, has also been great because it lets her stay in touch with friends on the other side of the world and with me when I travel solo.

How do you think men’s roles will change in the future?

I have no idea. But, at least in the circles I tend to play in these days (which are admittedly unconventional), I see more men placing a higher value on spending time with people they can’t get enough of (especially family and friends) and working to find ways to do things that not only pay the bills, but make them come alive. Not too long along, that was considered folly, something to be gotten over as you move into the role of grown-up. Especially for men.

Interesting enough, I see more and more dads struggling with what for decades many considered the classic working-mother’s dilemma — we want the best of both worlds, to have a great career and be a great, involved parent and spouse — and as dads, we don’t really know how the hell to deal with it. Especially because society still largely wants to keep us in the “do your job, you get to live when you retire” box.

Some great insights here! I really can’t wait to meet Jonathan in person and if you haven’t checked out any of his stuff yet you really should. Stay tuned for a book review for sure as I know as soon as I get a copy I’m going to read it!! Thanks for your time Jonathan.

 

/// Digital Dads Exposed returns next month with more unique and interesting perspectives on manhood and fatherhood. Is there someone you would like to see featured? send us an email.

My Son is Hetero – I’ve Failed!

Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

As parents, we’ve clearly failed because my son is heterosexual. You know that one guy who is annoyingly loud, yelling out player stats, team standing, and gets other men to question their testosterone when he gives out a full holler every time the home team scores? That’s my 8-year old son.

Here we are as two proud gay parents trying to enjoy our New Orleans sea food risotto, while our boy is engaging full stock men from other tables into what’s going on with the Vancouver Canucks hockey game. Admittedly, we don’t approve of the game because it seems more like a professional fight spectacle. I’m also one who’d much rather play than watch. Still, here we were with our own little spectacle at our table, and I’m thinking about what did we do so wrong that made him turn into such a big hetero. For that matter, what is hetero and what is a real man anyway?

In my opinion, masculine identity is a social construct, similar to an old Buick. There was the traditional man, the hegemonic icon that was once captured by the likes of Humphrey Bogart. The learned decision maker, integrally loyal to self, family, and community, and the meaning of life was patriarchy – enforced through religion and culture.

However, there came a time when women didn’t need or want these traditional men anymore. Due to war demands that raised women’s capabilities, the sexual revolution, women’s rights, the feminist movement, and legal updates, men lost their significance and purpose. Furthermore, men were disappointing because their traditional identity pride became embattled and bruised, and they made hopeless promises in attempting to uphold the traditional male icon and not ask for help while their postwar emotional ruptures landed them on bended knee. Here were the traditional men, having once held unearned privilege and status by just being men, now being crippled by their weakness in emotional expression and self-confidence. In man’s emotional constipation, anger appeared to be the only acceptable expression through physical force or grunts, while women took responsibility over dead-beat-dads

So what then is a real man? It isn’t about hetero or homosexual identity. Perhaps it’s the man with the strongest sense – the ones most fully accepting of themselves and pulling their weight in personal responsibilities regarding: self, sexual health, relationship, community connections and work. This is akin to dropping the bottle of shame, and challenging the myths of what it means to be a man. This means unabashedly seeking mental health support when one needs it, seeking a doctor when it’s time for the checks of prostate or colon cancer, verbalizing being pissed off to the spouse in a way that’s respectful and encouraging, and teaching young boys that real men DO cry at times. Perhaps this is a call to blow the whistle on the shame that the disfigured traditional man has left as an inheritance, and a time to be our own real men, accepting ourselves as we are.

As for my son, it looks like he’s on his way to becoming a real man. I don’t like hockey but I figure it’s best to support my son’s interest. Considering how he woos women, plays sports, and takes on challenges, I’m quite confident that this one will be playing for the hetero team – and that’s the way it’s going to be. GO CANUCKS!

Founders Note – April 2011

Friday, April 1st, 2011

It is amazing to me that the moment you say the word Dad, Father or Pops, you are instantly put into an interest bucket with all the Moms and Mothers. This means that all the lazy agencies of the world start pitching you on the same things they pitch them on.

You’ve heard me say it before and I’ll say it again. We treat this website as a site for guys to talk about men’s issues and topics. Sure, we talk about parenting and almost all of our writers are parents. We LOVE being Dads, but here we want to write about other things that reach beyond just our kids as well.

Something has bothered me a bit lately and that is the state of manhood out there. I think all the time in front of our computers and playing video games has made us a bit soft.

There is nothing wrong with enjoying a photo of a naked woman (or man), having a cold beer on any weekday afternoon and screaming out loud at a sporting event. I love to crank the tunes, drive fast and experience everything that life wants to give to me. I enjoy talking about sex and like having it even better. I’m not all that handy with tools, but the idea of building things and fixing up my house excites me. Tequila, scotch or wine all make me happy depending on the mood.

I bet most of you guys out there share similar thoughts. Yet, why do so many of us (me including) fear expressing this openly in today’s world? Sure, the political correctness bullshit has certainly put a damper on our fire and the anonymous nature of the web makes us try to always maintain a certain level approach in what we say and share.

But, does this mean that we should be ashamed to be men? Hell no!

I got thinking about this as I was talking to some friends recently and realized that while we’d have the conversation face-to-face, I bet that none of us would be willing to have it online due to the flack we’d get. The more I thought about that, the more I realized how much that sucked.

My rule with Digital Dads is this is where a Dad can be a guy and I plan on keeping it that way. Don’t ever worry about being a man here please.

Photo Credit: Valeria Maltoni

Game of Thrones & The Oscars

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011

In case you didn’t know it, C.C. is a huge movie fan so The Oscars are must watch TV in his house. Of course, that means they are going to be a hot topic for the latest episode of Digital Dads TV.

Plus, as you know, I received this awesome package from HBO’s Game of Thrones and I had to show it off so that everyone could get a better feel for what it was about.

Watch Digital Dads TV live every Monday from 2-3 PM Eastern on The Pulse Network . We’d love for you to be part of the live shows.

Links to everything shown or talked about in the show.

Have someone you think would make a great guest or a service, product or service that you think would be right for our audience? Please e-mail us to let us know about it.



DDTV – Drew Bennett in Studio

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

February is almost over, Valentine’s Day has come to past and it is time to get things going again with a guest in studio for the latest episode of Digital Dads TV.

This week I had the pleasure of having my buddy Drew Bennett (aka Ben Sparks) in studio to talk about photography, kayaking and a few other things. If nothing else, watch the opening segment for a special surprise guest appearance from Fitarella to quickly discuss the importance of oral sex. Got your attention now? Watch and enjoy!

Don’t forget that Digital Dads TV is live every Monday from 2-3 PM Eastern on The Pulse Network so tune in and be part of the live show.

Links to everything shown or talked about in the show.

Have someone you think would make a great guest or a service, product or service that you think would be right for our audience? Please e-mail us to let us know about it.

Back in the Studio for Digital Dads TV

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

I’ve been on the road as part of the Content Rules Book Tour and last week’s planned show from Montreal ended up not being possible when my flight got delayed.

So, this episode of Digital Dads TV finds me in The Pulse Network studios for the first time in 2011. I had so much content that I wanted to catch everyone up on that I couldn’t squeeze in a guest. Enjoy the show and links to everything can be found below.

Don’t forget that Digital Dads TV is live every Monday from 2-3 PM Eastern on The Pulse Network so tune in and be part of the live show.

Links to everything shown or talked about in the show.

Have someone you think would make a great guest or a service, product or service that you think would be right for our audience? Please e-mail us to let us know about it.

The Art of Shaving

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

One of the first true signs of manhood is when you learn to shave. I have fond memories of using a toy razor when I was little right along side my Dad shaving and years later doing something similar with my son. It is one of the true guy things that every male does on a regular basis.

I’ve always wanted to get an old fashion shave. You know the type. Hot towels and a straight razor. Thick leather chairs and smooth music on the radio. The kind your grandfather probably did himself at the sink, but most of us have never tried.

So, when the team from The Art of Shaving asked me if I wanted to get the full experience for free while I was at Blogworld in Las Vegas how could I say no?

The Art of Shaving - Las Vegas

This particular location is located inside of Mandalay Place which is a massive row of shops connecting The Luxor and Mandalay Bay hotels.

I showed up early before they opened and was greeted at the door by Joe LaSpisa. I knew instantly that he was the type of guy that you want to give you a shave for the first time. He had an air of authority about him. You had no doubt that he knew what he was doing the moment he shook your hand and said “good morning.”

The Art of Shaving - Las Vegas

As Joe sat me down, I of course began chatting with him because I wanted to hear his story. Starting at the age of 13 in Italy, he has been a barber his whole life. His family left Sicily and moved to Chicago where he owned his own shop most of his life. Looking for a change they thought about going back to Italy, but ended up settling in Las Vegas where he has been shaving people like me for the last six years. His card reads “Master Barber” and after fifty years that is certainly fitting.

I thought I might be a bit nervous about having a complete stranger dragging a blade across my face, but as I laid there with a hot towel covering my face listening to Frank Sinatra over the sound system, I found myself completely relaxed.

Once my face was properly warmed up a shaving oil was applied that Joe promised me “makes all the difference and once you try it, you’ll never shave without it.” After that my face was lathered up with warmed shaving cream and the real fun began.

Instead of big banana strokes like you see in the movies, Joe shaved me with short, precise strokes. You could tell he had done this thousands of times and proceeded in the same way he had his whole life. After going through it all once, he lathered me up again for a second pass. He kept feeling, rubbing and checking to make sure that every spot was up to his standards before determining it done.

After a quick trim of the back of my neck and rubbing a bit of aftershave on my face, a freezing cold towel was put in place. I tell you that first thing in the morning was quite a shock as I still hadn’t had any coffee.

The Art of Shaving - Las Vegas

It may have been a free shave, but Joe didn’t treat it that way and I made sure to tip him appropriately. After all here was a man who had mastered his craft and he deserved to be rewarded for it.

The entire shave took about 45 minutes from start to finish and I’m not sure there is a more manly way to spend that time first thing in the morning (OK, I can think of one thing that trumps it *wicked grin*). If you ever have a chance to do this, don’t hesitate and do it. I’m still not sure why I waited this long to get something like this done.

Thank you to The Art of Shaving and to Joe for making a half asleep Friday morning a memory I’ll never forget.

Disclosure: http://cmp.ly/3

Who Needs a Dad Site?

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

I noticed over the past year or so that anytime I would blog about my family or kids on my personal blog that the posts would get more comments and more reactions then any other topic I might write about. Combine that with my passion for being a good father and the fact that I think Dads get a bum rap across all forms of media and that made me want to start this site.

Dylan and Emily Wedding

Of course the big reason is these two little people right here. This is my son Dylan and my daughter Emily. They are the reason I do a lot of things in life, but I wanted to do this to share my experiences with them and to share what I learn with you the reader. I certainly don’t have all the answers on how to be a good Dad or how best to raise kids, but I like to think that I am open to share what little I do know and I hope some of you get some good advice out of it.

The idea really started to come to a simmer last summer when I got thinking about how so many of my friends were what I called “Digital Dads.” We shared pictures of our kids online, uploaded home movies and spent a large chunk of time interacting in ways that our fathers never did. I wondered how this would change the next generation of kids. I wondered about this a lot.

I also work in the marketing world. I run a company called The Advance Guard and we work with brands big and small to build buzz, community and awareness around their products and services. We focus on building campaigns with disruptive technologies and social media. I also host a marketing podcast called Managing the Gray. Because of both of these I read about, plan and execute a variety of campaigns and I kept seeing Mommies getting all the attention while Dads sort of being forgotten about.

Now I know a lot of this is due to the fact that there are plenty of Dads involved in online media, but very few write about being a parent on a regular basis. At least I think this why most are ignored for the most part.

What I want out of this site is a way for three Dads (and maybe more some day) to share honest advice on being a Father in today’s world. The hope is to cover a variety of topics that any guy can use. We’ll be posting recipes, talking about sex, reviewing things and of course talking about raising our kids. No topic is off topic so expect some good variety in the coming weeks.

I’m a Digital Dad and damn proud of it. I hope you enjoy what you find here.

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