I think this graph is factually out of proportion. Come on fella. Is that sliver really 1/365? PS I can dye one of your tee shirts green and write "Better than Irish" on it with a marker if you like.
Are you longing for a really cool pink shirt on Valentine's Day? And something really brilliantly red white and blue on Independence Day? And a tie with a turkey on it for November and Santa on it for December? Even better, a tie with a little button that plays Jingle Bells? (Or is it just teachers who go this far?)
The name of this blog is a political statement about fatherhood. Regardless of the progress toward gender equality that has occurred over the last several decades, one stereotype persists and may be getting worse: moms are good parents and dads are incompetent boobs who sometimes babysit. Poppycock, I say. Or an excuse for dads who would like to be viewed as numskulls so that they don't have to parent their kids. Dads are parents too, and I know some who are very good at it.
I'm neither a stay-at-home dad nor do I work full time. I work part time, and I'm the primary parent for the foreseeable future. The primary competent parent, I hope it is not presumptuous to say.
3 comments:
I think this graph is factually out of proportion. Come on fella. Is that sliver really 1/365?
PS I can dye one of your tee shirts green and write "Better than Irish" on it with a marker if you like.
Really? Brilliant social commentary like this, and you're getting out your micrometer to quibble with the proportions?
My coworker has all of the good ones. Her best: "Irish you'd buy me a beer.
Are you longing for a really cool pink shirt on Valentine's Day? And something really brilliantly red white and blue on Independence Day? And a tie with a turkey on it for November and Santa on it for December? Even better, a tie with a little button that plays Jingle Bells? (Or is it just teachers who go this far?)
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