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Father is a verb. - Father's Day and Father Christmas have tried to convince us, - but don't – be - fooled: You can, may or will father, depending on your mood. For father is a verb. It only works in the transitive. you can't father alone, only in relationship. It doesn't resent hospital trips, and offers wrap-around comfort when a partnership splits. It's touch-line volume drowns out all rivals. And belly laughs come standard with jokes on recycle. (insert dad joke here) Yes, father is a verb. It's something that you do, despite the hour, it drives right on through the night when life’s gone sour. It'll hammer ten fingernails to get the job done. It will dance, heedless of decorum forgetting reputation (with an ill-suited hat on). It turns manliness into awesome-men-ness, It tempers strength with a dose of gentleness, yes father is a verb. Be sure, whoever you are, it works in the singular: I can father; You can father     (and I'm not talking *** here;      that mostly needs a partner.) But also, -  it works in the plural - we can father; and they can father, because, you see, in this village it’s a joint activity: we father (and we mother) collaboratively. It works best in the present tense, happening now, not "later!". - It can be said in a gentle voice or something - even - quieter. sometimes active: directive, protecting. but often responsive: just sitting, listening. ... holding, and hugging. It responds to need, you see, but works best proactively, works great sacrificially. More specifically, in the end it’s a doing word not a noun to be worn like some tilted crown It's not some post-coitus reflexive honorific It's a feat way beyond a sudden beget. Father’s not some title that you necessarily deserve. It's one that's sorely earned. Please believe me - that’s right, you heard, father is a present continuous, long lifetime of a verb.
0
Jul 17, 2022
Jul 17, 2022 at 11:28 AM UTC
Father is a verb - 2022
Father is a verb. - Father's Day and Father Christmas have tried to convince us, - but don't – be - fooled: You can, may or will father, depending on your mood. For father is a verb. It only works in the transitive. you can't father alone, only in relationship. It doesn't resent hospital trips, and offers wrap-around comfort when a partnership splits. It's touch-line volume drowns out all rivals. And belly laughs come standard with jokes on recycle. (insert dad joke here) Yes, father is a verb. It's something that you do, despite the hour, it drives right on through the night when life’s gone sour. It'll hammer ten fingernails to get the job done. It will dance, heedless of decorum forgetting reputation (with an ill-suited hat on). It turns manliness into awesome-men-ness, It tempers strength with a dose of gentleness, yes father is a verb. Be sure, whoever you are, it works in the singular: I can father; You can father     (and I'm not talking *** here;      that mostly needs a partner.) But also, -  it works in the plural - we can father; and they can father, because, you see, in this village it’s a joint activity: we father (and we mother) collaboratively. It works best in the present tense, happening now, not "later!". - It can be said in a gentle voice or something - even - quieter. sometimes active: directive, protecting. but often responsive: just sitting, listening. ... holding, and hugging. It responds to need, you see, but works best proactively, works great sacrificially. More specifically, in the end it’s a doing word not a noun to be worn like some tilted crown It's not some post-coitus reflexive honorific It's a feat way beyond a sudden beget. Father’s not some title that you necessarily deserve. It's one that's sorely earned. Please believe me - that’s right, you heard, father is a present continuous, long lifetime of a verb.
a reworked version of a 2017 poem
stevejeff
Written by
Jul 17, 2022
Jul 17, 2022 at 11:28 AM UTC
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