Tag: BRF

Inside Fatherhood drafts: Stay-at-home-dad Dave Hollins

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Dave looks well. Lean and fit, there’s no outward sign of the accident that changed his life.

But, after talking with him for a few hours, I come to realise how struggling with epilepsy has impacted on family life.

Dave [pictured above] found a new role as a pioneering stay-at-home dad. But, with his three boys now growing up and an empty nest looming, what does the future hold for the dedicated dad?

Dave was my third interviewee for Inside Fatherhood, my forthcoming book to be published by BRF in 2018.

Here’s a taste of his experience of fatherhood:

“I don’t see why a bloke can’t look after the kids — if you’ve got the time. There’s nothing a woman can do that a man can’t,” says Dave of his early days in the role.

But he does rue the way the image of the Fairy Liquid mother is still engrained in our collective consciousness as a society, an image further reinforced by the media.

Dave was first reluctant to join the local toddler groups when Jack was first born as he was put off by the reactions of the mothers around him. “It was 2003 and I was the only bloke in the room,” he says.

Do you have an experience of fatherhood to share? Contact me if you would be interviewed for the book.

Inside Fatherhood drafts: how Scott turned his life around

Scott and Emily

I found Scott through a contact.

He clearly has an amazing story to tell and is very eloquent in telling it.

Scott’s story is of a recovered heroin addict, who found that faith and fatherhood offered him a new way forward after years of self-destructive behaviour.

But, despite getting clean, finding someone to share his life with and having a baby daughter [pictured above with Scott], the little voice of doubt inside is never far away.

Scott was my second interviewee for Inside Fatherhood, my forthcoming book to be published by BRF in 2018.

Here’s a sample of what he has to say:

“When you first try heroin, people say it’s like being kissed by God himself. I still remember the feeling — even now. It was like being wrapped in cotton wool. All addicts spent their lives trying to recapture the feeling of that first hit. But, that night, since the first time I’d used heroin aged 20, I experienced that feeling of enveloped in love. Looking out the window the next morning, I knew I had stopped.”

Do you have an experience of fatherhood to share? Contact me if you would be interviewed for the book.