Daily Press (Sunday)

Worried about his kid’s role models

- Email tellme@washpost. com or write “Tell Me About It” c/o The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071

Adapted from an online discussion.

Dear Carolyn: I’m a widower with a nearly 6-year-old daughter; my wife died when “Emma” was 2. Since I started dating a few years ago, I’ve exclusivel­y dated men (I’m bisexual). It just seems less painful somehow.

Because of this, I’m worried that my daughter doesn’t have, and might never have, a close female presence in her everyday life. My parents cut me out of their life years ago because of their biphobia and most of my extended family went with them. My brother is the one great family presence in my life, but he isn’t married.

My mother-in-law was wonderful after my wife died, she provided day care and helped in raising Emma, but they moved away and now we only see them 4 or 5 times a year. Emma does FaceTime with them every week. She had a female kindergart­en teacher, and I signed her up for gymnastics at a place that has all women coaches.

There’s a family who moved in across the street that is a single mom and two daughters; one of the girls is about Emma’s age. Should I let the relationsh­ip develop in a natural fashion or should I be more proactive trying to arrange playdates and explaining things to the mom? Is there anything else I should be doing to provide Emma with a positive female role model? Should I ask Emma directly if she feels there is something lacking in her life, or will that just plant the idea in her head? — Widower Dad

Widower Dad: Kids need love. You love your kid. You are enough. She will be okay.

I think it’s great that you’re mindful of Emma’s having women in her life as examples, but these bonds must grow organicall­y. Sometimes even moms aren’t the right example for their kids, remember. Focus on the love and on giving your daughter the things she needs that are within your power to give, and trust the universe (and endless human variety) for the rest.

That might be hard for you given the twin traumas of losing your family and your wife — so maybe a more productive place for your energy right now is to look into therapy, if you haven’t done so already.

Dear Carolyn: I recently bit the bullet to enable my husband to do an out-oftown assignment he wanted to do. It meant a lot of extra solo work with the kids and housework, all while working myself.

The thing is, his thank you has all been stuff he gets to do too, like baseball games. Don’t get me wrong, I like those things, and it’s not like he got me a bowling ball with “Homer” on it, but it rings a little hollow. Is this a mean thought to have? — Favor Returnee

Dear Favor Returnee:

Figure out what you want, and then say, “This is what I would like as a thank you.” The rest is just various life stages of resentment.

If there are deeper roots to that resentment, though, then you’ll need to address the bigger imbalance. And soon.

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