Debunking myths of Text by KAT FARRELL
G
Tackling stereotypes and addressing the issues fatherless girls face
oogle says fatherless daughters are teen mothers, poverty-stricken youth, substance abusers, promiscuous, insecure, low achievers, inmates, dysfunctional, and depressed. Could it be possible to define what the National Public Radio says is 39% of students 18 and under in a few words? Growing up and getting curious about how my fatherâs absence affected me led me down a rabbit hole. I read what online pages said about children without a father and started to wonder if it was all true. I knew I didnât fit those labels, and talking to another high schooler at Palo Alto High School made me realize I wasnât the only one. One Paly student told me she spent the first five years of her life with her father in South Africa, until her parents got divorced and her mother moved with her to America in search of a good education. Her father had properties to attend to in Africa, but with a visa, he was able to visit every three months. That was until COVID-19 hit and travel was limited. She hasnât seen him since January 2020, and it has taken a toll on her mental health. Social media has added to the difficulties this source confronts as a fatherless teen, with the growing popularity of the term âdaddy issues.â Daddy issues is used to describe a girl who has a poor or non-existent relationship with her father, and is often glamorized. âPeople want to
24 May 2022
make having parental problems a trend and something thatâs cool,â this Paly student said. âI think itâs really weird.â Terms like âdaddy issuesâ create a stereotype that associates negative traits with the absence of a father. This further contributes to the misre presentation of fatherless girls, and diminishes the importance of the real issues these women face. âWhen you come back to a home missing half of the two people who literally made you itâs weird,â she said. âIt feels unstable; it doesnât feel good. It feels like you donât have a home to go to.â This instability has been a factor in her ability to find healthy relationships. She says thereâs a lot of anxiety and dread that comes with facing a romantic relationship, though that does not take away from her desire to be in one. âYou want that person to be your support system, but since you didnât really grow up with
Art by LAUREN WONG
a stable support system, you donât know if that person could be good enough,â she said. âIf you need to go to them can they actually be stable and be there for you? It just feels like they canât.â Struggling with insecure attachment in relationships with men is common in women who grow up without a present father. In âInsecure Attachment and Emotional Distress,â published by Sherri L. Turner, from the department of Educational Psychology in Minnesota, and five other researchers, Turner states, âThose who are avoidantly attached often avoid forming relationships with others under the presumption that they will not get their needs met.â Children who grow up without a father have the ability to flourish. This source says she plans on going to college to major in computer science. In âAbsent Fathers,â a research article published by the British Psychologist Society, Sarah E. Hill states, âAlthough research suggests that pa-