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V. Nicholas Gerasimou's Side of the Fence

Tag Archives: parenting

Overcoming Dad Guilt: A Parent’s Journey

30 Friday Jan 2026

Posted by Daily Devotions of a Dad in Faith, parenting, Advice, Self-Help, Do It Your Self, single parent

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parenting, Parents, family, life, love, mental-health

Being a parent is a strange, confusing path to navigate. You live your life, as good or as bad as it may have been. You experience your childhood. Your personality is wet clay and through the years it is shaped by each encounter you have. Every interaction, every failure, and every victory slowly guides and molds who and what you will be as an adult. The problem is we can only look back after years of reflection and self-analysis and see the path we were on. In that light we can see why we do many of the things we do now as adults. For better or worse.

Those of us with trauma or abuse in the footnotes of our story carry a great deal of unrealized pain in our hearts. That pain, or anger, or fear that we keep locked away always has a way seeping out and making a mess of things when we aren’t paying attention. When the warden who guards our trauma steps outside for a cigarette, we momentarily lose control. The narrative slips away and we lose all sense of what the long game is, which is raising a well-adjusted child into a functional, loved adult. Can’t see the forest through the trees.

That spilled drink. The mess, after the mess that you’ve cleaned up for fifth time that day. The new hole in the drywall. The disrespectful retort and side-eyed glance that triggers your ire. Whatever it may be, we, “Pop off”. We, “Fly off the handle.” We, (as my ten-year-old recently said) “Go all Red Hulk on me,”. Whatever analogy you want to use, we let anger and frustration get the better of us.

I say this not as a cautionary tale, or a “How To” on being the perfect parent, but more-so as a verbal hug and pat on the back to those of us who struggle with the soul-crushing guilt we drown in after we realize that the thing we said, or the way we reacted, or the tone we used was One-Hundred-Percent an echo of the way we were treated as children, and a part of us is still stuck back in our childhood home absorbing that abuse.

Speaking from personal experience, when I lay in bed some nights and preform the autopsy of my day, there are times when the mist that clouds my thoughts thins enough for me to see through my bias and knee-jerkingly hot-headed reactions to things, and I see myself… through their eyes. Through the eyes of my two young sons. I am ten again and looking up at my father, his face red with frustration. The volume of his voice shaking the picture frames on the wall as he fights his own demons. I see the man my mother married after my parents divorced rearing his arm back at me with a closed fist, his eyes swimming with hate.

In those moments of quiet retrospection, I hate myself.

I’d be lying if I said I haven’t gone into their room long after they’re asleep, tears in my eyes, and silently promise them to do better tomorrow. To be the Dad they deserve. To remember what it was like to be ten, and understand they are doing their best and it’s my job to keep them on the path.

It can be hard to pull myself out of the shame spiral I fall into. The ‘Dad guilt’. I second guess every thing I said and did, and then catastrophize about how many years of potential therapy they will need to process the damage I’ve hypothetically done with my reactions. I do yell at times. I do get upset. I look at all the happy, smiling Peace-Gurus on Instagram preaching the gospel of gentle parenting and question what the heck I’m doing wrong. Why can’t I achieve the same tranquil results they promise if I simply take a deep breath, use a calm monotone cadence to my voice, and tell my feral wolverine of a child to find his center and show me his big feeling with words? Let them live their truth.

I’ll tell you why, it’s because I know how hard, and evil, and painful the world can be. I know just how brutal and uncaring people are. How cruel the broken human heart is underneath the façade people paint over their faces to hide the truth. I know that if I don’t prepare them for THAT world I am doing them a disservice as well. Kicking them out of the plane with no parachute.

So, I’m trapped in a paradox.

On one hand, I want to protect them from all of the horror and pain I experienced as a child. I want to shield them from the damaging disfunction I lived through. I want to be there for them and for them to be confident that they can come to me for anything and I will always answer. An unmoving constant in the chaos of their lives they can always depend on. True North. I want to be safe.

But, I also want to teach them respect, and empathy, and morality. I need them to understand that actions have consequences. As harsh as my reactions may be at times they are always measured. They know that deep down as upset as I seem there is always love beneath it. As scary as I can be, the world is worse. Some thing I always tell them is, “The world does not love you. The world doesn’t care about you. I do.” I am treating them with (at times) brutal expectations and high standards because I know that the world will as well, but once they leave my nest there will be no safety net.

That’s the hardest part of all of this. Finding the delicate balance of tender love and brutal discipline. Holding them when they cry. Listening to them express their feelings and validating those emotions so they that know they matter, while drawing a line in the sand where they can expect a slap to the back of the head when they cross it.

Young boys are like pack animals. In Jurassic Park, Sattler asks Muldoon if the fences surrounding the Velociraptor enclosure are electrified, and Muldoon replies, “That’s right, but they never attack the same place twice. They were testing the fences for weaknesses, systematically”. They test boundaries to see what reaction they get. They want to see what they can get away with. What’s acceptable and what will get you yelled at.

It’s my job to not let my insecurities and trauma get in the way of seeing that for what it is and to react with measured discipline. The problem is, I’m not perfect. I am flawed man and I fail. All the time. I get irritated and overwhelmed. As a single Dad I am constantly playing zone defense. I’m outnumbered.

What I’ve learned through years of trial and error is to do something I try to instill in my boys. Responsibility. I am no hypocrite. Owning up to your mistakes. When I fly off the handle, I always take time to rectify it. I will sit them down and apologize. I will explain what I did wrong. How the way I reacted was more than what the situation justified. I have even given them the permission and authority to call me on it as well. I try to explain what I was feeling and why, and If I overacted I ask them for forgiveness. This is a pattern I am constantly trying to instill in them. To practice using in their squabbles about the X-Box or what cartoon to watch on Netflix. Always with varying results.

I guess my point is, Keep showing up. We will stumble and fall, and at times feel like utter failures. Like I said at the outset, being a parent is a strange, confusing path to navigate. Love your kids, and keep doing your best. If they don’t see it now, they will one day.

Nick Gerasimou is a Southern California based author and educator, and Jiujitsu Black Belt under Juliano Prado.

Copyright: © V. Nicholas Gerasimou 2026

All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means whatsoever without express written permission from the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. Please refer all pertinent questions to the author.

The joys of dining out with young children: A cautionary tale of woe.

31 Monday Aug 2015

Posted by Daily Devotions of a Dad in parenting

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Tags

parenting, Parents

IMG_0820

Dining out with two children under the age of three is… stressful. No, that’s not quite right.  It’s more like trying to defuse a bomb set on a short timer, that is pressure and impact sensitive, while wearing a blindfold, during an earthquake…  Yah, that’s better.

I asked my (almost) three-year-old son Nixon, “What do you want for dinner?”

His reply, “Pancakes!”

“You can’t have pancakes for dinner…” I reply in my “Dad tone”.

“PANCAKES! AND COOKIE ICE CREAM!”

I stood there looking at my son and I have to say I was impressed by his bravado and defiant determination to basically have cake for dinner. I’ll take credit for the stubbornness in his DNA.

“Okay, fine,” I say. (To the pancakes, not the ice cream. He’s not that good.) Breakfast for dinner it is.

As an aside we had our house tented for termites three days ago and just got back in. Due to the poison that was pumped through our home we had to get rid of our food. So in the moment, where do you get a quick, cheap, breakfast for dinner meal? You guessed it, Dennys!

So, back to my original statement. Dining out with two children under the age of three is… stressful. What many people who don’t have children (Or are so far removed from having young children that they’ve simply forgotten what it was like) fail to realize is that when you are dining out with young children you are on the CLOCK.

I sit in the car, looking at the front door of Dennys. Just taunting me. “Hey, come on in,” it says,  “Have a meal with your kids. Relax. It’ll be easy.”

No. No it won’t, Dennys. You’re a big fat liar, Dennys. I look at both boys in the rear-view mirror. They’re restless. Uneasy. Horizon before a big storm uneasy. I can sense the crankiness lying just below the surface, like a hungry crocodile waiting for an unassuming wildebeest to take a sip from a murky riverbank.

I get them out of the car and we start to walk the green mile towards the restaurant.

“Dead man walkin’,” yells an elderly man in plaid pants and red suspenders as we pass him on our way in. Not really, he actually said hello and held the door open for us. We are quickly sat in a booth, the high chair is disinfected with wipes and filled with a fussy ten-month-old with a very short attention span.

Now, as soon as butts hit vinyl, time becomes very precious. Every moment counts. Seconds matter, people! Seriously. My children have an about (depending on the time of day, alignment of the planets, and how close we are from, or coming up on a nap) a twenty, to twenty-two and a half minute shelf-life in a restaurant. Seconds… count.

“Hi how are we today?” “Oh look little ones! How old are they?” “Would you like to start with an appetizer? Drinks?”

Things all well-meaning servers say. She doesn’t sense my urgency. She fails to see the stress on my face. By this point my oldest, Nixon, has taken the saltshaker and poured the entirety of its contents into a powdery pyramid in the middle of the table. As he laughs at his granulated masterpiece he kicks off both of his flip-flops and tells me he has to go pee-pee (he’s potty trained). I look at our server with a defeated sigh and tell her I’d like an iced tea, water and milk for Nixon, and she turns away to get the drinks. Uhh-uh. Get back here!

“NO WAIT!” I yell in a hushed, inside-voice church tone. “I need (not want, or would like… NEED) to order. She looks slightly put out that I’m throwing off her well oiled Dennys order taking routine but she begrudgingly obliges.

Lincoln starts to scream.

I put a spoon in his hand to divert his attention. He gags himself… badly. Its gross.

Nixon informs me that he will only eat “Cookie Ice Cream”, over, and over, and over.

I order pancakes and eggs for my son. He hears me order and promptly offers his protest in the form of a high-pitched squeal that only dogs and bats can hear (Just kidding, everyone in the restaurant heard it! Ha ha… ha… *laughter slowly fizzles out into an embarrassed chuckle… then tears).

Lincoln throws the spoon he’s been gagging himself with towards our server. She simply looks at it on the floor, then back at me. I sigh and blink for a really long time.

“Ill be right back with your drinks.”

Ten minutes in.

Nixon starts to cry.

Lincoln, not wanting to be left out joins in.

I turn to little Link to try to entertain him and Nixon takes the opportunity to grab hold of the sugar packet container near him and he makes it rain.

He laughs. Then screams because he wants to get up. I don’t let him, which only serves to push him to find more creative methods of escape. What’s that you say? Why yes, he did try to wiggle under the table. I hook him with one of my legs as I take an entire napkin out of Lincoln’s mouth. Where did he get a napkin? How?

Sixteen minutes in.

I look up. A rush of hope flows over me. Food! Our glorious food!

We eat, quickly. Nixon chokes on a pancake. Lincoln paints himself in eggs and the blended peas I brought for him.

We finish. Our server takes FOR-EV-ER to bring our check.

Time to leave. Thirty minutes in.

I pick up Lincoln and brush and wipe him off as best I can whilst blocking Nixon in the booth with my hip. He slips past and starts doing hot-laps around the room, garnering cheers from many of the elderly patrons, which only serves to excite him more. He turns on the afterburners.

While clamping Lincoln to my hip, I chase my feral child down. I pick him up by the waist band of his pants and carry him extended from my face like one would hold a rabid ferret, to the cash register. I pay and Nixon sees the “Claw Grabber” toy machine by the front door. Hatred flows through my veins and I think very bad thoughts about the manager that thought it would be a good idea to put that cursed machine so close to my escape route.

He. Loses. His. Ever-loving. Mind.

Scream.

Chase.

Wrestle.

Drag.

We’re outside.

Squirm.

Cry.

Kick Dad in the chest.

Arch unnaturally like they’re possessed by a demon as to make it impossible to buckle the bottom clasp.

Click. Click. Click.

The boys are locked in their car seats. I shut the door and just stand in the silence. Eye’s closed I just inhale and soak in the nothingness of outside. I may have cried a little, I’m not sure. When I open my eyes I am looking directly at a middle-aged couple that are caught mid-laugh. They are laughing at me. The man gives me a knowing nod and they head into the restaurant.

I’m not sure what the point of this story was now that I’m at the end of it. I guess maybe just some comfort for people out there that no, you’re not the only one who’s kids act like that. I feel your pain, and I’m sure many of you out there can relate.

And maybe some advice for those in the hospitality industry. If you see a parent flying solo with young children, give the guy a break and expedite things along. Twenty-Two and half minutes fly’s by pretty quickly.

Nick Gerasimou is a father of two, author, blogger, and teacher based out of South Orange County, Ca.

Copyright 2019 V. Nicholas Gerasimou

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