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Portland, OR
USA

It’s my joy and honor to equip dads with practical tools to better dial into their daughters’ hearts.

With 25 years of experience as a licensed professional counselor and over 35 years working directly with teens and young adult women. Dr. Michelle Watson brings practical wisdom to dads with daughters of all ages.

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Your Daughter Needs You to Hold Her Safe in the Storm

Michelle Watson

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Hey Dad...If you’re like most fathers, you’re ready for a reprieve from the social distancing-coronavirus outbreak quarantine season. And because we’re all emotionally taxed, we find ourselves longing for the day when our routines and rhythms will be re-established.

I want to encourage you today to stay focused on your goal of dialing in to your daughter’s heart with intention, patience, love, and grace through the entirety of this pandemic. Keep your eyes fixed on the bigger picture, which is to invest in ways that yield lasting dividends with a long-term return (which is a fancy way of saying that you can use this time to create forever memories where you bond more and grow closer during this crisis).

That said, here’s a story that I believe will inspire you anew today. 

If it’s true that a picture is worth a thousand words, then this one is valued at a million.

When I first saw this photo on Facebook, it immediately melted my heart. There’s just something about seeing a daddy protecting his little girl that has a way of reaching in and touching the deepest place in all of us.

 
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I think for those of us who are daughters, we project ourselves into this photo and wish we were the one being held safely in the arms of a dad like this. Even when we’re all grown up.

And if this picture itself isn’t enough, here’s what mom Sarah included as her tagline alongside it:

We got caught in a huge thunderstorm and flash flood warnings alerted on our phones. Addie was the only kiddo not covered in the stroller, but she loved getting drenched. She keeps talking about it to Tom, "We were in the rain together and you held me." #nycsummer #dctrip

Oh my. Have there ever been more profound words spoken by a three-year old? 

"Dad, we were in the rain together and you held me."

The storm itself didn’t scare her.

Being unprepared for the crazy weather conditions didn’t prove to be too much for her.

Even standing on the unpredictable streets of our nation’s capital didn’t overwhelm her.

Why? Because her daddy held her. In the rain. Through the storm. 

Dad, I know how much you loved the days when you held your baby girl tight as she was scared. You still tear up when you recall how she’d come running to you with her arms outstretched and wanted only you to comfort her. As you reached down to pick her up you felt like your heart would burst with love as you held her close. Back then you would tell her that everything would be all right because you were there. 

But then she grew up and didn’t seem to need you as much. And it left you feeling a bit lost. You wondered how were you going to save the day if she found her own umbrella and no longer came running to you when her skies snapped, crackled, and popped. 

It was then that you packed up your superhero cape. But along with that a part of you shriveled up. You assumed that now that you weren’t being called to active duty in the same way you once were that now you were unnecessary.

Please hear me:  

Dad, we always need you. 

You are always necessary. 

Whether near or far.

Without you we struggle to feel safe in the downpour.

No matter what age we are.

The reality is that even though we now are navigating storms on our own, we inwardly wish you could be there to shield us and do the heavy lifting when the big bad wolf comes to huff and puff and blow our house down. It would be easier to run to you every single time something hard hits out of nowhere. But we know we won’t grow up if we do that. 

At some point we have to stand strong in the storms by ourselves.

And you can rest assured that we’ve taken what you’ve taught us and we forever hold it inside. All that courage you’ve instilled is now a part of who we are.

The thing is that our storms just look a little different now than they did when we were little. But they’re storms just the same. And we still need you to hold us tight, but with a bit more room in between us. Let me explain with a few more clarifying details.

Dad, you hold us safe in the storm and save the day when you:

  • come home every night, making us feel safe and cared for

  • provide for us and work hard to do so

  • love us unconditionally even when we’re prickly and crunchy

  • tell us that a B is just as good as an A because we did our best
    (believe it or not, we’re harder on ourselves than you can imagine and we need you to ally with the part of us that tried, not the part of us that was less than perfect.  Disappointing you hurts more than the low grade)

  • spend time playing with us and doing life together

  • teach us how to drive without getting frustrated with us through the learning process

  • wipe our tears and tell us that he was a stupid boy who doesn’t know what he’s losing

  • help us fill out our FAFSA with patience and attention to detail

  • show mercy and grace at times when a consequence is deserved

  • make amends when you’ve said or done something that doesn’t align with your heart toward us

  • let us feel all the feels in the midst of this coronavirus outbreak when we don’t know what’s ahead and worry about whether we’ll get to finish the school year with our friends and do all the fun things to celebrate a job well done

The list goes on but you get the gist. 

The truth is that we need you to hold us safe in the storm, whether the storm is on inside of us as the sky is falling or whether the downpour rages around us. When you’re calm and patient and loving and kind through it all, you are our safe haven.

Ask your daughter today what kind of hold she needs from you right now while we’re all feeling the effects of this international storm together. 

This story above is of a daughter who feels loved and secure in her daddy's love. How I long for the day when every daughter will know that her dad will hold her safely in the storm. 

 p.s. And just so you know, Tom, the dad in this picture told me: I will never forget that moment as long as I live.