1. Cherish your time with them. One thing that will amaze you is how quickly the years will fly. My oldest daughter is 15, which means I have three short years with her before she leaves the nest. Thatās not enough time! The time you have with them is short and precious ā make the most of it. Spend as much time as you can with them, and make it quality, loving time. Try to be present as much as possible while youāre with them too ā donāt let your mind drift away, as they can sense that. 2. It gets easier. Others may have different experiences, but Iāve always found the first couple of months the most difficult, when the baby is brand new and wants to feed at all hours of the night and you often have sleepless nights and walk around all day like zombies. It gets easier, as they get a regular sleeping pattern. The first couple of years are also a lot more demanding than later years, and as they hit middle school they become almost functioning, independent adults. It gets easier, trust me. 3. Donāt look at anything as āmomā duties ā share responsibilities. While there are a lot of good things from our grandparentsā day that we should bring back, the traditional dad/mom split of parenting duties isnāt one of them. Some men still look at certain duties as āmomā duties, but donāt be one of those dads. Get involved in everything, and share the load with your baby mama. Changing diapers, giving baths, getting them dressed, even feeding them (you can give them breast milk in a bottle). 4. Love conquers all. This one sounds corny, but it should be at the center of your dad operating philosophy: above all, show your children love. When youāre upset, instead of yelling, show them love. When they are upset, show them love. When they least expect it, show them love. Everything else is just details. 5. Kids like making decisions. While it is easier to be an authoritarian parent, what youāre teaching your child is to submit to orders no matter what. Instead, teach your child to make decisions, and heāll grow up much more capable ā and happier. Kids like freedom and decisions, just like any other human beings. Your job is to allow them to make decisions, but within the parameters that you set. Give them a choice between two healthy breakfasts, for example, rather than allowing them to eat a bowl of sugar if they choose to. 6. A little patience goes a long way. As a parent, I know as well as anyone how easy it is to lose your patience and temper. However, allowing yourself to react in anger or frustration is not the best thing for your child, and you must remember that. That means you need to take a deep breath, or a walk, when you start to lose your patience. Practice patience with your child and your relationship, and your child, will benefit over the long run. 7. Sense of humor required. There will be times when your child does something that might make you blow your lid ā writing in crayon all over the walls is a good one, as is dumping some kind of liquid on your couch, or sneaking out and taking your car to meet up with friends. While you need to teach your child not to do these things, itās better to just laugh at the humor in the situation. Iāve learned to do this more often, and it helps me keep my sanity. 8. Read to them, often. Whether youāre a reader or not, reading to your children (from the time theyāre babies onward) is crucial. It gets them in the habit of reading, and prepares them for a lifetime of learning. It gives you some special time together, and become a tradition your child will cherish. I read with all my children, from my 2-year-old and my 15-year-old, and love every word we read together. See my list of Best All-Time Childrenās Books. 9. Donāt be the absent dad. The biggest mistake that dads make are not being there for their children. Always, always set aside time each day and each week for your children. Donāt let anything violate this sacred time. And at those big moments in your childās life ā a soccer game, a music recital, a science fair ā do you very best to be there. It means the world. 10. Let them play. Kids really develop through playing ā and while it might seem obvious, you should allow them as much free play as possible. Thatās aside from TV and video games (see below), aside from reading, aside from anything structured or educational. Just let them play, and make things up, and have fun. 11. Spark their imagination. Free play, mentioned above, is the best way to develop the imagination, but sometimes you can provide a little spark. Play with your kids, creating forts, dressing up as ninjas, role playing, imagining youāre explorers or characters in a movie or book ⦠the possibilities are endless, and youāll have as much fun as they will. 12. Limit TV and video games. Iām not saying you have to be Amish or anything, but too much of this type of entertainment keeps them from doing more imaginative playing, from reading, from getting outside to exercise. I recommend an hour a day of āmedia timeā, but you can find the amount that works for you and your family. 13. Learn the āfirm noā. While Iām all for giving kids the freedom to choose, and for free play, and lots of other freedoms, there should be limits. Parents who donāt set boundaries are going to have children with behavior problems, who have problems when they grow up. And if itās not good to always say āyesā, itās also not good for the child to say ānoā at first ⦠and then cave in when they throw a temper tantrum or beg and plead. Teach them that your ānoā is firm, but only say ānoā when you really feel that itās a boundary you need to set. 14. Model good behavior. Itās one thing to tell you child what she should do, but to say one thing and do another just ruins the message. In fact, the real lesson your child will learn is what you do. Your child is always watching you, to learn appropriate behavior. Excessive drinking or smoking or drug use by parents, for example, will become ingrained in the childās head. Bad manners, inconsiderate behavior, sloppy habits, anger and a negative attitude, laziness and greed ⦠all these behaviors will rub off on your child. Instead, model the behavior youād like your child to learn. 15. Treat their mother with respect, always. Some fathers can be abusive toward their spouse, and that will lead to a cycle of abuse when the child grows up. But beyond physical or verbal abuse, thereās the milder sin against the childās mother: disrespectful behavior. If you treat your childās mother with disrespect, your child will not only learn that behavior, but grow up with insecurities and other emotional problems. Treat your childās mother with respect at all times. 16. Let them be themselves. Many parents try to mold their child into the person they want their child to be ⦠even if the childās personality doesnāt fit that mold. Instead, instill good behaviors and values in your child, but give your child freedom to be himself. Children, like all humans, have quirks and different personalities. Let those personalities flourish. Love your child for who he is, not who you want him to be. 17. Teach them independence. From an early age, teach your children to do things for themselves, gradually letting them be more independent as they grow older. While it may seem difficult and time-consuming to teach your child to do something that you could do much faster yourself, itās worth it in the long run, for the childās self-confidence and also in terms of how much you have to do. For example, my kids know how to wash their own dishes, help clean the house, clean their rooms, fold and put away laundry, shower, groom and dress themselves, and much more ā saving a lot of time and work for me. Even my 2-year-old knows how to pick things up when sheās told to do so. 18. Stand together with mom. Itās no good to have one parent say one thing, just to have the other contradict that parent. Instead, you and mom should be working together as a parenting team, and should stand by each otherās decisions. That said, itās important that you talk out these decisions beforehand, so that you donāt end up having to support a decision you strongly disagree with.