Month: December 2025

This Father Should Never Have Needed a Lawyer: Baby Chance and Georgia’s Outdated Legitimation Laws

This case exposes what many fathers in Georgia already know. The legitimation process does not merely clarify parentage; it withholds parental rights until proven in court. It assumes absence instead of responsibility. It treats biological fatherhood as conditional rather than inherent.

The danger of that assumption becomes painfully clear when tragedy strikes.

How the 2024 Squatters Act Continues to Impact Fathers and Families in Georgia

Housing remains at the top of Georgia’s challenges, especially in Atlanta, where rents rise faster than wages and where fathers with limited income face shrinking options. The Squatters Act didn’t create this reality, but it did create new urgency.

The Force Still Moves: One Year Without Lawrence Wilbon

Lawrence Wilbon reminded us that love is a verb. Faith, he’d say, was something you walked out with your boots on the ground. And from lifting fathers to strengthening families, from building systems to planting seeds, Lawrence gave everything he had, without asking anything in return.

Pair of hands resting on a pregnant belly in the shape of a heart

A Dad’s First Big Assignment: Supporting Mom Through Pregnancy, Delivery, and Postpartum

When fathers learn, plan, advocate, and rest with intention, moms recover better, babies thrive, and the whole house breathes easier. 

Show up. Ask questions. Carry the load you can carry. Guard the rest and watch the signs. Put the helplines in your phone. And remember, your baby doesn’t need a perfect dad — your baby needs you, present and prepared.

A father and a mother talking with their daughter around a table

The Top Five Traits of Successful Co-Parenting Relationships

Co-parenting is one of the most significant tests of maturity, love, and patience that two adults can undertake. It requires shifting the focus from what ended between the parents to what must continue for the child.

Over time, through thousands of conversations with fathers and families, we’ve seen what works and what doesn’t. The five elements detailed here consistently stand out as markers of successful co-parenting relationships.

The Missing Conversation Between Masculinity, Fatherhood, and Public Health

For nearly two decades, we’ve worked to reframe fatherhood not as a social category separate from public and community health but as its foundation. When fathers thrive, families thrive, and when families thrive, entire neighborhoods stabilize.

We can’t separate men’s health from fatherhood any more than we can separate a heartbeat from a body. The emotional, physical, and spiritual wellness of men is a public health issue. It influences how children are raised, how relationships survive, and how communities heal.

A Responsible Fatherhood Field Response to the New Executive Order on Child Welfare

The “Fostering the Future for American Children and Families” Executive Order’s emphasis on improving data systems, accelerating permanency, and strengthening partnerships creates an opening to bring fathers and paternal kin out of the margins. This is strategic. When fathers are engaged early, when their families are considered as viable kinship placements, and when agencies have the training to do this well, children experience less trauma, fewer moves, and faster pathways to safety and permanency.