Tag: raising children

What Griff’s New Book Reveals About Mothers, Sons, and the Journey from Boyhood to Manhood

At the center of the book is a simple but provocative idea: Mothers can raise sons, but mothers are not men. That statement will make some readers uncomfortable, but Griff leans into the discomfort with humor, compassion, and honesty.

Instead of attacking mothers, Griff honors mothers. His book is a love letter to his own mother, a woman who raised him with toughness, wisdom, sarcasm, resilience, and survival instincts after navigating life without the protection of a present father herself.

Griff reminds readers that many mothers are not trying to replace fathers because they want to. Many are trying because they feel they have no other option.

The Only Magic in This Atlanta Hawks–Magic City Collaboration Is the Disappearance of Morality

From a programmatic perspective at Fathers Incorporated, we spend our days encouraging fathers to model respect for women, to support mothers, and to raise children who understand the value of dignity and healthy relationships. 

This partnership pushes against that work, and the contradiction deserves to be named.

Dads, Let’s Hold the Line for Our Sons Until They Can Hold It for Themselves

One of the best gifts a father can give a son is a stable place to land. A place where the boy does not have to earn love with his stats. A place where he can be honest about fear and still feel respected. A place where he can hear, “I’m proud of your effort,” and also hear, “Now let’s get back to work.” These combinations are how boys learn that love is not fragile and standards are not cruel.

So what does encouragement look like in practice, beyond good intentions? Here’s what dads and others can do to instill belief and confidence in our boys.

Dads, Let’s Build Our Daughters’ Confidence Long Before They Call Her “Too Much”

The charge is clear. Guard her voice. Protect her becoming. Reinforce her identity. Challenge her without humiliating her. Love her without requiring perfection.

If we are not intentional, girls will edit themselves before anyone else has to, and culture is quick to condemn and confuse them. We tell girls to be confident, then critique how that looks. We tell them to lead, then call them bossy. We tell them to speak up, then call them loud. We tell them to be bold, then ask them to soften their tone.

But a different future is possible.

Parents and two children sitting on a couch looking at the camera and smiling

Gentle Warriors Academy Receives $6.5M Grant to Strengthen Fathers, Families, and Communities in Georgia

The grant award expands GWA’s ability to equip fathers, couples, and co-parents with the skills, coaching, and support that build resilient families — improving child well-being, enhancing relationship health, and advancing long-term household stability.

How Fathers Can Embrace Emotional Intelligence to Raise Resilient and Empathetic Children

Emotional intelligence (EI), the ability to recognize, understand, and manage one’s emotions and the emotions of others, is a cornerstone of this transformation. For fathers, embracing EI is not only an avenue to deeper connection with their children but also a way to equip them with the skills to navigate life’s complexities with resilience, empathy, and self-awareness.