It’s difficult to adequately describe the experience of fatherhood in words. It’s wonderful. It’s stressful. It’s a job that begins at conception and goes…till the day you pass away.
Most first-time fathers experience tremendous changes in their self-identity, their life, their jobs, their relationships with their female partners, and their relationship with their parents. It seems to sense that practically all fathers struggle greatly with fatherhood.
Despite many difficulties, dads do their utmost to protect their children and bring them the most beautiful things because they love their families. Dads, more often than not, don’t express their feeling in words. But through what they do, we can feel how deep and how far their love goes. Here are a few living instances that demonstrate dads are real-life heroes in their kids’ eyes.
#1. He tattooed it because his daughter passed away and it was the last thing she gave him before the accident
#2. Father daughter glow up
#3. My s/o holding our identical twin girls, born prematurely at 30 weeks, together for the first time. They’re a month old today
#4. Since we’re getting closer to fathers day. He took his daughter to his graduation, and 18 years later he proudly accompanied his daughter at her graduation
#5. Creative dad
#6. My brother was the first to graduate with a Master’s in my family. My dad couldn’t stop crying
#7. Umbrella dad
#8. My dad passed away when I was 16 from cancer and before he died he pre-paid flowers so I could receive them every year on my birthday. Well, this is my 21st birthday flowers and the last. Miss you so much daddy
#9. Last minute my wedding photographer suggested I do first look photos with my Dad. I think his reaction shows how lucky I am to have him as my father
#10. Went to a Daddy Daughter Dance and our previous year’s picture was used as the showcase, my daughter felt like a superstar
#11. I became a dad today
#12. Father and son time. 30+ years apart
#13. Father taking daughter to a fun run
#14. My dad volunteered as Batman bringing joy to kids fighting cancer at a children’s hospital
#15. When my school discovered I was undocumented, my scholarship & in-state tuition were taken away. I told my papi that I was going to drop out & work instead. My papi told me he’d cut his arm off before I dropped out. We made it work. Today I graduated & he’s why.