Vector analysis by M.L. Krasnov, G. Yankovsky, A. I. Kiselev, G. I. Makarenko

By M.L. Krasnov, G. Yankovsky, A. I. Kiselev, G. I. Makarenko

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No in/ inne podejście do mnie mają. nieraz po prostu mi: nie wierzą. i nie ufają mi. ). (11) I: znaczy nie no po prostu wyżalałem się (ze) swoimi (kłopotami). natomiast dzieci ja dzieciom tyle ile byłem w stanie to (niejasne) [hałas] pomagałem. czy w nauce czy czy w różnych rzeczach. na pewno żona się nimi więcej zajmowała. na pewno bardziej były zwrócone ku matce niż ku ojcu.

Report that fathers talk about psychosis as undermining the father–child relationship. They experienced emotional disengagement from their children, seeing hospitalisation as a family disruption and medication as a straitjacket. They also feared for their children: they were afraid of passing on psychosis. At the same time, the informants expressed pride in their fatherhood, some talked about receiving support from their children and the children giving them motivation to make positive changes in their life, though some were also aware that fatherhood may exacerbate aspects of their psychosis.

All in all the two extracts underscore the argument I am proposing here. Failed fathers are failed because they did not or could not do something or, rarely, be something. The failed father is a failed ‘doer’. In extract (1) the informant could not ‘do what he wanted’, in (2) the speaker could not ‘do it all’, in (3) the father forgets doing, in (5) the father fails to protect and direct the child. Extract (4) provides an excellent summary: a mentally ill father ‘did too little’. More or less explicitly, the fathers who talked to me referred to actions or activities in which they failed.

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