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Being Physical (Healthy Touch and Affection)

The incidence of sexual abuse and the objectification of girls generates strong anger, revulsion and fear in a responsible father. It is foolish and unproductive to ignore that fear and anger. However, we do great harm if, for example, we let the prevalence of sexual abuse make us afraid to touch our daughters, or afraid of how our healthy physical affection will be interpreted. If good touch is absent from our relationships with our daughters, then we cut off part of our humanity and our daughters’ humanity. We are tactile beings who need physical expressions of affection, comfort, reassurance and playfulness. Words are not enough to convey the depth and importance of our love for our daughters. Yet fear of being sexual--or perceived as being sexual—can stop a father’s hug in its tracks.

As a father, I am consistently affectionate, but never sexual, with my daughters. I take great comfort from hugs and enjoy physical play with little kids – a wonderful legacy taught by my father. Not every father relates to his or other children this way; my experience is neither universal nor unique. But no matter what our style of fathering, our kids need physical acknowledgement of our love for them. That’s sometimes not simple or easy to do.

What is good touch? Touch is good when it does the following for its recipient:

  • Comforts her
  • Affirms her as a person
  • Supports her
  • Respects and is sensitive to her person and her boundaries
  • Is given with her permission
  • Is given freely, with no quid pro quo
  • Helps her feel strong, lovable and able to delight in herself
  • Is not sexual.

Good touch is not confined to fatherly hugs and kisses. Good touch can happen when, together with our daughters, we garden, play handball, do carpentry, take dance lessons, train the dog, wrestle, shoot baskets, go for a walk, or do any number of things. One great example of fathers' creative good touch comes from a Philadelphia ballet school. The most advanced class at the school was made up entirely of teen girls. By this age, the few boys who'd taken lessons had stopped and that left the advanced girls unable to learn an essential skill of advanced ballet -- doing lifts and other moves with a partner. The solution? Several of the girls' fathers volunteered to come in and be lifters and partners in pirouettes. They were unskilled, but still useful to the daughters by literally providing physical support.

Still, it's not easy for fathers (or anyone else) to talk about good touch/bad touch issues. It feels awkward, odd, and even risky for me to write or say publicly that I am physically affectionate with my daughters. Part of me feels as if, by admitting that I touch my daughters, I’m confessing to some crime I didn’t commit. Have you hesitated to touch your daughter or other girls you love because of how they, or other people, might interpret that touch? Most fathers feel that the joy and comfort they get from hugging and kissing a daughter must remain hidden and unacknowledged lest others be suspicious or mortified.

We must cut through this thick cloud of suspicion if we want to begin having healthy, useful conversations about healthy and essential father-daughter touch. The true crime of abusive touch rightly sparks loathing because it is so deeply harmful. But we fathers need the courage to acknowledge that abuse exists and that its existence can get in the way of fathering a daughter in healthy, non-abusive ways. We need to talk with each other and with our parenting partners about how to provide our daughters with good fatherly touch.

Adapted from Dads and Daughters: How to Inspire, Understand, and Support Your Daughter by Joe Kelly and used by permission

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