BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. This father handled this very well. I’d say even bordering on heroically. Notice the cross on his shirt telling you where his strength, love, patience, and self-control truly come from. FYI. Like him. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces to my dying breath, no matter the cost.
@LawgicalXX I take mine into the men’s. I know the turf and they know me and I can protect my kids. I don’t think any men should be in any women’s spaces. No gray area
@iqrafatma1278 I would suggest cleaning it with him and doing less and less. I would just help direct my daughter and not actually pick up things eventually she did it all.
@charise_lee I agree with everything but as a rule of thumb unless no one is in the women’s bathroom I use the men’s with my daughters. I don’t think any men should be in women’s spaces ever!
@therobbieharvey These comments are hysterical. I needed a good laugh. Betting a lot of single women who have cats ragging at men while eating Hagen Daz watching Sex in the City.
@therobbieharvey So women take their kids to the women’s bathroom and men take theirs to the men’s bathroom. I ‘m with my child I can protect them and my upbringing is no men belong in women’s spaces. It worked well.
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces
I agree with you. I wrote a story on my experience as work at home dad raising daughters.
BATHROOM LIFE AS A DAD WITH DAUGHTERS
This video breaks my heart. Primarily for the two little girls; secondly, the dad; but all involved. The dad seems to be traveling by himself. I have driven my girls all over the country by myself from six months to 17 and 19 years old today. I have been in this tough predicament of having to stop for gas and my daughters needing to go to the bathroom badly too. No matter who was yapping in my ear, there is no way in a million years I would let my daughters at this age go in any public restroom or locker room without me, my wife, or a woman I know and trust. I do think he should have gone to the men’s room not the women’s. I always took my girls to the men’s bathroom or locker room.
As a dad who raised two daughters from infancy, I completely get this father’s mindset to protect his kids. Mine are less than two years apart. So I often would take both with me into men’s private spaces instead of the hornet's nest of the ladies' room. The lesser of two evils. Hundreds, if not thousands, of times I embarked on this fun fest. Try managing and protecting two young girls in a public bathroom by yourself, while avoiding touching any object or surface other than what is necessary and keeping your children from doing the same. After that, you can work on world peace and the cure for cancer. I was a work-at-home dad who took my kids by myself all over America and to many foreign countries. At restrooms in restaurants, department stores, airports, gas stations, and locker rooms at health clubs and public swimming pools. When my daughters were small, locker rooms were the trickiest. After swimming, I had to help them shower and change. They would be all over the place, each with everything on their mind but the task at hand. The goal was to keep the environment calm, loving, protected, and safe, and to get out as soon as possible, but theirs was a bit different. Play time, scream time, dance naked time. Anything but shower time. Who needs to swim laps, lift weights, or hop on the elliptical? Management of two toddlers in the men’s locker room is exercise enough.
Seriously though, our job as fathers is to protect our children from any unsafe or vulnerable situations, no matter the distraction, backlash, or threats we get. Only a couple of times did I have men confront me for having girls in tow. I just ignored it and tended to my children. One older man in a YMCA locker room was quite assertive and aggressive towards me. I did not say much; I just attended to my girls and pointed to the sign on the locker room door that allowed my daughters to be in the shower. My bet is this belligerent man in the video has forgotten what you deal with as a father of daughters or never had children. He is clearly focused on the older woman waiting to use the restroom, which is admirable, as she is a woman too. So I would be careful about demonizing him, while I do think he is completely out of line and completely in the wrong with his hyperbolic reaction.
Here’s the other side of the coin. As our girls grow old enough to be in women’s private spaces alone, we must protect them there too. Woke society tells us we should allow males who think they are females to be in our daughters' spaces and sports. Not a chance. Our jobs as dads and men are to keep female spaces and sports female no matter the cost to our reputation, social status, economic hardship, relationship demise, or judicial threat. The Lord knows I have experienced all of those to protect my angels. Locker rooms and bathrooms were invented to create exclusive spaces for women, not inclusive spaces for males who think they are females. Whether it is my little angels scared at a gas station bathroom, a young teen girl vulnerable in a school bathroom, or an older woman forced to share a gym locker room with men, I will defend females and their sports and spaces