I'm gonna guess that she's happily startled because, for example, mine hit his weed pen outside every 15 minutes and fell asleep on the couch and never once came near me. I think that my experience (or smth similar) is pretty common.
Edit: Hi, I'm an actually human person and was the first to comment on this. I'm not trying to start a damn war of the roses, and apparently this is NOT the correct answer (see the next comment below mine). Just popped in with my stupid, obviously incorrect thought about what this could mean. So chill with calling me a stupid whore.
Nah it's not. I can see how someone would want to normalise such a shitty event to deal with it but the fathers I know and myself have been much much more involved and supportive than our fathers were
“The younger generation of dads are more supportive and involved and it’s so awesome to see” Jeez genius it’s almost as if that’s what the comment said.
Off topic but what percentage of something do you think that something needs to be before it becomes 'common'?
Like I would think 20-50% is a solid range for common and then 50%+ is when its very common.
But then again, if you consider that there's probably 10-20 births a day in a hospital, then you would probably see 1 or 2 fathers not showing up daily. So if its a daily occurance does it drift back into the realm of commonplace even though the percentage is low?
13.1k
u/BeatnikBun Apr 24 '26 edited Apr 24 '26
I'm gonna guess that she's happily startled because, for example, mine hit his weed pen outside every 15 minutes and fell asleep on the couch and never once came near me. I think that my experience (or smth similar) is pretty common.
Edit: Hi, I'm an actually human person and was the first to comment on this. I'm not trying to start a damn war of the roses, and apparently this is NOT the correct answer (see the next comment below mine). Just popped in with my stupid, obviously incorrect thought about what this could mean. So chill with calling me a stupid whore.