<oembed><type>rich</type><version>1.0</version><title>walker wrote</title><author_name>walker (npub1cj…wrz4u)</author_name><author_url>https://yabu.me/npub1cj8znuztfqkvq89pl8hceph0svvvqk0qay6nydgk9uyq7fhpfsgsqwrz4u</author_url><provider_name>njump</provider_name><provider_url>https://yabu.me</provider_url><html>I knew I was going to love being a dad. After all, everyone and their mother (literally) tells you how much you&#39;re going to love it once your wife gets pregnant. You hear more cliches about fatherhood than you ever knew existed. You hear, time and time again, that &#34;you won&#39;t REALLY understand until you hold your child for the first time.&#34;&#xA;&#xA;After a while you think &#34;yeah... okay... I get it already.&#34; &#xA;&#xA;But you don&#39;t. Not at all. You can&#39;t possibly know. It is quite literally impossible to understand until that moment. You *think* you know. You *think* you understand how it will change you. But you have no idea. &#xA;&#xA;Becoming a father is a singular moment in which your entire world changes. A light switch flips on, then that light switch is ripped out of the wall. You can&#39;t turn it off. Ever. &#xA;&#xA;Every cliche is true. Everyone who told you &#34;you won&#39;t REALLY understand until you hold your child for the first time&#34; was right. They were so right... They were more right than you could have possibly imagined. &#xA;&#xA;Everything changes. It changes in ways you cannot possibly understand until you are in that singular moment. &#xA;&#xA;Sure, any logical person with an IQ above 100 can imagine the *logistical* ways in which your life will change (but even then we mostly underestimate). But absolutely no one can understand the feeling of becoming a father until you actually become one. &#xA;&#xA;Becoming a father made me want to be a better man. To become the man I am supposed to be. The best man I can be. The man I need to be. The man I am meant to become. In fact, it necessitates that I do so. I have no other option. And I wouldn&#39;t have it any other way. &#xA;&#xA;Becoming a father made me want to be a better husband as well. For my amazing wife, of course, but also so my son will be able to look to me and see an example of what a good husband should be. &#xA;&#xA;Becoming a father also made me truly understand time preference. I thought I understood time preference before, but I didn&#39;t. My understanding was purely academic. It was theoretical. A philosophical exercise at best. &#xA;&#xA;Sure, I could talk about &#34;thinking in generations,&#34; but the moment next generation of my blood actually stood before me, I realized I didn&#39;t understand true long-term thinking at all before. In that moment, I finally did. I will die. So will you. So will everyone. What legacy will we leave for our children? What world will they inherit? How will we make it a better one than the world that was left to us?&#xA;&#xA;It&#39;s a Saturday night and I&#39;m rambling. But I felt the need to write this. I had a great day with my son and wife. Any day I spend with them is a great day, but some days the totality of being washes over you more than others. &#xA;&#xA;I love being a dad. I know it may not be for everyone and that&#39;s okay. It&#39;s for me, and I wouldn&#39;t trade it for the world. </html></oembed>