Site search

WELCOME

This blog is about fatherhood. Black fatherhood to be exact. But it's also about how no matter our race, gender, political affiliation (or whatever it is that can potentially separate us), good parents are all connected through parenthood. Our shared experiences are what bind us, not to mention our love of a good story.

RSS FatherDad RSS

Please Donate to Malecare’s FatherDad Program

Malecare, the national prostate cancer support nonprofit, is the sponsoring nonprofit organization of the FatherDad African American parenting program. Literally 100% of your donation will go towards furthering our goal of empowering and promoting Fatherhood in our community. Keith Morton has volunteered for nearly four years to write this blog. Please help us take his work to the next level. Please be generous.

Links:

Hey, Where Did the Summer Go?

I’m not the biggest fan of the summer. I don’t like being covered in sweat when I get to work. I don’t like being devoured by evil hungry mosquitoes. And I despise flying beetles sneaking into my home getting caught in my ceiling fan’s down draft and landing in my sleeping face. I also don’t [...]

Fatherdad’s Summer Round-up So Far…

When I’m not supporting public charter schools in the area of finance and accounting, building my non-profit (Black Dad Connection), publishing a book, designing a website, performing weddings, and just generally keeping busy as a father and husband I am, well, doing other things. For instance I read, play with toys, and generally don’t sleep. [...]

ONE DREAM THAT WILL NEVER BE

I think about the dreams of mine that have come true over the last few years and I am appreciative. I published a written work, I wrote a book on black fatherhood that I will be publishing as an eBook in the coming weeks, I am Executive Director of a non-profit that I started and [...]

CELEBRATING 5 YEARS OF FATHERDAD.COM!

Five years ago today I started this little blog. A lot has happened to me over the years since and many lessons have been learned. I can honestly say that I am a different person in the sense that I have grown up quite a bit, but I am still me. I can be no [...]