Who can measure the impact of a man’s words or actions? The need for men to step forward and assume their God-given and crucial role to affect society for good is a countercultural message, for sure. But it rings so true it even shows up in secular programming.
The power of a man’s influence forms the bedrock of Rick’s work. He founded the fathering skills program Better Dads and speaks and writes about how men impact their marriages, families and communities.
“We don’t recognize the things we say or don’t say can tremendously impact people’s lives,” Rick said. “One of the things I ‘preach’ a lot to men is that they matter, they are important,” Rick said. “That is not a message our culture gives to men. I lay out what that looks like, and they are shocked. They’ve never heard that before.”
Rick shared his experience mentoring a fatherless elementary-age boy. When Rick pulled up to the apartment complex to meet his young mentee for the first time, he noticed a playground teeming with children. Without supervision, toddlers were overrun, kids dodged surly teens blaring music with obscene lyrics, and scantily clad girls vied for attention. Shady characters skulked on the perimeter. He also noticed a discernible lack of men. “Where were the men?” he asked. He was told there were no men there – just single mothers trying to raise kids the best they could.
A few weeks went by. Rick returned to meet his young charge at the playground. This time, several men were throwing Frisbees or watching the playground. Gone were the gangsters and their clique. Gone was the foul language and the loud music.
“It was like a ray of sunshine had broken through the clouds and shone on the playground,” Rick said, noting that just the presence of a few men was all it took to make a difference.
Presence. “Despair and hopelessness are found in kids’ lives where men aren’t involved,” Rick said. Lives were different because a few men used their powerful gift from God. Men have the power to bless or harm in ways that will forever be remembered and internalized.
“I can’t tell you how many elderly people tell me, ‘The only thing I regret in my whole life is that my dad never told me he loved me and was proud of me,’” Rick said.
Rick remembered a woman who showed him a coat hanger she had treasured for years. Her dad had written a message telling her he loved her on the paper dry cleaner insert. Negative words fester and cause wounds that go deep. Words like, “You are no good,” “You will never amount to nothing.” “We carry those things around,” he said.
Rick recounts similar down-to-earth examples in workshops like the ministry’s Father-Teen Daughter retreat or Single Mom/Son weekend. He’s spoken at MOPS International conventions, Promise Keepers Canada events, Design 4 Living women’s conferences, and Iron Sharpens Iron men’s conferences.
Rick was raised in a dysfunctional, alcoholic home. The angry boy grew into an angry young man, he said. He started a successful environmental engineering firm but still felt the despondency of an empty life. He credits his wife for turning his world around.
“It seemed like no matter how much I accomplished or what I did, it was not very gratifying,” he said. “I didn’t want to pass on that bad legacy to my kids.” Looking for role models, Rick researched men in history he admired. He realized the common denominator of the great men he studied was that they were Christians. While his wife had grown up in the church, he did not come from a faith background.
“I was raised that Christians were hypocrites, that Christianity was a crutch for the weak,” he said. I spent a year studying Christianity and finally realized that the words of the Bible were true.” At age 40, Rick accepted Christ, which, “changed everything.”
He desired to make a difference in the world, which he realized would be best accomplished one-on-one through relationships. God led him to found Better Dads to introduce Biblical principles to pre-believers in a non-threatening manner.
“People you would never consider are getting reached, impacted, and lives changed,” he said.
One of his most recent books, Overcoming Toxic Parenting, builds from his own experience learning how to heal the wounds from a destructive home. He outlines three main things to help someone successfully change their life.
First is education. “You don’t know what you don’t know,” Rick said, referring to the learning curve he experienced trying to discern what was normal family behavior. Next, counseling, noting sometimes professional counseling is needed to get over things like physical or mental abuse. Lastly, Rick advocates mentoring, “It’s not enough to eliminate the negative, that leaves a void that without positive influences will be filled with the same.”
He points to the difference a mentor can make to model a positive example of healthy marriage and family life. “As a culture we don’t encourage that process (mentorship). It’s hard to breach that gap of how to connect.” He and his wife found mentors by joining a life group at church, a path he recommends others follow.
“Knowledge is key to people being able to change.” One of the problems with marriages today is that young couples don’t have mentors. If they were not blessed to have parents with good marriages, they are floundering.
“Whether you are a man or woman, you matter to people’s lives. There are younger people looking to you to learn how to have a successful marriage, raise kids,” he said.
In his experience counseling couples prior to marriage, he’s found “expectations young people bring into marriages are pretty skewed.” He’s seen communication problems when women expected their husbands to instinctively know what to do to make them happy without telling them. Young husbands had unrealistic expectations about sexual intimacy. “It’s a recipe for disaster (without help),” he said.
He related an example of expectations of chore distribution, where the wife was disgruntled because she believed her husband wasn’t doing his fair share around the house. Until one day, she looked out of the window and saw him cleaning leaves out of the gutter in the pouring rain. She revised her complaint, because she realized he was doing a lot of things she didn’t know about. Faith, finances, raising kids — all these hot-button topics are rarely discussed before marriage but can cause division later, Rick added.
Marriage
As Rick’s ministry expanded, he found himself led to address different aspects of family life and relationships. “A man’s ability to step up and lean into a relationship not only changes the legacy, it affects his marriage,” he said.