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This blog was created with some reluctance.
During my wife’s pregnancy with our first child, I felt at odds dealing with my own anxieties while also trying to be a supportive and encouraging partner. 
After all, what pregnant woman wants listen to her husband complain about fatigue and phantom symptoms? 
So, I wrote a book.

An agent showed interest, and quickly followed with “You know, you should start a blog!”
A what? A blog?
That was in June 2011, the month I underwent a vasectomy.
I started MenGetPregnantToo.com the next day, with a post called 
The End of Fertility

During the years since, this site has transformed from a typical “diary of parenting life” blog, into a collection of essays and interviews covering more serious topics, such as bullying, the peer pressures facing children (and their parents), and shifting gender roles in the workplace and at home.
Where parenting is concerned, there is no false labour. (The ‘u’ isn’t a typo, I’m Canadian.)

Since its inception, the site has been recognized by Reader’s Digest Canada as one of the country’s best parenting blogs – the only dad on the list.
I have also grown as a parenting writer and columnist, appearing regularly as a contributor on radio and television, and have also authored a weekly column “Questions Parents Ask”, which was published Canada, the U.S., and the U.K.
That column won the Platinum Marcom Award as part of the three-person blogger team at Lifeworks.com.

This site is ad-free; it features no product reviews, no giveaways, and no brand partnerships. It is not about winning free trips or screening children’s toys. It is about connecting with mothers and fathers, and fostering a better understanding of the new challenges of 21st century parents and children.

I live just outside Montreal, Canada with my wife and two kids.
Thanks so much for stopping by, and I hope you enjoy reading away.

One response

  1. Donna Avatar
    Donna

    I found Your November11/17 post to be extremely interesting. The deep seated “culture” of acting you described will make it difficult for change to occur quickly. We can only hope posts like this will spur a new awareness and ongoing conversations that over time, will, make a difference. I hope it doesn’t take a generation, but I also fear it will.
    I found your blog via the -alive- magazine I picked up from Thrifty Foods. My daughter has been vegetarian since 16 and became vegan about 2 years ago. Her husband as an anniversary gift to her, went vegan for a month last March. He remains diligently vegan today. Says he has never felt better in his life. They will turn 40 this year. My daughter has always been an excellent cook, and even her dad is slowly adjusting his attitude to plant based eating.
    Am I able to subscribe to your blog?

    Like

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