Tag: parenthood

  • ROOTED MEN™: Why African Fathers in the UK Must Redefine Fatherhood, Identity & Legacy

    African Fatherhood in the UK: A Quiet Struggle

    For many African fathers living in the UK, fatherhood comes with unspoken pressure.

    You are expected to provide.

    To stay strong.

    To hold culture together.

    To raise children who succeed in a society very different from the one that raised you.

    Yet many fathers are doing this without support, guidance, or safe spaces to talk.

    At Intentional Parenting, we see this clearly:

    African fathers are not absent — they are overburdened and under-supported.

    This is why we created ROOTED MEN™: Fatherhood, Identity & Legacy in the Diaspora.

    Why African Fathers Need a Different Conversation?

    Fatherhood in the UK requires more than authority and provision.

    It requires presence, emotional intelligence, and cultural adaptation.

    Many African fathers are navigating:

    -Cultural discipline vs UK safeguarding laws

    -Provider pressure and financial stress

    -Emotional distance learned from their own upbringing

    -Identity tension: “Am I raising my children the African way or the British way?”

    -Raising confident children without losing cultural values.

    These realities demand a new kind of fatherhood — one that is rooted, intentional, and responsive.

    From Provider to Present: Redefining African Fatherhood.

    Traditionally, respect for fathers was built on fear, distance, and unquestioned authority.

    But research — and real family experience — shows that today’s children thrive on connection before correction.

    Being a strong father in the UK means:

    ⭐️Listening as much as instructing

    💕Regulating anger before disciplining.

    ✨Creating emotional safety, not silence.

    🇿🇼Modelling values, not just enforcing rules.

    This shift does not weaken fathers.

    It strengthens their influence.

    Introducing ROOTED MEN™: Fatherhood, Identity & Legacy.

    ROOTED MEN™ is an interactive session created by Intentional Parenting for African fathers in the UK.

    The workshop helps fathers to:

    📝Understand their role beyond financial provision.

    🇬🇧Navigate cultural expectations with intention.

    🧑‍🧑‍🧒‍🧒Build stronger relationships with their children.

    🔑Address anger, stress, and emotional withdrawal.

    💯Define the legacy they want to leave

    During the workshop, fathers are introduced to the ROOTED™ framework, a practical model for intentional parenting in the diaspora.

    This framework allows fathers to honour African values while parenting effectively in the UK context.

    “Legacy Is Not What You Leave Behind — It’s Who You Raise”

    One of the most powerful moments in the ROOTED MEN™ workshop is the Legacy Letter, where fathers reflect on this question:

    “When my child is 25, what do I want them to say about me as their father?”

    This exercise shifts fatherhood from survival mode to legacy thinking — helping men parent with clarity, intention, and long-term vision.

    African fathers deserve spaces that are:

    Respectful, Culturally grounded, Honest and Practical.

    That is exactly what ROOTED MEN™ offers.

    About Intentional Parenting.

    Intentional Parenting is a UK-based parenting education initiative supporting African families to raise confident, rooted children while building generational legacies in the diaspora.

    Through workshops, resources, and community programmes, we help parents navigate culture, identity, safeguarding, and emotional wellbeing with intention.

    About the Facilitator.

    Fadzai is a UK-based parenting educator, speaker, and founder of Intentional Parenting. She supports African families in the UK to raise confident, emotionally secure children while building strong generational legacies through culturally grounded parenting education.

    Final Word to Fathers.

    📌You don’t need to be perfect.

    💯You need to be present.

    🌟Strong families don’t happen by accident.

    ❤️They are built by intentional men.

  • Mind the brain

    Parenting for purpose

    @bnparents

    The key to learning about brain development is to knowing and understanding that our children’s brains are not fully developed before they are 25 years🤓😬. Long time, I hear you say… it is indeed, so brace yourself for the journey!

    Hands up to those who became parents with under developed brains …. 🙋🏾‍♀️

    This isn’t to shame anyone but to create a place to reflect and think :

    So what does that mean to my parenting journey?
    How did my experience shape the relationship I have with my child/ren?

    Who else was/ is helping me in my transitioning and journey?

    How am I thriving in this space?

    What do I do with what I know now?

    In many non western cultures of the global majority, a village/ community is there to help raise a child hence some of the challenges of having children young were mitigated. The turbulent teen years were dealt with by a community so the nuclear family did not feel it that much. For those of us who grew up in Zimbabwe in the 90s and beyond we know how the christian values and beliefs shaped us even for those whose parents didn’t actively practice christianity. Gospel songs were everywhere and pretty much what we listened to especially in public places eg in commuter buses, shops and malls. So imagine the impact that had on our minds and well being!

    Fast forward to now, where families are dispersed and all over… what does that mean to be a PARENT in this fast paced world?

    How are you minding your child’s brain?

    What sort of things can you do as a parent to support positive brain development? How can you look after yourself during what is sometimes termed ‘turbulent teen years’?

    For this and more… Be sure to subscribe to this blog for the upcoming masterclass on intentionalparenting©️ starting in Autumn/November 2023.

    More details to follow…

    For now, remain intentional 🌱