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Each month, iParenting.com spotlights a father who inspires and moves us, who embodies the qualities that we all admire in a person, a man and a father. Above all, the Dad of the Month is dedicated to his children. Rich or poor, famous or not, he shines as an example of what fathering is all about. Our choice for June is William Shaun Riley, soon-to-be adoptive father to 5-year-old Carter who is currently serving his country aboard the U.S.S. Carl Vinson.
Stephanie and William Shaun Riley, both 23, have been married for two years but have known one another since junior high. They share a long-term loving relationship and a 5-year-old little boy, Carter. Carter, though, is not Shaun's biological child. Shaun is one court appearance away from becoming his adoptive father. But Shaun helped and supported Stephanie throughout her pregnancy and always was a big part of Carter's life, even before the couple married. Adopting Carter, though, is not the toughest part of being a dad. As a fire controlman second class petty officer in the U.S. Navy (FC2 for short), Shaun often is away from home, out to sea on lengthy deployments. "I can only think of one thing that makes being a dad a challenge for me," writes Shaun vie e-mail from his current, though temporary, home aboard the U.S.S. Carl Vinson CVN-70, whose home port is the Naval Station Bremerton, south of Seattle. "And that is all of the separation. Out of the past 24 months, I have been out to sea almost 17 months of it; I have spent more than half of my marriage away from my wife and son."
Shaun doesn't yet know when this deployment will end, and it could go on longer than a more typical six-month stint. Most recently, his ship made stops off the Japanese coast. Shaun says his own dad was in the U.S. Air Force and so has insight into what it's like for Carter to have to say goodbye for prolonged periods of time. But that knowledge is little comfort during a long absence from Carter. "Well, I would be lying to say there are never times I wish I wasn't in the Navy," he says. As an FC2, he operates, maintains and repairs one of the ship's self-defense systems, its Close-in Weapon System. It tracks targets and can automatically fire upon them.
Keeping in Touch In addition to gazing upon his myriad photos, Shaun e-mails Stephanie constantly. He even gets notes from Carter, typed by Stephanie, transmitted verbatim from the kindergartener.
But none of his efforts add up to physically being there for Carter or Stephanie. "I cannot be there for big dates," says Shaun. "I wanted so much to be home hiding eggs this last Easter. Instead, I have to hear about it."
Family is No. 1 Shaun's mother-in-law, Linda Louise Taylor, 51, shares similar sentiments. "When Shaun is not out at sea, he and Carter are 'inseparable,'" she writes from her home in Azle, Texas. "The most important thing Shaun has done for Carter is giving Carter a father – someone to look up to and admire. He is Carter's hero!" Shaun says when he's home the family spends a lot of time together as a threesome. They rent movies and watch them in Shaun and Stephanie's bed until they all succumb to sleep. But he also squeezes in as much one-on-one time with Carter as possible. Carter helps Shaun fix the car – "He often mimics what I do," Shaun says – and helps out in the kitchen as Dad fixes meals.
Shaun doesn't think he'll be so lucky for his 6th.
Balancing Absence With Presence But it doesn't seem Carter risks feeling abandoned. When Shaun and Stephanie were first married, Carter called him "Daddy Shaun" but soon starting calling him just "Daddy." "I broke out in tears the first time he called me Daddy over the phone," Shaun says. He adds it was never difficult to enter a relationship with a child not biologically his. "Any man can make a baby, however, accepting the responsibility and the title of Daddy is a different thing," he says. "I once heard this song that said blood is thicker than water," says Shaun. "However, love is thicker than blood. I could not love Carter more if he was from my own blood."
Want to see more?
for being the great dad that he is? Nominate him for iParenting.com’s Dad of the Month!
About the Author: Jenn Director Knudsen is a contributing writer for iParenting Media and the mother of one.
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"What
kind of man steps in and takes 100-percent responsibility for a little boy that wasn't his? Then goes further and makes that child his own in his heart and in the eyes of the
court? That would be my husband, Shaun."
Mind at
Work, Heart at Home
The family
also chats on ship-to-shore phones once a week – to the tune of $20 for 20 minutes of talk time. And Shaun participates in an on-board program called
A lover of
the outdoors, Carter prefers riding his bike or power-wheel Jeep outside to doing most any activity inside. In fact, Shaun helped assemble that Jeep for Carter's 5th birthday, a
task that he worked on tirelessly until it was completed for the big day. "I was working nights at the time and wound up staying up around 48 hours," Shaun says. "I stayed up so
I could put his toys and Jeep together before I went to work for a 12-hour shift. It was the longest day in a very long time. However, it was worth it – it was the first
time I was able to be there for my son's birthday."