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    Thursday, August 4th, 2011
    4:13 pm
    Reason why Homer jay is the World's Best Dad
    Hes the person in charge of a notoriously dysfunctional family, he's a intoxicated, and he's far too fatty - he's even been vilified by former President George Bush. But Homer Simpson is a cool dad to he's three children. As our youngsters get older in a world where look is everything, Homer is an antidote to the superficial. He isn't troubled what he seems like or what people think about him - he simply cares about he's family and trying to do the correct thing.

    For instance, in one episode of The Simpsons, Homer's son Bart comes home from highschool moaning that he doesn't get all the computer games that he's friends do. A lot of mother and father these days will know just what that difficulty is like. But rather than dashing out and trying to offset he's parental guilt with expensive presents, Homer makes he's son laugh by clowning around. By doing that, he shows he is able to give Bart what all children want more than anything - time and attention.

    He also impresses upon he's child that there is more to life than material goods. Homer, a manual laborer in a nuclear power plant, is an individualist who teaches he's kids not to worry too much about what others think of them. He manages to chart he's own course to avoid peer group pressure.

    One of the ways he stands out from the crowd is by refusing to visit church. In one episode he skips Sunday service and has the best day of he's life, while he's wife Marge, fearful for he's soul, prays fervently for him. Then Homer sees God in a nightmare and says: "I'm a superior man, I care about my kids - why do I ought to visit church and be told I'm going to hell?" God agrees with him and says: "You've got a point there." Homer has proved it is possible to be superior without having to visit church.

    To he's kids - Bart, Lisa and Maggie - and to children everywhere, Homer shows the right thing to do is to act from your heart. The Simpson family have often been described as dysfunctional by politicians, moral campaigners and pundits. This seems to be based on Bart's rebelliousness and Homer's love of beer and TV. But the fact that the Simpson family is not perfect is what makes them so influential for our children.

    They are a family with real failings who have real problems just like the rest of us. And, just like the rest of us, they try to muddle through. Homer's concern for he's children's worries, however minor, is something many of us busy mother and father could do well to emulate.

    In one episode, Lisa doesn't get the part she wants in the school play. Homer helps her realize that every part is important, however small. That's what life's about. Making children appreciate we all have a role to play in society however cool or small.

    I believe you may obtain episode concerning that in here: Simpsonit & Simpsoni

    There is also strong communication within the Simpson family, something often missing in our hectic real lives. These characters eat meals together, chat and laugh. It's a social occasion which is often missing from households today, where everyone runs to their own timetables.

    Homer is a cool parent because he would do anything for he's kids. Most importantly, Bart, Lisa and Maggie know this. There is an episode in which Homer and Marge are found to be unfit mother and father because they've gone off to a health spa, leaving Bart, Lisa and Maggie with grandpa. As a result the kids are taken away and sent to live with the next-door neighbors, born-again Christians, the Flanders family. Homer reproaches himself for being a terrible father and undergoes a parenting class. In the confusion that follows he becomes baptized by accident.

    But the point is that for all their shortcomings Homer and Marge are prepared to do anything for their kids - and the youngsters love them for that. Bart and Lisa realize their mother and father may not be educated enough to have all the answers to their questions. But Homer and Marge are honest about what they don't know - and what they do. That honesty, so critical in a superior relationship between mother and father and children, enables Homer to maintain the respect of he's kids even when he is being at he's most stupid.

    In one episode, Homer admits that he is no superior at Maths and Lisa is delighted when he enlists her help to put bets on football. Lisa feels fulfilled and needed. Respect means that Homer doesn't ought to be a tyrant in he's own home. All mother and father can learn from Homer's ability to control he's kids without yelling or using bribery. Homer is clearly not the brightest of characters but he is a cool dad because he cares and tries to understand who he's children are and why they do what they do.

    When Bart gets drunk, the neighbors are outraged. But Homer recognizes some of himself in Bart's actions. He knows it was an accident. He is not quick to condemn without considering how he himself might have acted at the same age in a similar situation.

    And Homer is a hands-on dad, too. He'll happily pick up crying baby Maggie and feed her a bottle. As a "boyish man" it's natural for Homer to do activities with Bart, such as seeing a baseball game together. But it takes a mental leap for him to realize that it is just as important to spend time with Lisa, who sometimes feels neglected. She's a bright spark but still needs fatherly attention. So he has heart-to-heart chats with her and goes to concerts to hear her play her saxophone.

    Homer shows how all children deserve, and need, attention from their mother and father if they are to develop into confident adults. Homer may not always get the actions right but he cares about he's kids, listens to them and is honest with them. We can all learn a lot from that.
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