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Father First: Why Companies Should Encourage Dads to Be Present at Home

June 24, 20252 min read

For decades, the message to working fathers was clear: provide, don’t pause.

But times are changing, and for the better.

More men today want to be active, present, and emotionally available for their children. They don’t just want to bring home a paycheck—they want to bring their full selves to both work and home life. Yet many workplaces haven’t caught up with this shift, especially in male-dominated industries.

Too often, it’s still the mother who is expected to take the day off, stay home with a sick child, or handle school logistics. However, when fathers are empowered to take time off to care for their children, everyone benefits, including the workplace.

The Mental Health Boost for Dads

Research indicates that when fathers spend meaningful time with their children, it significantly improves their mental well-being. According to the Journal of Family Psychology:

  • Fathers who engage regularly in caregiving report lower stress levels, fewer depressive symptoms, and stronger life satisfaction

  • Time spent with children is linked to reduced anxiety and increased emotional resilience

This isn’t just about "dad guilt"—it’s about real emotional health. When dads feel like they’re showing up for their kids, their self-worth improves. And mentally healthy employees make better decisions, stay more focused, and are less likely to burn out.

What Happens When Work Supports Fatherhood?

Let’s talk business.

Workplaces that support fathers with flexibility, paid time off, and normalized paternity leave are seeing:

  • Higher employee engagement

  • Improved retention among young tales

  • Healthier workplace culture

  • Stronger gender equity - as caregiving becomes a shared responsibility

A Boston College Center for Work & Family study found that 86% of millennial fathers said they’d be more committed to their employer if they had better family support policies.

Time for a Culture Shift

Encouraging dads to take time off shouldn’t be a hidden favor or a career risk—it should be company culture.

That means:

  • Leaders modeling balance (not bragging about working through holidays or skipping family time)

  • Policies that explicitly include fathers, not just “primary caregivers”

  • Managers supporting flexible scheduling for school events, family emergencies, or shared parenting duties

When you normalize active fatherhood, you're not just supporting families, you're building a culture of trust, equity, and psychological safety.

Final Thoughts

Fatherhood isn’t a distraction from work—it’s a powerful force that grounds and strengthens the men in your workplace.

When you invest in policies and culture that allow fathers to show up at home, they’ll show up stronger, more loyal, and more fulfilled at work.

At Life Force Wellness, we help companies build environments where men don’t have to choose between being great employees and great dads.

Learn more about our workplace wellness consulting at www.lifeforcewellness.com

 

Mens Healthmental healthfathersfamilyemployee wellness
After experiencing burnout working long, stressful hours in the tumultuous oil and gas field, Megan decided to break out on her own and focus on health and wellness. Megan found a passion for teaching and coaching physical well-being but recognized the need to build mental resiliency in her clients, leading her to study positive psychology. Megan brings her passion for wellness back into the corporate environment by working with leaders to transform company cultures to focus on employee health and wellbeing.

Megan has studied various topics, from creating exercise and diet plans to building mental resiliency, understanding behavior change and creating engaging corporate programs. This led her to create Life Force Wellness LLC, a corporate wellness organization focusing on work-life balance and seven distinct areas of well-being. Megan has a B.S. in Business Administration with a concentration in Marketing and a minor in psychology. She holds certifications as a personal trainer, health coach, nutrition coach, corporate wellness specialist, positive psychology practitioner, stress management, sleep and recovery coach.

Megan Wollerton

After experiencing burnout working long, stressful hours in the tumultuous oil and gas field, Megan decided to break out on her own and focus on health and wellness. Megan found a passion for teaching and coaching physical well-being but recognized the need to build mental resiliency in her clients, leading her to study positive psychology. Megan brings her passion for wellness back into the corporate environment by working with leaders to transform company cultures to focus on employee health and wellbeing. Megan has studied various topics, from creating exercise and diet plans to building mental resiliency, understanding behavior change and creating engaging corporate programs. This led her to create Life Force Wellness LLC, a corporate wellness organization focusing on work-life balance and seven distinct areas of well-being. Megan has a B.S. in Business Administration with a concentration in Marketing and a minor in psychology. She holds certifications as a personal trainer, health coach, nutrition coach, corporate wellness specialist, positive psychology practitioner, stress management, sleep and recovery coach.

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