I had a very similar upbringing to everyone whose posted on here. I honestly think my dad meant well, but he just ultimately didn't know what the fvck he was getting himself into. It seemed like one night he was just like, "ahh hell yeah let's have that kid." The only thing I think I ever got from my dad was his jumpshot. My dad and I hated each other for the majority of my teenage years, but I responded well to it and that is one of the main reasons I think I bailed myself out of AFCism so fast at the age of probably 17 or 18. I didn't take a crying, listen to emo music, and shop at hot topic response. I just played it out like a hard ass and pretended like it didn't bother me, and I still do that to this day.
My dad is a good dude though - it's just unfortunate he had to have a son who was type B while he was the stereotypical type A. The guy and I are exact opposites in everything we do. He is a business minded, mathmetician, and engineer while I'm a writer who's is a good people person. He is a spot-up, sharpshooting, two-guard, while I'm a flashy, no look pass, point guard. Nowadays he and I just don't talk much. There isn't any hate.
I could probably write a novel about my parents and my upbringing.
I was raised heavily by mother, and there is good things in being feminine you just have to find them. I have a good sense of style because of her. I understand girls real well too, and I think girlfriends like to see the mom influence. It makes you sensitive, but I was reading in an interview with 2pac once where he had a comment on being raised by his mom. He said something like, "Being feminine does one thing to you and it makes you hella sensitive, but it's my sensitivity that makes me so hard." I can kind of relate to that sensitivity I'm gonna snap at any point.
While I could go on and on about this, I guess I can just finish by saying that I don't mean any disrespect to my parents - I'm grateful, but I just know I'm gonna do things with my son a lot differently.