Once per month, I host a class at Anne Arundel Medical Center in Annapolis for newly expecting fathers. Boot Camp For New Dads is offers expecting dads a great opportunity to learn the ins and outs of becoming a new father. The class is unlike anything experienced in the traditional classroom environment. This hands-on experience will leave you with the confidence to succeed as a husband and father. I am a proud father of two beautiful girls. Our family takes pride in giving back and making an impact in peoples in lives. This includes real estate, and real life. The link below features some great information, feel free to share. Enjoy! Lastly below are two articles that recently featured the class in the Annapolis Capital and Baltimore Sun.
Class helps dads-to-be prepare for fatherhood with some help from 'veterans'

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Paul W. Gillespie - The Capital
“Boot Camp for New Dads” instructor Mike Johnson, center, poses with two first-time fathers who’ve come to class to discuss their experiences with other men. Mark Gardner, left, brings his son, 5-month-old Gray, and Andrew Livingston is accompanied by daughter Kate, 8 months. The classes are held monthly in the Clatanoff Pavilion at Anne Arundel Medical Center. |
By THERESA WINSLOW, Staff Writer
Published March 06, 2008
"We're new fathers, 1-2-3.
Our duties don't come eas-i-ly.
From diaper rash to sleepless nights,
We just want to get things right
So we took a class at AAMC
To make a better fam-i-ly."
Welcome to "Boot Camp for New Dads," a three-hour class offered monthly at Anne Arundel Medical Center. The session combines practical advice for men expecting their first child with help from experienced fathers. These dads typically bring their babies along so the "rookies" can have some hands-on learning on subjects like diaper changes or simply how to hold an infant.
It's by men for men, and as the instructor, Mike Johnson of Severna Park, likes to say, no women over 2 feet tall are allowed!
Mr. Johnson, who is the proud father of two girls, ages 5 and 7, took the same class while living in Colorado several years ago, and it impressed him so much he wanted to bring it here when he relocated. "I just wanted to give back," he said.
The real estate agent started about 1½ years ago with a class called "Dr. Dad," which focused more on the medical side of things, then switched to "Boot Camp" in September. All told, he's helped about 150 dads - even attracting a few for a meeting that took place on Super Bowl Sunday.
Mr. Johnson doesn't have any formal training, just lots on the on-the-job experience. He uses a curriculum provided by the California-based New Fathers Foundation, which is the umbrella organization for "Boot Camps" across the country. AAMC is the only hospital in Maryland to currently offer the class, officials said.
"I think it's a great class," said Mandy Owens, AAMC's supervisor of women's education, the department that the class falls under. "It offers real, firsthand advice about what it's like to be a new dad, coming from a male figure. It's nice when it's straight from a dad, someone who's gone through it."
Mr. Johnson said some of the most common questions he gets deal with the sleepless nights that babies bring, how to help spouses and how to deal with visits from grandparents.
Mr. Johnson generally lectures for the first hour, then asks the men to write down some questions. They then break into small groups for one-on-one time with the veteran fathers and their babies. Mr. Johnson uses the last part of the class to lecture on subjects like shaken baby syndrome and car seats, and answers the written questions.
Despite the name of the class, Mr. Johnson said he prefers to run things in a laid-back style, so if a "rookie" has a question he wants addressed immediately, he'll gladly do that.
"I try to hit them with as much as I can," he said. "(But) every class is different. I customize it to what's on (their) minds."
Baby steps
"Boot Camp for New Dads" was founded in 1990 by Greg Bishop, a father of four whose full-time job is setting up trauma centers. The name comes in part from the fact that he originally had a lot of Marines sign up, and they pointed out that the beginning years of fatherhood were like boot camp, Mr. Bishop said.
Mr. Bishop said the impetus for the program was his perception that many men who are about to become fathers need some information. Women network, he said, while men become isolated. "These guys don't have much opportunity to talk to other men," he said.
He purposely used "father-friendly" terms to organize the classes, referring to instructors as "coaches," the new dads as "rookies" and the experienced parents as "veterans."
The format has changed over the years, but Mr. Bishop said he still prefers the veterans to do more of the talking than the coaches, since the hands-on experience is so valuable. "Men go to childbirth classes, (but they're) mom-focused," he said. "(Guys) get lost in the shuffle."
Severna Park resident Mark Gardner is well aware of the challenges facing new dads. He has a 5-month-old son, Gray. And like Mr. Johnson, he wanted to help other dads navigate parenthood. Mr. Gardner took the "Dr. Dad" class last summer, and has since returned twice with Gray in tow as a "veteran'" for two "Boot Camp" sessions.
"This class covers everything," he said. "It's kind of nice to be in front of a lot of fathers having all the same anxieties."
Andrew Livingston of Annapolis, who has an 8-month-old daughter, Kate, is another veteran. He said the only hurdle that new dads have to overcome is admitting they might not know some things about being a parent. If they do that, they can really benefit by taking the class, he said.
"I guess you have to do what you have to do, but it's better to be prepared," he said. "It's like an investment."
For more information or to register for "Boot Camp," call 443-481-4000. The next session will be held from 9 a.m. to noon Sunday in the auditorium at AAMC's Clatanoff Pavilion. The cost is $50. For more information about the "Boot Camp" program, visit www.bcnd.org.
'Camp' shows dads the ropes

By Ruma Kumar |Baltimore Sun Reporter
- March 12, 2008
Not much scares David Curry. A tall, burly man with tattooed arms, he tracks sex offenders for the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.
The tough exterior he maintains most of the time cracked a bit as Curry gingerly handled 11-week-old Ella Grace Franckowiak. Ella is 11 pounds of pale skin, blue eyes and wisps of blond hair, and she had the Odenton man flustered.
Nothing Curry was doing could make her stop crying. He tried resting her over his shoulder. He bounced her delicately on his knee. He cradled her against his broad chest. The tears kept falling.
"What's wrong?" he cajoled. "I know what the problem is, you have this big, goofy ugly man holding you." Defeated, he handed a disconsolate Ella over to her father, Shawn Franckowiak.
Curry is a "rookie" and Franckowiak is a "veteran" of the "Boot Camp for New Dads," a three-hour monthly workshop offered by the Anne Arundel Medical Center that brings new and expectant fathers together to have frank discussions about how babies will change their lives and relationships with their partners.
Curry was getting a taste of what life might be once he and his wife have their first baby, due April 13, and he had just learned a key lesson: Fatherhood is an art of patience and humility.
"Guys are wired to want to fix things," Mike Johnson, a Severna Park real estate agent, father of two and facilitator of the program, told eight rookie fathers at a workshop Sunday. "You want to look up a manual and fix it. There's no manual for a crying baby, guys. Babies will cry. It's the only way they know how to communicate."
Johnson began the boot camp at the hospital in Annapolis last September after noticing that there were dozens of classes geared toward mothers -- from basics on birthing to breastfeeding -- but little for fathers.
"Our fathers' definition of involvement around the birth was buying the cigars and waiting in the waiting room," Johnson said. "But this is a new generation. We're not on the sidelines anymore. Fathers are in the delivery room now. We want to be a part of the process."
Johnson's observation seems to ring true. Over the last decade, a new genre of pregnancy and baby books for dads began appearing on the shelves sandwiched between What to Expect When You're Expecting and Your Baby and Child. In the past five years, 19 new books of advice for expectant fathers have emerged, according to Amazon.com.
Johnson had participated in a new dads boot camp in Colorado about seven years ago, when he and his wife were expecting their first child. But he was disappointed to see the course wasn't offered here when he moved with his family about five years ago. He found the course had a national curriculum, so he developed the program here and began opening it up for men only, with a firm restriction against allowing females over 2 feet tall.
"I wanted to create an atmosphere where guys could open up and start asking the questions that they can't in other parenting or birthing classes," Johnson said. "Sex, for instance. Guys want to know when it's safe to become intimate again, and they feel shy talking about that in front of their partners and other couples. But it's a practical question that they're really curious about."
At a recent workshop, Johnson sat in a circle with the rookie fathers, chatting openly about everything from what kind of fathers they want to be to how to be supportive during postpartum depression and five key ways to calm a crying baby. The fathers-to-be got a chance to sit in small groups with veteran dads, who had been through this program or something similar in the past year.
In the process, the expectant dads learned a new language with words such as swaddling and the "Gatekeeper Phenomenon," where new mothers tend to be overprotective of their children and make fathers feel like they're doing things wrong.
"Some of you may have noticed, your wives or girlfriends aren't the person you knew 6, 7, 8 months ago," Johnson said.
The men nodded in agreement. "Sometimes, they'll feel blue after the baby. Just overly sad, crying."
"Why?" a rookie asks.
"Because of hormones," Johnson said. "It's a huge change in women's bodies. They're overwhelmed. They feel like they're expected to know how to do everything. And we have to be there to tell them, 'It's OK. We'll figure it out together.'"
Chris Click of Bel Air, whose wife delivered 5-month-old Juliana at the Annapolis hospital, came to the workshop to share some of his experiences with expectant fathers. It included practical tips such as how to change a diaper and not being afraid to dress a baby.
Click tackled heftier matters, too, such as rekindling romance with a spouse.
"All of a sudden you're No. 3, it's baby, mom, and then you, and that's hard to handle," Click said. "It's hard to separate mom from the little one."
Johnson steps in: "The courtship begins all over again. Start with date nights."
The rookies nod, still nervous, but happy to have a little more information than they had three hours earlier.
"The thing is, people tell you it's going to be this huge change in your life, but I need data, I need numbers, specifics," Curry said. "How big of a change? When you say, I won't get sleep, how much sleep are we talking here? I feel like we got into that here. I have no experience with children, so this really helped me learn about what works, what doesn't."
Boot Camp for New Dads is offered once a month at the Annapolis hospital. It costs $50. For more information on the next workshop or to register, visit www.aahs.org or call 443-481-4000.
ruma.kumar@baltsun.com