With any training program, the first few days are fun — there’s excitement that comes with new hobbies or projects. But then the real work sets in, and to get better, you have to stick with it. Improvement requires dedication, tenacity, commitment, and time. You have to plug through the hard days and can’t give up when things get rough. Otherwise, you’ll never meet your goal.

Brain training with an infant is no different. Everyone who has spent time with a baby knows how hard it can be: the sleep deprivation, the crying, the uncertainty, the monotony. But like other training programs, you need to persevere, and give your brain the stimulation it needs to grow and adapt, preparing you for a lifetime of parenthood.

Erez Levin, father of two, adtech specialist at Google, and paternity leave “dadvocate,” agrees. Levin took advantage of his employer’s parental leave entitlement when his children were born, and does not think the question should be if you take parental leave, but how you take parental leave. “When my daughter was four months old, my wife returned to work, and that’s when I began my full 12 weeks of paternity leave. I learned that bonding happens during the challenging moments, and I had plenty of those, especially in the first few weeks of my solo leave,” he told us. “I benefitted in more ways than I could list, but overall I am confident that taking my leave got me comfortable being an independent caretaker across all tasks.”

Just like any training program, the real growth — the real confidence, the real victory — of fatherhood brain training comes with the hard work. But like other accomplishments, once you achieve success and look back, all those hard days and nights were worth it.

Where Do We Go from Here?

For dads with access to parental leave.

There are very real social norms that push men into the income-earning role and dissuade them from taking their leave. Find a way to work around this, push back, and fight for your leave.

Although scheduling some overlap time with your partner is nice for building a family bond, it’s important to use part of your leave to spend time with your baby alone — it’s the best opportunity for brain training. When you’re the only adult at home, you tackle the challenges, so you learn how to solve those daily baby problems.

For dads without access to parental leave.

Luckily, in Switzerland, fathers are now entitled to two weeks of paternity leave. That’s not an awful lot, but at least it’s a start. So, take it and make good use of it! But if you don’t have access to paid leave and cannot afford unpaid leave, you can still train your brain by finding baby-engagement time outside of work. To maximize brain training, one-on-one time needs to be a priority during your baby’s infancy, so make the time to be alone with your baby. Will you be exhausted? Absolutely. Is it going to be worth it? 100%.

Of course, if your partner is breastfeeding, the role of feeding the baby may be covered. But there are still plenty of other baby-focused roles you can take on: diaper duty, gas-bubble eradicator, tummy-time instructor, master soother, nap captain, expert swaddler, lullaby singer, scrubber and bather — or just strap on a baby carrier and head out for a walk. You don’t have to read your infant Proust; you don’t have to strive for perfection. You just have to spend time with them.

For employers, managers, and leaders.

As decision-makers, you have the power to push for policies that allow all new parents to take parental leave — and the power to initiate the cultural shift necessary to encourage men to take advantage of parental leave entitlements. Take parental leave yourself, tell others about your brain training, and set an example for other new dads to do the same. If parental leave wasn’t an option for you when you had kids, join the voices of other men who regret their lack of leave by advocating for better policies for today’s new dads.

For grandfathers, uncles, friends, neighbours, colleagues, employers, and everyone else.

Fight for parental leave for all parents. Gender norms are so entrenched in our culture that we have come to mistake them as biology. But science tells us that females do not have any more parenting instinct than people of other genders. In reality, the “biology” of the “parenting instinct” is far more expansive — it’s an innate skill that also requires exposure, experience, and practice.

And lastly, support the new dads in your life. It’s hard for men to assert their desire to spend dedicated time at home with their infant. Men who do push back against social norms will need support. You can be supportive in the simplest ways: forward this article, talk about their amazing brain-training opportunity, tell them you believe in them. A few words of encouragement might mean more than you’ll ever know.

. . .

The more men have access to parental leave and take it, the more dads we’ll have in the world with brains trained for parenting. If we want to see greater gender equality, we need to not just focus on women’s participation in the professional world — we need to encourage more men to participate in the caregiving world.