I have namedchanged as paranoid about giving out too much information but your post got me thinking shot my father.
I think it is helpful when young to have someone who allows you to question society and isn't sexist.
My father was a staunch catholic I think he even paid money to one one of those anti abortion charities as I remember having a heated discussion with him when I was 13 years. So there was sometimes a great deal that we disagreed wth, the catholic faith being a major one. However we used to have wonderful debates and he certainly let me question Catholicism and he presented himself flaws and all.
I went to an all girls school and found some of the teaching pretty odd but in hindsight I am pleased that up until university I never really had to share a class with boys/men I really felt I could do what I wanted.
Anyhow he died by the time I was twenty but I never ever heard him say anything sexist or racist and he actively pointed out sexism so so often. He questioned society so much and how it treated women, immigrants etc. I think it means that now if I hear anything dodgy I really find myself calling people on it.
I remember him introducing me to a fellow teacher and her and him talking to me about how she couldn't even get a credit card in her own name and stupid that was and my dad reminding me how short a time ago that was.
For example in my teens when girls would start dropping out of sports he was an amateur sports coach and really was supportive to women also as a teacher I know it drove him mad that some women would not feel comfortable at sports anymore - he coached some women to national level before they went to better coaches.
We used to watch the tennis - he loved Martina Navratilova and the Williams sisters and when idiots would comment negatively about them in terms of their bodies then he would tell me what splendid athletes they were and how wrong people were if they couldn't see how fantastic they were both as spokespeople and as sports women.
He couldn't stand apartheid either and we would discussions about this.
I remember huge discussions about whether we would act one way or another in historical situations.
Advertising - he would point out how stupid it was and why would you want to base your worth on appearances etc etc.
When I went out and say drank too much at university he was always at the end of the phone would pick me up and never judge.
He helped around the house more than equally because my mother was ill but he honestly managed a house and full time work so I remember him sometimes doing house work until very late.
He fully supported anything I wanted to do from music to sport to academics.
His mother, my grandmother was totally wonderful and political and helped women and families too so I really feel he got a lot of this from his mum.
There are so many idiots in this world so I am determined to bring some critical thinking to my children.