Good Inside with Dr. Becky - The New Fatherhood: “You Either Sort It Out or Pass It On”
Episode Date: May 12, 2026For generations, fathers were taught that their job was simple: protect, provide, preside. But what happens when those old rules no longer fit? In this conversation, Dr. Becky talks with writer and fa...ther Kevin Maguire ("The New Fatherhood") about the emotional transformation happening inside modern fatherhood — and why so many dads are trying to parent differently than they were parented themselves. They explore: why presence matters more than ever in parenting the hidden identity shift that happens when men become fathers why play can feel surprisingly hard for dads anger, emotional regulation, and repair the pressure men feel to disconnect from vulnerability paternal postpartum depression and why so few people talk about it how healing ourselves changes the way we show up for our kids This is an honest conversation about masculinity, parenting, emotions, and the courage it takes to break generational patterns. Kevin's new book is called The New Fatherhood: Why Everything They Told You About Being A Dad Is Wrong, and How Embracing It Will Transform Your Life. Thank you to our partners for making this episode possible: Ole Henriksen: Use the code DRBECKY30 for 30% off the Banana Bright+ Eye Crème Airbnb: Host your home or book your next stay on Airbnb Knix: Use the code GOODINSIDE for 15% off period underwear Oso & Me: Use the code OSOGOOD15 for 15% off clothes newborn through age ten Good Inside is growing up! Listen to The In-Between Years with Dr. Sheryl, for parents of teens and tweens! Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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So much of the time, the issue isn't with the child.
The issue is with us and we have to get out of the way.
Oh, what I'm bringing to the table here is all of my baggage.
You'll be forced to come to terms with so much that you haven't yet thought about
and so many things that you've kind of put into that junk drawer,
that emotional junk drawer that you have in the kitchen.
This is an episode about fatherhood.
Now, if you're not a father, if you're a mother, if you're a grandparent, this is still for you.
because there's such an interesting perspective about fatherhood in this conversation that I think
will all benefit from hearing. Today I'm talking with Kevin McGuire. Kevin has the most successful,
the biggest substack on fatherhood. It's called the New Fatherhood. And now he has a book by the same
name. For years, Kevin has written honestly about his experience around what happens when
being achievement oriented, when not even realizing you've kind of defined yourself by your job
and your job success kind of clashes with the demand of modern fatherhood or even clashes with your own
values on how you want to show up as a father. Now, before I go further, let me just say,
this is not an episode about how to be a good dad. There's not one definition of that.
But I think is really important in this conversation with Kevin is Kevin and I both really see
dads as the protagonist, as the driver. They're not an extra parent. They're not the substitute.
They don't have to do things exactly like a mom does. And figuring out how to show up in a way that
really feels good to you is kind of a new thing that a lot of fathers in previous generations
weren't necessarily thinking about in the same way. I think there's a lot in this conversation
that might surprise you. A way of thinking about feelings that kind of destroys the idea that feelings are soft.
A way of thinking about, I'm sorry, that challenges the idea that it reduces our power.
And the surprise of what happens when you share your own vulnerable story.
And maybe everything you fear that will happen not only doesn't come true, but maybe so many amazing good things actually happen next.
I'm Dr. Becky, and this is good inside. I'm so glad you're here.
And I remember, I remember this moment.
I remember my daughter would have been about three years old.
And she was like, and I was at the kitchen and I was sending some emails.
She was like, Daddy, Daddy, can you do this?
Can you come and call her with me?
Can you come and play with me?
And I was like, no, no, I have to do that.
I have to send this email.
I have to reply to this thing.
All these stressful things that felt so important.
And I had this realization that, you know, right now she thinks I am the best person in the world.
And that's not going to last forever.
You know, she's 11 now, and I can see the kind of like the change in that she just wants to be with her friends.
And there is that moment for dads that you can be there.
You can be present.
And I think a lot of dads just throw themselves back into work.
You know, there's so many things I want to ask you, but let's actually start with the old fatherhood.
Like, what is the old fatherhood?
Just tell me what comes to mind.
Yeah, of course.
I think it's really, you know, we've been following the same plan as dads for generations.
And really, I boil it down to the three peas.
The old version of fatherhood is we were meant to do three things.
We were there to protect.
We were there to provide.
And we were there to preside.
We were there to be the boss over our family.
Yeah, you know, the preside, it is such an interesting almost also.
There's a little bit of passivity too.
I'm just presiding over.
And it makes me think about all these memes I've been seeing for men around different things
going on in the world.
Like, I'm monitoring the situation.
Like I'm monitoring.
I'm presiding.
It's kind of I'm watching.
I'm not really participating, but there seems to feel something maybe important.
But actually, maybe that was an old job.
So I think we can honor that monitoring and presiding, but maybe not anymore.
But I think presiding is like it really speaks as well to the old role as the dad as disciplinarian.
It's like you were the boss of the house.
You were the man of the house.
And you came home, you came home from work.
And your main role wasn't to look after the kids.
It was to kind of discipline them and like do what needed to be done.
Yeah. And look, and I think before I asked you about the new fatherhood, I always tell parents, first of all, all the generations before us, like, that's all had a big impact on us and what feels normal, even instinct. Like, I always think instinct is what we've learned till that point. And if fathers before you and before them, before them have all done something a certain way, that's going to show up for you. It doesn't make you a bad person. Doesn't mean you don't want to show up in a different way. But it's going to show up. Is that, is that right?
Absolutely. And it's these narratives that we've inherited from our dads and from their dads and everything that's been passed on kind of before us. And I think, you know, what we see here in fatherhood for this generation of men and kind of what I've been seeing as I've been writing for dads over the last five years is really like we have been, I think the biggest shift that has happened in fatherhood over the past 50 years is men are now present for the birth of their child. And, you know, my dad wasn't present when I was.
born and so many of those men weren't present. And I think when you, when you were there for that
moment, you know, I remember my wife telling me after, after the birth saying, I don't think
you'll ever see me in the same way again. And I said, no, I won't because I saw what you did.
And that was heroic. I called my mum, like a few minutes afterwards to kind of tell her that she had
another grandchild. And I said, I can't believe you did that for me. And I think just that
visceral experience of kind of welcoming a child into the world rather than being hidden away
and kind of just having it handed over to you once the baby is all cleaned up and wrapped away.
It just, I think that like that has just started to transform fatherhood completely.
Protect, provide, preside.
Do we have three new peas?
Are they just different letters?
Is it more complicated than that, the new fatherhood?
I think it's more complicated than that.
It's like we're really still working it out.
We're jumping out of the plane without a parachute and we're assembling it on the way down.
And it's really, you know, I think there is one P that doesn't really exist in fatherhood anymore.
And historically it really did, which is presence.
I think when you think of the new fatherhood and when you think of the roles that dads are trying to play now,
presence plays such an active role in really just like in defining who you are as a dad.
Yeah.
You know, I'm thinking about another P the whole time that you're talking.
So I just want to put it out there.
Play.
How does that come into the new fatherhood?
Well, it wasn't expected for dads.
That wasn't expected to play.
You know, there was the classic like rough and tumble dad who would kind of like come home and roughhouse with their kids.
But play wasn't really required.
But it's so, it's encouraged now.
I think there's a reason why dads around the world all love Bandit Healer so much.
Talk to me about what you're hearing from dads around so many of them doing something for the first time in their, you know, kind of history.
Yeah.
I think, you know, this new generation of dads that exemplify the new fatherhood are really
rewriting the playbook of what it means to be a dad today.
And so much of that is around, like, you know, just how they show up for their kids.
And I think there is so much, you know, my dad was one of the, was that generation that he
prided himself on, you know, I never, I never changed a diaper.
And you think, and you, and you think, I got, my poor mom, like, my dad worked away five days a week.
He kind of worked in construction.
He, like, built motorways.
He laid cable in the ground.
And he came back at the weekends, and he just used whatever he had in the tank.
And I think now with dad's being able to be more present, they can play.
They can be more there.
Like, my kids are 11 and 6.
And, you know, I used to work at incredibly stressful job.
I was at Google for almost 10 years.
You know, it was like, if I wasn't at the office, I was kind of heads down.
I was in my laptop.
Was there a moment of morning and night, a two,
a.m. panic thought that woke you up. You're like, wait a second. I'm missing something that
matters to me. There was this, there was a realization that I think, and so many and busy parents face
this all the time, is that you try to be the best parent you can be in the two worst hours of the day.
7 a.m. to 8 a.m. and 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. And it's like those are the crunch pressure moments
of like getting them up, getting them dressed, getting them in the bath, getting them fed. Everything is
so intense. And you try and do the best parent you can do in this.
those tiny windows. Wow. I mean, I find myself in smaller ways saying this habit I'm in,
is this a habit I chose or is this just a pattern that kind of took over, right? It seems like
you did that in a very big way. Are these my values? Is this how I want to be spending my time?
Is this my story? Is this someone else's story? And is it okay to kind of shift? So I'm thinking
about the mom or the dad is listening to this thinking, okay, what Kevin's saying really resonates
with me. I want to be more present. I also feel like I'm down to my laptop doing my work,
even though some part of me or a big part of me says it's actually not the most important
thing. But maybe for various reasons, I don't know if I can pick up and move, right?
I'm thinking about the dad who says, can two things be true, right? So yeah, what are your
thoughts about that? Are there smaller shifts that you've seen dads make to just feel like they
can be a little bit more present in their kids' life.
You know, I coach a lot of dads, and so many men come to this place where they've had a kid,
they go away on paternity leave, they come back and everything feels different in the office.
Something feels a little bit off.
It's kind of like that bit, you know, there's a bit in the scary movie where you walk into
the room and something's not quite right and the ominous music plays.
And they come back to work and they go, hang on a second.
And there were a lot of things I cared about a few weeks ago or a few months ago if you get the best better paternity leave, which hopefully more and more people are doing.
But, you know, it's the kind of like the new version of fatherhood isn't quite advanced in everywhere.
But they come back and they say, well, if this isn't it, then what is?
And I think untangling the sense of who you are from the job that you do is the first step for a lot of dads in order to become the best father they can be.
And, you know, it's interesting. It makes me think about a core principle, kind of the good inside method, which is untangling your identity from your behavior, right? That's the whole idea of good inside, right? So for a kid, okay, my kid's hitting. In order to intervene successfully, I need to be able to say, I have a good kid who's having a hard time. This is not a sociopath. This is not a kid who's going to be in jail forever. I need to be able to separate who they are inside from what they're doing outside, not to be permissive, but just so I can understand what the core issue is in help and what you're
is actually for dads, if you take that internally, something that's helpful for dad, separate
from parenting, but how they show up as a parent too is, I am not what I do either. Like, I am not
my job. I am a good person who works at Google. I am not a Google level three, whatever the manager
level is, because then I don't have any option to kind of shift. This is who I am, right? Which is really
constraining you're saying. Yeah, absolutely. And you just, you, you, you create your own boundaries that you
sit inside. And there's a really, you know, and that's what so much I've written in the book around,
you know, there's one chapter, you are not your job. And it completely is around like, how do we
separate ourselves from this? But, you know, other parts where it's like, what is the work that
needs to be done. So, you know, I think what I love about good inside and kind of what I've taken on
as a lot as a parent is so much of the time, the issue isn't with the child, the issue is with us. And
have to get out of the way. You know, I've been so many moments in the, you know, I've been a
parent for over a decade now. And there have been so many, let's say, teachable moments for myself
where I've realized that, oh, what I'm bringing to the table here is all of my baggage. You'll be
forced to come to terms with so much that you haven't yet thought about. And so many things that
you've kind of put into that junk drawer, that emotional junk drawer that you have in the kitchen.
100%. I often think before someone decides to have a baby, the real question is, like, are you ready for everything that's unhealed about the last number of decades to come out before your eyes? I feel like people would be like, I don't think you heard me. I'm having a kid. And I'd be like, oh, I heard you. That's what it's really about. And you know, like that's what. And the good news there, I think. And I always say this, I think about a dad I used to see for a while. And he came in and he was talking to me about something with, you know, at that point, he's like a seven-year-old. I
seen him on and off for years. And he was just complaining. You know, my kids whining all the time.
They're complaining all the time. I've worked so hard. I get in this life. And, you know, we kind of paused.
I heard it. And then we talked about what came up for him and, you know, different things.
She just goes, Becky, one time can you just tell me, like, I have part of my language?
I can you tell me I have a shitty kid? One time. Can it just be my kid's fault? And he was,
you know, we kind of laughed together. But I think the perspective that takes away the shame is,
I would bet on a dad any day over their seven-year-old.
Like, it's not that you're causing the issue.
But if you think about yourself and then you think about your three-year-old or your seven-year-old
or your 17-year-old, it's powerful to say, it's not that this is my fault, but I am in
the position of responsibility.
And that's actually just a leadership mindset.
I'm going to bet on me to kind of change the culture around here.
Yeah, and I think we just don't have great role models as men.
We don't have great dads out there who are.
leading the way who are being vulnerable, who are showing empathy.
You know, even the language of emotion is centered in, you know, if someone is showing emotion,
if a man is showing emotion, it's like, oh, don't grow a pair.
Or if they're kind of not following the norms of the group, it's like, you're a pussy.
It's like all of that, like, being strong is masculine, being or being kind of weak is feminine.
And I think, and men are trained to see, they're trained to see vulnerable.
is synonymous with weakness.
It's like, and if you show vulnerability,
this is something that someone else in the workplace
can use to get ahead of you,
to kind of someone who's more ambitious
can climb the ladder
because they know your weakness.
So we train ourselves to hide these things away.
We take our soft spots
and we just hide them away
and we make sure no one can see them.
And I think what a big core part of the new fatherhood is like,
okay, well, how can you show up?
How can you be vulnerable?
How can you really like,
because what our kids are looking for more and more
isn't physical strength.
You know, my daughter, she's, you know, she's in adolescence.
She's about to become a teenager.
It's like she needs me to understand her.
She needs empathy.
She needs love.
She doesn't need like these old models of what it meant to be a dad, you know, in 50, 100 years ago.
Recently I traveled to Texas for work and it was one of those trips where there was so much going on,
which can be really energizing and really exhausting.
And that's what's so great about booking.
stays on Airbnb when you travel. We booked a home in a really beautiful part of Austin that was so
peaceful. It had this amazing porch surrounded by trees. And when you're on a busy trip, having a place like
that to drink your morning coffee and ground yourself, just makes a huge difference. And the other thing
that helps me feel grounded when I'm traveling is when someone can help with all the logistics.
When you book a home on Airbnb, you can have groceries delivered upon your arrival, which meant that
in Austin, I could focus on being present instead of running to the store. And dinner?
There's something really special about sharing a meal around a table, even when you're traveling.
And that's especially true when you're traveling with family. Because when you book a home on Airbnb,
you get that space, a real kitchen, a dinner table, a backyard where the kids can actually run around.
The kind of setup that makes a trip feel less like a disruption to your family's routine and more like an extension of it.
That's why I love booking homes through Airbnb. I can do the things.
that will help me feel grounded so I can make the most out of my trip.
Vulnerable, emotion, presence, connection, not fixing.
Like, just bring that alive with something almost absurdly hyper-specific,
just so we can talk about a real moment.
Well, I mean, you know, the gestation of the new fatherhood, it began.
So my son is six years old now.
And so about a few months after he was born,
I would take myself out.
I would, you know, once he was in bed, I would take the dog.
I had this sad-looking Basset hound.
I would take him out.
And we would just go for a walk.
And I would go on my own.
I would go far enough away that no one would notice.
No one would know who I was.
But not far enough away that I would arouse suspicion at home.
And I would sit down and I would cry just to myself.
I would cry because I didn't love my son.
I didn't know what was going on.
And it was, with hindsight,
I feel very fortunate that it was my second child.
And I knew that something was different this time around.
And, you know, I was trying to find out what was going on.
I was lying in bed, Googling things, you know, 3 o'clock in the morning.
But like, why am I sad, new dad?
And I kind of came upon this notion of paternal postpartum depression.
I had friends get in touch and say, oh, wow, I never realized that that's what that was.
And actually the symptoms, how it presents in men is there are a lot of similarities.
But the symptoms of how it presents in men is it pushes addictive tendencies to the foreground.
So alcohol, drugs, gambling, sex.
For me, I feel really lucky.
And I just, I got hooked on a video game, which is the wildest thing to think about.
But I just, I would sit up and stay up until 4 in the morning.
It was a sense of, it was a sense of like having some control over a situation where,
I felt, you know, I really felt my son would never stop crying.
And in hindsight, of course he wasn't crying all the time.
He was just like, that's what it felt like to me.
And in doing that work, in really understanding, you know, I think a lot about this,
the Japanese art, Kinsugi with the broken pots.
Yes.
And you use the golden, you use the golden kind of clay to seal it together.
And it's more beautiful than it ever was.
And I really think about my experience with paternal postpartum depression and the vulnerability
that I've kind of had to learn to share and to show
because I know it helps other dads out there.
I know that the more that we talk about these things together,
the better we can be for our partners, for our kids,
the better we can show up for each other and for ourselves.
But also I think it's interesting.
First of all, thank you for sharing that with me, with everyone.
There's nothing like a story, you know,
that makes us know we're not alone and there's nothing wrong with us.
So I really appreciate that.
And it's interesting we got on this thread and we were talking about kind of showing up for your kids emotionally because I think actually it's really significant.
If we mom or dad are not developing a relationship with our own internal life, our own feelings, things that feel really hard internally for us, it's that's kind of impossible to expect that I'm going to be able to show up for my kid.
Like, right? And then I think Kevin, the thing is so beautifully always right about. And,
And this, I think, is the bigger picture is when we do that, the benefit is not just in the relationship with your kid.
I mean, your mental health is going to be stronger. Your relationship with a partner, your relationships at work.
Like, when we work on things with our kids, it shows up, I think, in the most positive ways.
Oh, yeah.
In ways we didn't expect. Someone's like, you know what? Someone actually told me this.
My manager ratings are higher at work than ever since I've been working on showing up in a different way with my kid.
Is that weird?
And I go, I actually think it's perfectly predictable.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Right?
You know, I, this is when I talk about the transformative power of fatherhood.
It's not just allowing you to be a better dad at home.
It's every single, it's an unlock for every aspects of your life.
Like so many dads that I talk to and I work with and they say, you know what?
I've been able to find joy in tiny moments of like in that gap between.
When my kid is losing it, you know, there's that, you know, for so many men, anger is an issue, right?
And it's like, and it's an inherited issue.
And we've watched our dads blow up and lose their tempers.
And we're trying to learn how not to do it for ourselves.
And so much of this is just like just finding that tiny slither of space and time between action, between reaction and action, between the kind of thing that we feel and the next step that we take.
and, you know, like, and then that for me is like when you learn to feel more, you can, you know,
it's that great line. I come back to it all the time. I never forget it. And when it's when your
child is having a meltdown, they're not having a hard, they're not giving you a hard time.
They're having a hard time. And for men, it's like this instant shot of empathy to the heart.
You straight away feel, oh, you know what? I can be mad at this kid right now because he's like going
through it and I just need to give him a hug and let him know that I understand and I'm there for it.
So many things I want to double click on. One thing, just because I think it's a really powerful
slight shift is I would actually say to someone, anger is never the problem. Anger is a completely
healthy emotion. Anger is the emotion that tells us what we care about, what we need, what we want.
It's the key to then self-concept and self-respect. The issue is all.
unregulated anger, unmanaged anger.
And actually, learning how to regulate anger starts with looking for it and kind of befriending
it and listening to it before it becomes a volcano.
And so I just always like to clarify that because, you know, I said this recently, you know,
and I happened to say this to a dad and he said it really resonated.
I said, feelings are information.
Think about the best CEO in the world.
They want information.
certain information is overwhelming.
Right now, everything about AI and the workforce, that is overwhelming information.
But no great CEO I know would say, don't tell me about it.
Make it go away.
What they would say is, you know what, I am overwhelmed thinking about this, but my job is to work on the overwhelm
so I can use the information wisely.
And if you think about anger or jealousy in yourself or in your kid that same way,
it kind of becomes obvious why feelings aren't soft or even we see.
say they're vulnerable. It's just, I guess, but if you think about it as information, it,
it kind of makes sense in a different framework. But also as boys, we're trained not to feel.
Which it means you're trained not to have a lot of information from your body.
And I think we have to, we have to learn, like, as men now, we're going, okay, well, what does it
mean to feel? What does it mean to be able to be in touch with these emotions? You know, for me, a big,
when I was dealing with the paternal postpartum depression, I started working with a therapist.
as like, you know, hugely helpful, big unlock.
And I think I remember, and she said, why won't you let yourself be angry?
These are very normal times to be angry.
And I, and I just said, and I said, well, because I'm scared of hitting my kid.
Yeah.
And, and she said in a moment, she said, you know that anger and violence are not the same thing?
And it felt like she'd kind of open my head up and take.
making these two wires and uncrossed them and when, you know what, those two things aren't connected.
And it was just huge unlock.
And for me, I learned him like, you know what, it's okay to be angry.
I have now, I like to think of like, I have an anger threshold.
Yes.
If something crosses there, it's like, I'm going to get angry.
And I warn my kids.
I'm going, hey, I'm pretty close here.
Do you want to keep pushing this?
Because I'm ready to keep pushing it if you are.
And most of the time, it works.
and we come to a better place.
I think that's exactly what I'm saying.
Like, violence is behavior that happens because I cannot regulate the anger in my body.
But I kind of picture anger in our body saying, like, why are you always blaming me?
The issue is the lack of skills.
Like, stop blaming me.
I'm just trying to tell you what you care about because anger is the thing that lets me say to my kid as an example.
No, you can't have a sleep over tomorrow night.
Why?
It's Saturday.
Because I know I'm so tired.
I need a good night's sleep. And I know for that day, if I have an extra kid there and people wake up early,
I am going to not be in a good place. That's not good for anyone. But the anger actually is a little
bit felt to me then, which is why I set a boundary. If I don't let myself feel it then,
you know what I'm going to do? Okay. Sure. And then I'm going to react. I'm going to yell when I don't
want to. I'm going to say, what's wrong with me? But the anger wasn't the problem. It probably
it was only the issue that I couldn't hear it when it was at a level two, so it had to explode out
as a level 10.
Well, a lot of what a lot of parents will do, and not to say that that alcohol is the enemy
or anything like that, but it's like, they'll just drink to numb those feelings.
So, well, I don't want to allow myself to kind of feel angry.
I don't want to sit in that uncomfortable emotion.
So I will just like open another ball of wine.
Exactly.
So on the topic of anger, though, here's something I really want to ask you about.
I think I like this framework.
that it's not really anger. It's our unregulated anger. So we need skills to manage it. And me too.
It's not like I always have access to those skills. I'm going to do the thing sometimes I regret.
I love talking about repair. It's such a big part of good inside, right? I always think we want to
try to show up the way we want a little more often, but then repair a heck of a lot more often,
knowing we're never going to get it right all the time. Do you find repair? I'm sorry I yelled.
That wasn't okay. I love you. Some version of that. Is that harder?
for dads?
Hmm.
It is,
I think generally,
like,
it is,
it's very hard to admit you are wrong.
In any circumstance,
whether it's dad's mom's kids,
it's very hard to admit you're wrong.
It's very hard to admit you're wrong
in the moment of especially kind of blowing up
and being angry.
I,
you know,
for me,
it ties back to that idea of,
I want to do things differently.
You know,
I think about this,
shift in fatherhood. I think about all the generations of men who came before me and all the
generations of men who just passed down what was passed down to them again and again and again.
And I know that in this moment, like, the easiest thing would be to just pass it on again.
It would be to close that kitchen drawer with all the junk and say, you know what?
Like, they can deal with it when they're older. But I can't do that. It's like I, and I think
This is what you're seeing in this generation of men now, that men are taking a much more
conscious role in what they choose to pass on and what they choose to kind of say, the book
stops here, and this goes no further.
And really it is, you know, like, I am learning.
I'm a work in progress, I think, as we all are.
And am I the perfect parent?
No, not even close.
like, do I lose my temper at my kids?
Do I, you know, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my,
style.
like, I, I, I, I, I, I, I kind of disappear and shrink away.
And, like, like, and as I've kind of, as I've got a little bit more comfortable with anger as
an emotion, with kind of, you know, getting to this place where, okay, this is a, this is a, this is a, you know,
like a selection box of different types of feelings that I can go, oh, right, I can feel all of these
things.
and it's okay to feel these things, even if it does mean, you know, like losing my temper with my kid or my child getting upset, that you just, you do have to turn around and say, listen, I, in that situation, I'm sorry. And I didn't act or behave how I should have done. I think we, you know, you write about this so, so well. It's, we can't expect our kids to do the things that we won't do ourselves. It's, you know, do as I say, not do as I do.
It's so hard.
Literally this morning, okay, I was short with my kids.
I was stressed.
I get up early.
I'm doing my work.
I had a thought.
I couldn't finish it.
I was kind of annoyed.
It was breakfast time and my kids came out of the room,
although they were perfectly on schedule.
It just was a collision of needs.
And so I was short with them.
I snapped.
And actually, right before they got in the bus,
it was funny.
I said these three lines.
This morning was rough.
I'm sorry, I yelled.
I love you.
Right?
But before I did that,
I just want to be honest.
Like, my thought process never changes.
I was like,
my kids owe me.
an apology. My kids, they owe me an apology. Like, they could have done this. And honestly,
I tell them they can come out at seven. They came out at 6.57. That's why I yelled. It's because of the
three minutes. I have a whole story. And I don't know why I do think about sports a lot as metaphors,
because I think it becomes so obvious what good coaching is. And I pictured before my kids got in the
bus a team with horrible sportsmanship. They taunt everyone when they're winning. They're tripping
people when they're losing. They're blaming the ref. And then you see the coach who's doing the same
thing. And then your coach is consulting you, Kevin, saying, my players, let me tell you are they bad
sports. And you probably be like, well, I mean, I've, you know, and I can't imagine a coach that
anyone would want would say, well, they owe me an apology first. They have to change their behavior
first. You'd say like, what planet are you living in? Like, right? And I really thought about that.
And I was like, I'm the coach. The truth is, my kids are a little challenging, but I wonder if I really
want them to have accountability. I guess I got to kind of do the accountability. And I just want to
name it is annoying. It's annoying and we all have righteous indignation after we yell. We go into like,
my kid owes me this and if they didn't do this. And so I just think there's a humor to that.
Like, oh, there I go. Not useful. Let me be the best basketball coach I can be. And that, that really
helped me show up in a little different way in repair this morning. Yeah. Because you could have dug your heels in.
You said, I will not apologize until they apologize first.
And actually, you're going, hang on a second.
You know, my son is six.
Is he going to know that he's done something wrong?
You're like, you know, and he should apologize and da-da-da.
And if I'm sitting there, she doing.
And actually, you just, you know, what I see with my kids all the time, and I struggle
with this genuinely is they can flip from incredibly happy to a ball of rage and back
happy again in the space of two minutes.
and if I lose my temper, the day is done.
Like maybe the whole week is done.
Like if I've really lost it, it takes a long time for me to kind of get back to that baseline.
And I look at them and go, well, I shouldn't be expecting them to be able to stay at this baseline all the time.
And I shouldn't be expecting them to be the ones who are leaning forward and saying, you know,
hey, I'm so sorry that it took me a little bit longer to put my shoes on.
It took me a little bit longer to do.
I think so much of stress in the mornings especially, but just with children in general,
and especially young kids under five.
So much of the stress that we experience
is when they don't adhere
to the schedule that we have created.
And I think they're such a happy in between there
because it's true.
Kids and we both are post
the under five-year-old stage.
And I just want to say congratulations to both of us
because those are hard years.
So that's just number one.
We did it.
Number two, kids do live in a timeless world.
And so I think the nuance I always tell parents
is like if you think about your kid on one planet
and you're in another planet, that is what life is like. In my planet, what I care about is
getting out the door on time and is getting to work on time and is getting my kid to bed when
we said they were going to go to bed because I want five minutes to sit on the couch before I pass
out. Like, that's my world. And then over here is the world of Pokemon, of all of a sudden,
I'm a teacher, I'm a fireperson, pretend play. These are timeless worlds. And I love a visual. So if I think
about my kid wanting to cooperate in my world, which we do need sometimes. I think about the visual of
I need to go to my, I need to leave my planet and build a bridge to their planet and drop in
for a couple minutes because that's actually the only way there's even a bridge to kind of walk
back together to mine. And so those three minutes of, oh, tell me about that card, right? Beyond feeling
good in and of itself, because it does feel so good when you really give yourself permission to just be in your
kid's world, you are bridge building. And then you have something where your kid could walk back
to your world. But if not, there's no bridge. There's no bridge for them to even walk on.
And those bridges that you build in those early years, you know, I always think, I always call those
first five years the tunnel. Like if you have kids under five, you're in the tunnel and you're
just, it's dark, it's scary, it's intense, it's relentless, you're just going and there is,
it's not that you're hoping and dreaming for this time to be over, but you're just heading that way.
and you keep going and you keep going until you get at.
And sometimes there's a light come in.
You think it's the end.
It's a train.
It's about to hit you.
You're done for.
But I think like those bridges that you build in those years are the things that kind of
that sustain you as a parent going forward.
I think, you know, there's, you know, the week we record this, there was a, there was an interview
and there was a kind of like a very, very well-known kind of male influencer who was talking
about dads aren't useful at all in the first two years.
that shouldn't even be there during the birth.
And I was listening to it and going,
this is the rhetoric that really puts that's on the wrong track forever.
You know,
that work that you do in those early years,
that work that you do to build those bridges
and kind of watch those real true connections with your kids,
they will sustain you going forward.
My daughter and I play a video game together.
There's a video game called Stadju Valley.
You walk around, you run a farm, you grow crops,
And every Saturday morning, we get up and we play it for an hour together.
And I, it was, she played it on her own for a while.
I said, oh, I can play this.
And I got a job working on her farm, working around, water and plants, helping kind of pick everything out.
And it's just this, we've formed this real connection of this thing.
And I think, you know, there is so many opportunities for dads to lean in to rather than force your kids to be into the thing that you were into.
It's like, hey, well, just figure out what they're into and meet them where they are.
like build that bridge and that will be something that really sustains the relationship.
The overarching thing I want to leave a dad with is you are likely trying to do something.
No one else in the course of fatherhood history in your lineage has done.
And if you think about that visually, like everyone before maybe did it one way.
And it's not about blame because I actually think everyone has always been doing the best they can with the resources they have.
That's a lot of kind of energy.
And then there's you.
And you're kind of saying, I'm going to shift something.
So every single father who comes after me is going to have something else feel a little bit more natural.
So it won't be as much of a fight to say, hey, I'm sorry.
It won't be as much of a fight to listen without fixing.
It won't be as much of a fight to talk about feelings.
I just think what's often missed there is you're taking home.
a lot. That is such hard work. That is honestly just so brave and maybe as motivation. Just think about
all the generations after you who can like owe you a major thank you note. The other thing I just
want to add is I'm so excited at Good Inside, not to build forefathers, but to build with fathers.
I would love to hear from you. I would love you to email podcast at goodinside.com and just give it to
us. Like, hey, this is what you got wrong. This is what that episode left out. How did you leave this out?
I don't think fathers are the passenger in the car.
They are not a supporting part of the movie.
You are your own protagonist.
You are also a driver.
And I know I'm really eager to learn about your journey,
your needs, your wants,
so we can show up in a better and better way for dads.
So let's end the way we always do.
Place your feet on the ground.
Place a hand on your heart.
And let's remind ourselves
even as we struggle on the outside, we remain good inside.
I'll see you soon, and I'm looking forward to hearing from you.
