Good Inside with Dr. Becky - Vulnerability, Courage & Fatherhood
Episode Date: December 2, 2025Dr. Becky talks with Joe Gonzales, founder of Brooklyn Stroll Club, about how searching for connection with other dads sparked an NYC movement. He shares how fatherhood is “re-raising parts of yours...elf,” why vulnerability is contagious, and what it means to play the long game in modern parenting.Get the Good Inside App by Dr. Becky: https://bit.ly/4fSxbzkYour Good Inside membership might be eligible for HSA/FSA reimbursement! To learn more about how to get your membership reimbursed, check out the link here: https://www.goodinside.com/fsa-hsa-eligibility/Follow Dr. Becky on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drbeckyatgoodinsideSign up for our weekly email, Good Insider: https://www.goodinside.com/newsletterFor a full transcript of the episode, go to goodinside.com/podcast.Thank you to our sponsor, Airbnb — because during the holidays, it’s nice to love your family and have your own space. Find your getaway or host your home at airbnb.com/host.Thank you to our sponsor Skylight. Head to Skylight.com/BECKY for $30 off their 15-inch calendars. This offer expires December 31st of this year.Thank you to our sponsor Hot Wheels. Check out our full series with Hot Wheels at hotwheels.com/challengeaccepted.Thank you to our sponsor Sony. Get $700 off the Sony Alpha 7 IV camera at electronics.sony.com.This season, Good Inside is partnering with Welcome Baby, a nonprofit that provides essential supplies to new parents in need. From December 18th–22nd, 10% of every new membership will help fund Welcome Baby packages—giving parents the support they need during those first, beautiful, overwhelming weeks. Learn more at GoodInside.com. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Parenting can be one of the most rewarding journeys of our lifetime, but at the same time,
without a doubt, it is one of the most difficult. And one of the reasons it's often most difficult
is that it can be so lonely and isolating. Today I'm having an amazing conversation with someone
who has changed what it means to be a modern dad. Joe Gonzalez is a New York-based father, media
professional and the founder of Brooklyn Stroll Club built on the idea that dads also need
belonging and community. Every parent needs a group to turn to for those moments when you're
panicking or need support or can't put words to something that you're going to that's real
but feels so confusing. And what he has done through Brooklyn Stroll Club is nothing less than
remarkable. Joe and I unpack what it really means to be a father, what he hopes his kid says
about him and the type of father, he is surprising things he's learned along the way and really
the power of not feeling alone. I'm Dr. Becky, and this is good inside. We'll be back right after
this. Hi, Joe. Hi. So happy to have you here. I'm so excited to be here. Thank you.
So let's just jump right in. So why don't we start? Just tell me a little bit about how you kind of
came to this world of fatherhood, what you noticed in terms of maybe what's absent from it,
what it was really like and you didn't expect. And then what you did about it because it's
pretty remarkable. Yeah. So I became a dad almost about two years ago now. When I found out
me and my wife were having a kid, I just, it completely changed me. I was like, what am I going
to do? We don't have family here. So I think for us, it was like, what are we going to do about
that. How are we going to create a village for us? And I had been documented it online and TikTok
and just really kind of documenting how I was experiencing what she was going through as well
and just kind of being open and vulnerable about that. Then when my son came, I'm like,
okay, this is a lot to experience. You know, she's going through healing. She's going through
so many different things as well. And so for me, I was like, how do I get community around?
I need people who understand this. Like, this is something I've never experienced before.
a lot of my friends maybe didn't have kids, aren't married, you know, so I'm like, put a call
online and I'm like, hey, where do the dads hang out? Like, I'm just like, I'm in Brooklyn. There's
got to be dads around here somewhere and kind of the consensus was, we don't know you do it. Or
there was like a Facebook group or something that didn't really feel inviting. So for me, I pretty
much made a call out to, hey, do you guys want to meet up on a random Saturday and come to find out
like dads really were open to that as well. So like 20 dads came through. My son was about
four months old. And from there, we've just started building this community called Brooklyn Stroll
Club and really didn't expect it to grow how it has. But I think for me, what I found is just
like community not only is needed for me, but for others as well. Yeah. And just your one two line
description of what Brooklyn Stroll Club is or maybe what it is underneath what people might see.
Tell me a little bit about that.
So I would say Brooklyn Stroke Club, it always changes as far as I'm changing as well.
But for right now, I would say Brooklyn Stroke Club is a community for dads to feel seen and supported while giving a new voice to modern fatherhood.
Okay.
There's so many things I want to unpack from what you said, because you went online and kind of said, like, where the dad's at?
Like, where do the dads go?
And it seems like, is this right, you got interest but no answer?
Like, everyone's like there's no, I don't have an answer, but I don't have an answer, but I'm.
I'm also kind of asking that question.
Is that what happened?
Yeah, it was kind of like, oh, well, I don't know.
And it was a lot of moms that were just like, oh, I mean, maybe my husband has done this
or, you know, we have this Facebook group.
It didn't really point me anywhere that felt like where I belonged, you know what I'm saying.
Do you think dads, or let's even say dads to be, because it sounds like you were thinking
about this during the pregnancy, are also aware, like, I have this need for community.
Was community always been a big thing for you before fatherhood?
and the absence of it around this new identity was obvious to you?
Yeah, I saw originally kind of my background as I come from the church.
So the premise, a lot of that, is community groups.
And some of those fall short sometimes.
You know, when it comes to faith, you can kind of go back and forth.
Like, I'm involved.
I'm not.
I'm kind of contemplating where I'm at in life.
But fatherhood, I'm here forever.
So I think what I kind of got inspired was like, hey, I really want to create a group
where I can evolve and grow in,
and that doesn't kind of fall apart, you know what I mean?
Or I don't have to go back and forth and contemplate this.
Like I'm in fatherhood forever regardless.
So having a community that empowers that was important to me.
Yeah.
And look, I think moms and dads are woefully undersupported in general.
I know you and I have talked about that.
But there probably is a lot more for community for new moms.
Are you in a new mom's group?
And are you in this group when you're pregnant?
and do you have your text thread?
And have you found that that is something that moms have a little bit more built into their life
or more optionality than dads have traditionally had?
Absolutely.
I think moms really are great at community, great at building community,
great at understanding what their needs are, what they're expecting,
what they want in friendships.
I think women are way better at just building strong connections with women.
And I think that's the kind of thing that we've wrestled with or struggled with as men.
There's some stats by my friends, like, Mundo, really.
They have a stat that's like 55% of men between 25 to 40 have not one person that they feel close to.
So I think that they...
Wait, say that again.
So 50% of men between the ages of 25 to 45 don't have one person they feel close to.
Which is interesting, because if you don't have somebody, one, as a friend to you, just by yourself, how can that affect you?
when you become a father and you're actually somebody's closest friend, you know, or as a partner
to your partner, you know, how can that affect you and how can that affect the way that you
operate in the world? And that's just something I think we've answered or tried to figure out
as we create the community. Yeah. You know, a principle I think about a lot and it's just
feeling loud in my brain right now is we can't change the hard. We can change the alone.
And the transition to parenthood is really hard.
Yeah. And I think sometimes we focus on trying to change the hard. It's not that hard or here's how to make it easier. But if you think about not changing the hard, if the hard just is the hard because life has hard things, and instead you focus on weight, maybe the problem isn't the hard. It's just hard plus alone. And what if I actually focus on the alone piece? It's actually not to say it's so easy to change, but I actually think that part is, we have a little bit more agency in changing that. And that's exactly what you created and transition.
to becoming a father? What if I just didn't feel alone every Saturday? What if I put my baby in a
stroller, walked around with other dads? I don't know if it's probably not structured
conversations. Who knows what we talk about? But I'm literally no longer alone in this brand new
identity I'm taking on. Yeah, having a place where you can, our online community is where you can
actually just talk to daily and then having a meet up monthly. Like, yeah, that's not going to cure
everything. That's not going to cure your loneliness. But that creates the conversation and
starts a movement. So for me, I'm hitting dads on a Saturday morning. Like, hey, I've been up
since five. I need to hang out. I need to get outside with somebody who else, who else is like
feeling the same, who is up, who is tired to. To me, it feels like I'm not doing it alone.
Of course, I have my partner, which is always the support for me, but being able to have another
dad to experience, hey, your kid's going through this, my kids going through this, I feel a little bit
more less alone in that element.
Yeah, look, I don't want to be shy about naming this.
The transition to having a baby can be tricky sometimes in a partnership.
And sometimes you have a little tiff or something's going on.
You're feeling distant.
And actually having someone to talk to about it helps you vet, helps you feel understood,
maybe helps you develop a new perspective to be more productive with your partner.
Yeah.
Our partner can't be the only person we're talking to when we're having a hard time with our partner.
Yeah.
Right?
It's too circular.
No, absolutely.
There's dads in the community that I look up to how they,
handle things. Or I'm like, hey, I actually wouldn't handle it that way. And it helps me kind of
regulate what I'm doing and how I'm expressing myself, not only to my partner, but also to my
child. So it's like, hey, I love the way that you're talking to your wife or how y'all experience
this together and y'all went through it together. Or, you know what? It's 100. We have meetups
with 100 dads. Not everybody handles things well, but being able to regulate those and understand
where I want to take things, where I want to kind of leave things from other people and other
experiences is helpful. You know, I'm curious what you think about this. I'm not even sure of my own
answer, but I'm just going to put it out there. Do you think most dads are most men when it comes
to something that's hard? Have they been socialized to think, I just have to make this better
or pretend this isn't happening rather than maybe I could talk to someone about this or experience
this with someone? Yeah, I would say so. I think dads, I think the male, maybe
stereotype is just internalize a lot of those things. Find the solution on your own. And I think
like that's been seen in society and been seen in how men kind of operate maybe on isolation
in politics, in general and government and things like that. Like when men get power and
have those things that maybe aren't addressed, those I think those kind of play out a little bit
differently. But your family needs you in those elements. And so to be able to like process
those things, I think is really important.
Yeah.
What was it like when you became a dad?
Like what images come to mind or feelings or thoughts?
I think completely changed me.
I think when I first saw my son,
I had this immense responsibility
that made me feel like I'm the sole responsibility.
Of course, my wife was there.
She had this tough process of giving birth.
But, you know, even in that moment of seeing him,
it's like she's healing.
She's trying to figure out get better.
and I'm like, okay, what am I doing now?
And I think that responsibility of can I provide,
can I be there for him and unlearn all the patterns
that maybe I learned in the past?
Like, what can I do for him that's better?
And I think a lot of not only what can I do for him,
but also what can I do for myself
and how can I change the dynamic of maybe what he's seen
and what he's going to experience kind of fell on me as well.
Yeah.
You know, I read something you had sent another interview.
It makes me think about what we're talking about here
that so much about fatherhood isn't just about raising your kid.
It's about re-raising parts of yourself.
Yeah.
I've been in a place where I, everything means more, how I respond to him, how I respond to my
wife.
It matters.
And I think I've really been trying to take those moments one at a time and not just like
think about, hey, these are things that I need to address overall.
Of course, I need to work on this and this.
but being able to respond to my son out of love, out of care, patience.
Like there's elements maybe that my dad maybe fell short in that I want to give to him
in a way that kind of heals not only him but myself, you know.
And I think that seeing him and how I've handled situations sometimes is a healing journey
for me as well.
Being able to him to have a tantrum or him to lose his cool and me to respond just out of love
or really out of patience.
I kind of make myself proud in those elements
in those times, you know.
I mean, I think you're getting to the heart
of what parenting secretly is all about, right?
I think so many times, like, we think having our kids
are going to heal us or our kids will naturally heal us,
but our kids trigger old stuff in us.
Oh, yeah.
Kind of the opposite.
You're like, oh, I guess I didn't resolve that thing.
And I think we can either look at that as,
oh, something's wrong with me
or I'm destined to repeat the past
or through this interaction with my kid,
they're kind of like showing me a mirror
or shining light of something
that if I can work through this,
it's going to benefit them.
But it's going to be maybe huge for me,
even in my non-parenting areas of life.
And it sounds like that's kind of the journey.
I mean, especially him being so pure
and just a raw emotion of what a human is.
Like he's just experiencing things for the first time.
So being able to see that in a way that's like,
Hey, he doesn't know how he's responding to me. He doesn't know how he's acting in some areas.
I do. I'm 30. I'm 33. Like, I understand my responses. And so it definitely has more of a
responsibility to say, how can I respond better? He's, it's his first time. It's not my first time.
And not that I have, I definitely have grace in how I respond and how I react, but can I be better
the next time that he responds this way? And can I respond better to?
my partner the next time as well, you know.
Tell me a little bit about your dad.
Like you, what do you remember growing up?
My dad, he worked hard.
He was a hard worker.
I never, that's one thing I learned about from my dad that I'm really proud of is that
he could provide.
He could make a way with whatever, whatever he had, whatever resources he could make.
I think what I saw and why the community is so important to me is my dad was really isolated.
I think he didn't have friendships.
And honestly, I don't think he had the time to have friends.
And I think that kind of put him in some isolation moments.
And I saw that in patterns maybe that he reacted or maybe that he expressed himself in different areas.
And so I think for me, it was just important to like figure out how do I get around people?
Yeah.
Take the good parts of my dad.
Take the good parts of what he's been about and be able to channel it to something better.
And that's what he would want.
That's what our parents have done for us.
You know, for me, my dad wanted me to be in a better school, wanted me to be in a better life.
He was one of seven.
So, you know, he had a lot going on and a lot of experiences with his siblings, with his family.
So, of course, like, it was just a different upbringing in a different time.
But he worked so hard so that we can do this.
And so I'm grateful for those moments, but I'm also challenged in how I can operate and how I can be a father.
And what you're naming is something that I think is the key to showing up.
in a way that feels good as a parent,
is none of this is about blaming our parents.
We can say my parent was doing the best they could
with the resources they had.
Yeah.
And there are things I want to do differently.
Yeah.
And it doesn't have to be my fault, my dad's fault.
Like, I always find fault to generally be an unhelpful framework.
We're just like pointing fingers at someone,
which generally isn't a way we learn.
Yeah.
And I've had to go through that.
It's a constant mourning sometimes of maybe what I didn't experience.
or what I wish I would have had.
When I see it in my son or when I can give it to my son, that's the healing element
for me where I have blamed my dad or I have blamed my parents and oh, I didn't get to
experience this or even now, like being grandparents and things like that, maybe what
my son is maybe missing out on or not experiencing.
It always evolves, like how I was treated, how I wasn't, how maybe my son's going
to develop and that always wrestles with me internally, but I can only control how my wife
and I manage and how we experience and create those experiences for our son.
I wonder if you could talk about a specific moment with your son that makes you kind of
know in that moment, like, I'm giving him something that I probably could have used but didn't
get. Can you share a specific moment? Yeah, I think yesterday, actually, he was just at a place.
I mean, I don't know if he's getting teeth. He's getting his molars. I don't know what it is.
It could be a, you know, a plethora of things that he's dealing with.
I think this moment yesterday, he was going back and forth.
He just wouldn't go in his stroller.
Just was like, we were trying to go to the park.
I'm like, hey, I'm making a decision for you.
Like, we're going to the park and we're trying to do something.
You're not happy.
I think overall in that moment, I was very frustrated.
It's like just like kind of not my full self.
But I think I was really proud of how my wife and I handled that,
where we didn't like, we didn't, like, react.
We didn't do any, like, we didn't take it out of control.
We just really took him to the park and found a solution rather than just like, hey,
we need to get out of the house right now because this isn't probably the best place for you.
Let's go somewhere else.
Let's make an active decision to do something.
And I think I was proud of myself rather than just being like, hey, you know, just stop crying.
Or, hey, you know, let's, you know, you're okay, you're okay, like telling him, you know,
being able to validate his feelings, but also being able to find a solution for him without
compromising how he's feeling. Yes. And so what can feel natural in those moments? Let's just
act it out is some version of maybe I'll act one out. You could act another one out. It's like
stop crying. You're being ridiculous. We're just going to the, we're going to the park. It's not such a
big deal. No, absolutely. I mean like that. Or what's another kind of you feel like just easy,
quick vomit your own frustration response? Yeah, you're good. You're okay. You're okay. You're okay. You don't
needing you're okay we're gonna go get this like you're you're okay I think unvalidating how he's like
he doesn't know that he's upset like I think one of those things like he doesn't know he's frustrated
he doesn't he's just experiencing what he feels in the moment like telling a one year old
they're okay is like never helping the solution you know yeah so that's an experience for sure
and so you're saying in that moment showing up and I think this is a duality that sometimes
we don't even realize both are possible because I talk to this you know
about this with parents all the time, where it's like, okay, so let's say your kids having trouble
getting in the stroller, you could say, there's something about getting in the stroller that doesn't
feel good right now, where, oh, this is a hard moment. Keep it simple. And then parents will say to me,
oh, so then you're just not taking them to the park. I'm like, whoa. No, yeah, no. I am taking
them to the park. And the idea that you can validate and see your kids' current emotions as real,
and you can still put them in a stroller when they're crying.
Yeah. You can still get out of the house or I can still say to my kid, oh, I know you don't want to go to bed right now while carrying them to their bedroom.
And that's also wild. It's also wild. They're locking their legs, not going in the stroller. They kick something over. You're like trying to get a snack. You're trying to get the bag on. It's like so many other elements too that happen where you're like those are the moments that I'm proud of when there's so many external. The dog is kind of going back and forth. Maybe somebody rang the doorbell. We're just like it all sometimes feels like 15 random things happening at one time. But being able to regulate, hey, my goal is to take you to the park. We're going to be here. It's going to be okay. You're going to be.
You're going to be fine, not actually, but just knowing internally.
Like, that's going to, we're going to be good.
Like, I think we're going to be good if we get here.
And then it's good.
And sometimes it's not.
He's still, you know, fussy when we went back and forth.
But at least we made a decision and didn't just react out of emotion.
Tell me for the dad or the mom listening.
I think a common thought is.
Okay, but so you're just telling your son it's okay to freak out about getting in the stroller?
Like, he has to know that's not okay behavior.
You don't want to reinforce that.
Like that's, I think, a very traditional mindset, right?
So does that thought ever come up for you or when you hear that from moms or dads around you?
How do you think through that?
I think at first, that makes sense logically.
When having a toddler, you understand I'm playing the long game.
Like, I'm here to, I'm here to not only just get him to the park.
I'm here for him to feel loved the entire way to the park, whether that's, whether I had a long day or whether I didn't.
You know, not only am I here for him to feel loved, I want him to see my wife is loved, like that my wife, that I took time for her, I grabbed her a water.
I, we slowed down and we didn't let feelings dictate how we were going to operate in our day.
we acknowledge them,
but we were able to find something,
a solution that helped us all get in a better place
because if he's in a bad place,
it could all slew into all of us getting into worse places.
So we're taking care of him and he's our priority, of course,
but we're also taking care of ourselves.
I just want to be your back, something you said,
it's so powerful, and your language is so powerful.
I'm playing the long game, number one.
And I think about that a lot with parenting.
Yeah.
Whether you're kind of playing,
the right now optimizing for ease in this moment came.
Yeah, I could turn on the TV.
I could, you know, I could do whatever.
I could easy.
Yeah.
Yeah, give him something, go on my, or leave the room.
That's easy.
Those are easy things.
They're easy.
Or I guess I could scream at my kid and he'd become so scared that he'd get frozen
and then I'd pick him up and put in the stroller, right?
But whether you're optimizing for easy in the moment or the long game of,
and what you just said, it's not just about getting my kid to the part,
I want my kid to feel loved on the way to the park.
That's really profound.
And loved doesn't mean giving in, right?
But loved means I see you.
Yeah.
And we can stay connected.
You still have a parent and a leader and a coach in your hard moments.
When I think about their long game and your son is going to be, you know, I don't know, let's say 16 and about, you know, 14 years, right?
There's going to be a lot of moments when he's away from you.
And something really hard is going to happen.
Yeah.
And his body is either going to remember, like, this is going to get me in trouble.
This is going to get met with more fear, more distance, more judgment from my dad.
Or this is something my dad is going to be able to be present for.
He's still going to see me as a good kid, even if I have a hard moment.
And he's going to help coach me through this.
I mean, that literally makes all the difference at age 16.
A friend of mine, he has an 18-year-old.
He just went to college.
I'm just, I was asking him the other day.
I'm like, what did you, like, how are you processing, like him making his own decisions now?
And he said something that I thought was so profound.
He was said, we made the things that were important when the stakes were low.
So when the stakes were high, they understood that everything mattered.
So, for instance, like, you know, dating somebody or the decisions that he had, those are a little bit higher stakes or, you know, what school he's going to go to.
and those things like that.
But they made things that were maybe lower stakes of, like, disrespecting, talking.
Everything mattered to them when the stakes were low.
So when they were higher, they could actually, you know, know that they can trust their parents,
that they're present, that they're going to be there no matter what,
and that everything mattered to them.
And I just thought that was really important.
I think that's beautiful.
And I know you and I were talking about these toddler tantrums, right?
Oh, yeah.
I'm taking the good inside class right now.
I was telling you before we got on, I'm like 30 minutes in.
I'm trying to work through it.
But my wife and I were like, we have to take these.
And I love your process in it and just being able to validate and see really, really everything I'm repeating is just regurgitating what you said on good inside on the app.
And so I just appreciate your voice in that because it's really helpful.
Because it goes quickly from being a baby to a toddler.
It was so interesting.
Like I know when you asked me about what I remember about my son, it just everything he existed.
And now he's a human.
And that's what, like, I remember these beautiful moments of existing.
Now I'm like, oh, I'm teaching him now.
He's learning things and he's seeing things.
And it's just such a different.
And I want to let anybody listening or watching know.
People are generally surprised that tantrum starts so early.
It is usually before two.
Terrible twos, that like phrase that we all think.
Honestly, in the one year, even 11 months, that's when toddlers start tantruming.
So that's totally normal.
And it's powerful to just know all a tantrum really is.
is a surge of feelings without skills to manage feelings.
Because kids aren't born with skills to manage feelings,
but they're born with the feelings.
So that's all a tantrum is.
And the reason I love this long game perspective
around how we deal with tantrums is it's true.
When our kid is 16 or 26,
I don't think telling them they can't have ice cream for breakfast
is going to lead to a tantrum.
Like, I hope not.
But your kid is going to want something
and not be able to have it.
they're going to get fired from a job
they're going to be jealous of a friend
they're going to be
mad at someone they love
and being able to learn
when you're one two and three
I'm allowed to have feelings
by the way my parent will stop me from hitting
all behavior isn't okay
but all feelings are
I always think it's just like the ultimate
power move and emotional privilege
growing up and that's what you're teaching
during a tantrum
yeah I was saying the other day
I was talking to the dad's and my son bit someone and I was I was embarrassed like for myself and I know that's maybe weird to say but I I felt him and it was interesting because all of what happened was with him and dealing with how he was feeling and it you know that happens emotions happen but I was like why am I feeling this way it was such an internal perspective not only was his tantrum what happened with him but it also happened inside of me too and I'm like why am I feeling maybe
be embarrassed or sad, you know, that this happened as a parent. And I thought that was interesting
to feel because not only is he feeling something, I'm feeling something too. How he operates in the
world, I feel it too, you know, and it matters to me as well. And so I'm like, is this a reflection?
Is he going to be like this forever? Is he going to do this? Is this going to happen? And, you know,
I think all those things go through your mind. So being able to like calm myself as well during that
moment is important as well. Seriously. I remember talking to, it was a dad who was seen me in my
private practice years ago and he'd always come in talking, he was on this big journey of being
like a different kind of father and he felt like that was the most important kind of journey of his
lifetime. And he'd always come in, talking, oh, my kid of this tantrum was biting. There's always
stuff to talk about, right? And we'd always kind of pause and try to think about, well, what's the
story you're telling yourself, first of all, about your kid's behavior? Because we don't respond to
our kids' behavior. We respond to the story we tell ourselves and the feelings that
come up in us and all this thing, the stuff. And I just remember him looking at me and saying,
Becky, one time, can you just tell me this has nothing to do with you? This is all your
kid's fault, you know? And we kind of like laughed about it because it is funny. When you
really pause and you watch your kid, their behavior can be so difficult and inconvenient.
I always feel like that's just, it's inconvenient when your kid's biting another kid.
You're like, oh, man, got to really figure this out. But really what goes on for us is we have
something happening inside of us.
And so much of the reason we want to stop the tantrum, stop doing that, is we just want to
stop the feeling happening inside of us.
It's not even have to do with our kid.
Yeah.
So the fact that you're so open when you said, is that weird, it's embarrassing or it brought
up so much.
Yes, when our kid bites or hits or says to us, I doubt this has happened yet, I hate you.
Oh my gosh.
It will happen.
I'm giving you some emotional vaccination.
Yeah, yeah.
Get ready.
All good kids say, though.
things, they do. If we're aware, let me first check in and just notice what's happening
for me, we can really slow down the process. And that's, that's actually such a power move,
I find. Yeah. Absolutely. I think there's just so much internal introspective thought process
in how it's processing and how he's going through it. But it, I think about myself, too. I'm
Like, I'm 33 years old.
And then there's times where I'm like, yo, why am I acting like this?
Why am I?
I'm embarrassed by myself too.
I'm like, yo, I need to react better.
Yeah.
He doesn't have those skills to regulate.
I do.
So it's like.
You know, and when it comes to biting, I just actually had this new thought.
So many times as adults, you know, we have biting comments.
Yeah.
Right?
It actually is interesting to think, okay, maybe I don't literally bite another human.
I'm just going to put this out there.
I'm hoping that's not happening for anyone.
But we also have biting moments, which.
Which is kind of helpful when you realize what might be happening for your kid.
Why would I in a situation have some comment come out of my body that's so cruel and so biting?
Oh, I was probably even in that moment overwhelmed with a feeling.
And I didn't have a skill in the moment to manage it.
So it kind of viciously came out of me.
Yeah.
And I noticed those way more having a child.
It's just like a mirror.
You know, my wife will, you know, if we have a little back and forth and I'm like, oh, he's right.
watching this. I'm like, this is not something, not only, like, of course, I know I need to
respond better, but I want him to understand how he's loved and cared for, and that we also
are trying to figure out our own things internally myself. You know, I think that's important
to see, but I'm not, you know, above him by, you know, I also have my own things that go back
and forth for sure. Do you feel like talking so openly, right? And being, I find you remarkably
emotionally available, as what I would say.
Do you notice that having a ripple effect on other fathers?
Yeah, I think sometimes I share too much, but I think that's like my characteristic.
But I think fathers are really, like we have a chat or like outside of the discord that
are where our community lives.
And like yesterday, I'm hitting them like, hey, I'm wrestling with my son being upset today.
What do you guys think?
And it's like six, seven dads saying, hey, this is what happens.
it's okay. Here, here's some things you can do, get them out literally what I was doing,
which was really helpful. And it affirmed me. Like, hey, just get them outside, try to do something.
Hey, maybe if you take them out of that environment, like all the things that I was doing made me feel
seen and encouraged in what I was doing, not that I was just alone. Of course, my wife and I were,
you know, this is the best decision. Yeah. But having an outside community speaking into that
is really helpful because you could feel like, am I the only one doing this? I don't know if this is
normal. I don't know if this is happening.
And so having other dads and people being able to go through that as well, and they're going
through the same things.
Like, they're like, hey, my son's doing this.
My daughter's sick or, you know, this is happening and this is happening.
Being able to normalize that is just such a different, you know, ideology of parenting.
I feel like being able to just be in your, you know, your house, your own, you know, your own room.
Being able to take it outside of that with community, I think is helpful.
I think the fear that we're the only one is present in every parent's brain.
And it happens, you see your kid, you're like, does any other kid actually tantrum like this?
Like, everyone says, oh, kids do this?
But do I actually have the kid who's the sociopath?
Like, people worry about that all the time.
The reason it's so important to have a community to talk about that with is that fear I'm the only one.
My kid's the only one.
It leads to us getting so activated with our nervous system.
We really go into fight or flight mode.
so then you respond to your kid from fight or flight mode.
And that simple outlet, which isn't simple, but it's, you know, straightforward.
Hey, anyone else going through this?
Hey, any ideas.
It's really not a nice to have.
Like, it's a critical part of the parenting journey.
Absolutely.
I was looking at just a phrase, it takes a village.
I was like, where does it come from?
It's like an actual African proverb.
It's like centuries of like what parents have understood that it takes more than just
you and your partner it takes grandparents if you don't have grandparents like us here it takes
community teachers there's people that my son will see that validate him that see him not only him
but also me in those elements and i think that's the healing journey he'll he'll never have to see
himself as isolated he'll see my dad interacted with other men other people yeah was proud of his
friendships was really open and not only that but he had those friendships as well all right i want to
end with five rapid fire
questions. Awesome. You ready?
You need to shake it out, stretch. Okay, you're good.
Okay. What's one stereotype
about dads that you want to retire
so we can build stronger communities
for them? That dads
are stupid, I would
say. Dads don't know anything.
Let's retire that. Let's retire that.
We want to learn.
Yeah. Finish the sentence.
A moment in the last month I was really
proud of as a dad or as a husband
was? It was our seven-year anniversary. We had a babysitter. We spent time together, my wife
and I, and I think that was just a really proud moment to be able to feel that our son was safe
at home, to be able to talk about where we'd come from, where we're going as a family. I think
that was really good. I think I commented on your story that day. Yeah, yeah. We, of course,
we did a little TikTok. I love it. Yeah, of course. Okay. What feels harder or more vulnerable?
saying to your kid, I love you, or saying to your kid, I'm sorry?
I would say I'm sorry is more vulnerable.
I think, I know this is a rapid answer, but one thing my dad used to say that I'm trying
to unlearn a little bit is I don't want to be right.
I just don't want to be wrong.
And it really, I had to unlearn a little bit of that.
Like, you can be wrong and be sorry and be open about those things.
And so I think I'm sorry is really important to me.
And I just want to name, you know, to me the most powerful relationship.
strategy in the world is repair.
And you can only repair if you made a mistake, which also is just a sign you're human.
But it is so hard because I don't think many of us had parents who really gave us a good
sorry.
Not like, I'm sorry you feel that way.
No, like, I'm sorry.
Right.
And so I think I'm sorry is harder for a lot of people that I love you.
Yeah, because it puts you on the same field of like, hey, I actually, I need you to like,
I need you to like acknowledge.
I'm actually kind of putting myself a little, you know, lesser than you.
Like, that's what I feel like that generation may be thought of.
Exactly.
You know, where they're like, oh, man, like, I can't be sorry to a kid.
Like, he's a kid, you know, or they're a kid.
And I think being able to be like, no, if I react poorly, I'm sorry, period, regardless of who age, whatever, you know.
It is such a kind of new cycle breaking thought.
And I know now I'm undoing my rapid fire questions.
Sorry.
No, it's really good point.
And just to give anyone listening a different model.
if you think about the best CEO in the world
who snaps at someone during a meeting
or the best NBA coach
who is overly harsh
at someone in a game.
Those leaders say sorry
if they're effective.
And I don't think anyone would see that coach
go up to a player and say,
hey, I was having a moment.
I was frustrated with how our team is playing.
I totally took it out on you.
I'm sorry.
I just don't know if someone to say
that coach totally lost
their ability to have power.
No, you'd be like,
well, good thing.
If not, that player probably would have acted out
for the rest of the week.
Yeah. I think we could change a lot in the world and in government in general,
if men just said they're sorry a lot more. So I think that's what I'm trying to realize
it myself. Cheers to that. Okay. If you could give a brand new dad, only one piece of advice.
What would it be? I would say be patient with yourself. It's your first time and their first time
as well. Yeah, just be patient. You have everything. You're meant to be here.
Oh, I love that. I think sometimes parents,
to hear you're the right parent for your kid yeah you're you're the only one that they're
you're the best version of yourself today and you're going to be better tomorrow and and no matter
what you have said or what how how that's playing out in your parenthood or in in your marriage or
whatever um yeah patience you you you'll figure it up i love that all right last one i want to
you to picture your son 20 25 years from now oh man okay and someone just says to him
Oh, like, what was your dad like growing up?
And he says, oh, my dad, and then what do you hope he says?
My dad had so many friends that loved him and cared for him, and I did too.
I think he had so many people, not only friends, I say my dad had so many people around him
that loved him and supported him and that he loved and served and supported too.
And I want the same.
You really visualizes this community, this belonging.
I would hope that he sees this not only, you know, today or in a photo or whatever, that he sees it active in my life and in our marriage and our, you know, and that he wants the same thing for his, you know, family.
Incredible. Thank you. This is such a powerful conversation. I feel like I could talk to you forever. So it just means off to have you back. So thank you. Thank you so much.
I have so many takeaways from this episode. I'm guessing you do too. But there's something Joe said that is cycling in my brain over and over, even.
now. When he talked about how he was intervening, when his kid was having a tantrum about getting
in the stroller, and they were just trying to get to the park. And he talked about playing the long
game. He said this thing. He said, I don't just want to get my kid to the park. I want my kid
to feel loved the whole way to the park. There's something about that language that feels so
important to me and puts words to, I think, what so many of us are trying to do with our kid.
And so I know for me when I inevitably have a frustrating moment later today with my own kid,
and I'm just thinking, I need to shut this down right now. I have a goal of getting to bed,
of turning off the TV. I can set certain boundaries, but my goal is for my kid to feel loved
the whole time. I'm so thankful to Joe for putting that idea in my head. All right, let's end the
we always do place your feet on the ground and 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.
