The Dr. John Delony Show - How Do I Tell My Family That My Daughter Isn’t Mine?

Episode Date: January 14, 2026

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Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:05 Two and a half years ago, my wife had an affair, and my awesome daughter is a result of that. I found out that there was an affair midway through pregnancy, and then pretty soon after that, deduced that very low possibility that she was going to be biologically mine. Wow. What up? What's going on? What's going on? This is John with Dr. John Deloney's show. man, I had one of those new tonics from Chris Williamson's energy drink line and I'm a little bit hopped up. Hope y'all are doing well today talking about your marriages, your relationships, your mental
Starting point is 00:00:50 and emotional health, whatever you got going on in your life. Man, I feel like a lot. Kelly 2.0, I feel like a lot. You are a lot, I guess. I guess you're so kind. That's upgraded Kelly 2.0, the one that's a kind. and she doesn't say mean things. She just says like, you're a lot, I guess.
Starting point is 00:01:09 I think them, but I don't say them. See, exactly. That's why you're 2.0. Actually, you're probably at Kelly 3.0. That's like two, that's two, like upgrades. Yeah. She says everything. All right, let's go out to Little Rock, Arkansas,
Starting point is 00:01:23 and talk to David. What up, David? Hey, what's up, Dr. John? I'm good. You too, man. How are we doing? I'm doing pretty good. It's an honor.
Starting point is 00:01:32 It's honor to talk to you, man. What's up? Well, I'll keep it pretty straight to the point here for you. About two and a half years ago, my wife had an affair, and my awesome daughter is a result of that. I've let my family basically believe that she is biologically mine. And I told my closest friends, and I don't know how to tell my family or when's the right time. That's a doozy, man. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:02 So how long have you been married? We are coming into our 10th year. 10th year. Okay, tell me about your marriage leading up to the affair, then how you found out about everything, and then how you all have decided to rebuild this thing since? Leading up to it was basically working a lot and just missing a lot of things that probably should have seen.
Starting point is 00:02:26 And then I found out about midway through the pregnancy that she wasn't going to be mine. And basically we're kind of taken to court and forced into a paternity test. And then they gave away the rights. He was quite a bit older and didn't really want anything to do with it. Or as I like to say, take a note out of your playbook that he's just very sick and not going to be there. And so I'm going to be her father forever.
Starting point is 00:02:56 And we've basically been rebuilding our marriage to do that just months at a time. And now we're pregnant again with our second. so I'm super excited he's due any minute. Man, what a wild trip. Okay, take me to the moment. You're sitting at your kitchen table and you find out this baby you're excited. Did you know about the affair before you found out,
Starting point is 00:03:22 A, there's an affair, and B, this isn't my biological child? No, I found out that there was an affair midway through pregnancy and then pretty soon after that deduced that very low possibility that she was going to be biologically mine. Wow. And I was at a McDonald's, actually. At a McDonald's, all right, take me there. Like, give me the, what's going on inside your chest, man? Um, well, I mean, not nothing, it was heavy in the moment.
Starting point is 00:03:59 basically he'd lost his second phone and had called me because I knew him as an individual as well and he'd called me trying to speak to her to not call the phone type of thing and then from there her and I had discussions and talked through everything and I'd pretty much relinquish that he was out of the picture and it wasn't going to be an issue but then his wife decided to also make an issue and kind of take us to court for paternity and everything. I think mostly the logic they used was that if I ever left her, she would come after him for child support or whatever, and he didn't want that. And so that's why they took us to court. But like I said, my biggest thing is just how do I tell my family about it? My friends are supportive. I've told my
Starting point is 00:04:52 dad and he's supportive, but I don't know about my in-laws or my mom. I don't know. Don't know how to sit them down and tell them with the holidays coming up. I don't know if I just dump all them all at once or take them aside individually. So, man, it's, it's a lot. And here's where it's a lot. One of the biggest challenges after dealing with a major issue, right? Infidelity, bankruptcy. see, I would say anything that is like your marriage was no longer, right?
Starting point is 00:05:32 And now you're going to rebuild a new one. Is in defense or in support or as a part of the rebuilding process, also a key part of that to do that well is to not cash in your own integrity in the process. Here's what I mean by that. in an effort to choose to stay with your wife. And it sounds like there was never even a moment where you thought I'm going to leave her for cheating on me. Is that right?
Starting point is 00:06:06 That's right. Okay. So I'm a guy who's going to stick by her and we're going to figure this thing out. If she'll have me, I'll have her back and we're going to rebuild our marriage. And then you find out she's pregnant with somebody else's kid. Then you have to go to court
Starting point is 00:06:18 not because this man and or his wife want to be in their life of this child, but they want to get it written down that they never have to be in their life of this child. That's correct. Which is Matt, I can't even have my head around that, but that's a whole other call.
Starting point is 00:06:35 And so in this process, you, and this is hard to hear, okay, so I'm saying this with love and care, right? You became a guy who doesn't tell his family the truth. Yeah. And so it's her issue, her breach of trust,
Starting point is 00:06:55 this, and I'm saying this consequence, who's also your daughter, right? So it's not like, I don't want to dehumanize your daughter, but the consequence of her actions, which is creating human life with somebody else, that's hers, and then she's going to have to own what does rebuilding trust look like,
Starting point is 00:07:13 but then you became a guy who cashed in his integrity in order to keep the peace, keep things quiet, and all that kind of stuff. Does that make sense? And so really the conversation here is twofold. One, you going first and saying, I haven't been honest with everybody. And we have a story we want to tell. And it's just...
Starting point is 00:07:38 So it'd be something we could do together. Here's why I think that's important. And again, every family is different, and I'm going to trust you that you know your family dynamics. So just you have a roadmap. What was it like telling your dad? How'd that conversation go? It was, he was pretty quiet, uh, quiet and I thought he'd be. But, uh, he took it really well. Um, he's very grounded individual. And I feel like I knew it would go well. Um, and basically just reassured me that, you know, nothing would ever change. And he love us all the same no matter what.
Starting point is 00:08:18 So does he, did he and your mom ever experience infidelity? Not that he's ever talked to me about. Okay. that's an incredibly measured response. Good on him. I would high-five him if he was here. Because here's what that sounds like to me. That sounds like a dad who exhales and says,
Starting point is 00:08:41 this is my grown man's son's life. And even if I would do this differently, and everything in my body is telling me to tell him to run, this is his life and I'm going to be right here with him. that's a that's a that's a that's a it's a out of out of the norm response in a positive way let me say this way I hope to stand by my son when he chooses to make courageous decisions and I hope to stay by him in that way that's that's amazing and so you know how would the conversation go with your mom that's that's my worry she I don't feel like she is as
Starting point is 00:09:28 emotionally grounded as my father is. Okay. And, yeah, I don't really know. She's dealt with her own trauma through work. She's worked as a sexual assault examiner. So she's not, I think she deals with trauma from that and like to project that on to other people sometimes. But that's my own, you know, diagnosing. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:09:55 I don't know if I need to wait until she's in a good head space or, just, you know, there's no time like the present type thing. I'm not sure what's best. Yeah, so here's my rules of thumb, okay? Number one, and I say this with all love, she doesn't get a vote on your actions or what happens next. Number two, you cannot control her choice
Starting point is 00:10:23 as to how she responds. Number three, give her a head. heads up, this is coming. Like, hey mom, when we get together for Thanksgiving, me and my wife, we need to take you out for breakfast. Just ask, we need to have a big, hard conversation. We're safe. We're not getting divorced.
Starting point is 00:10:47 But we need to, right before we have our second child, we need to go have a big conversation just to put everything out on the table. What is it? What is it? What is it? We're going to tell you in person, but we need to set some time away. and that way she's not just like hanging up the Christmas lights and being like and you're like oh by the way mom like right so that way it doesn't she knows it's comp there's some big conversation and she can bring herself here's the next one that's big facts are your friends and what I mean by that is say the thing right out of the gate that doesn't need to be a big story I was working too much and then one time that it is sitting down because she's going to think something's wrong with the baby number two. She's going to think y'all are getting divorced. She's going to think the worst. I've got cancer. She's going to think the worst. And so sitting down and saying, I need you to stay present with us.
Starting point is 00:11:39 I need you just to listen to what I'm going to say. I love my wife to the end of the moon and back, and we have repaired our marriage. But three years ago, there was an affair. And my wife got pregnant by another man. And I chose to adopt and keep that child. And so that child is my daughter. but she's not my biological daughter. And I just wanted you to know this. Period. Stop talking. You're saying?
Starting point is 00:12:10 Yes, sir. And if your wife is sitting with you, great. If she says, I just, I don't think I can. Fine. That's great. And y'all two know whether her being there will add a whole bunch of complexity. If you want to have a direct mother's son conversation, you'll know those dynamics better than anybody.
Starting point is 00:12:28 I can think off top of my head it would be best for me to have that conversation if I was having to have this conversation with my parents I would do it by myself but if I was doing it with my brother and sister I would do it with my wife with me
Starting point is 00:12:43 okay that's my other thing I need to tell my siblings too yeah and it's just dynamics and I think it's clear to say this is she is my daughter absolutely and even if there's a long lull I don't know what to say
Starting point is 00:12:59 I'm heartbroken, she starts crying, whatever. Say, I've been through all of this, mom, and this is new for you, and this is not going to change your relationship with my daughter, your granddaughter, and it's repeating those things over and over. I can do that. Yeah, and this is my personality, every personality is different. I would say, go ahead and get it all out now. Ask your questions, and what you're projecting is, I'm not, there's not a thing I haven't thought
Starting point is 00:13:34 about here. There's not a, I'm not still waffling on whether I'm going to stay with her or not. I'm not confused. So I can handle your questions. How are you? It was devastating. And then I chose to stay and rebuilt. There's a powerful phrase that I learned from working with attorneys for so many years. And it is this. There's power in the pause. We often, as people like to fill those empty spaces with a bunch of words, a bunch of words, a bunch of words, a bunch of words. And power in the pause, the person who speaks the least owns the anchoring of a conversation. And so you projecting to your mom, she's allowed to be heartbroken, she's allowed to be really mad that this woman hurt her son. All that's right and good. She gets to do all that stuff. But you can't talk bad
Starting point is 00:14:27 about my wife. You can tell dad all the bad stuff you want. You can't tell me. That's my wife. and my hope is when you see her you'll hug her because she's been through hell too. You get what I'm saying? Yes, I do. That's excellent advice. I really, really appreciate it. No, you got it, man.
Starting point is 00:14:48 And can I just tell you, leading this conversation with, I messed up here, automatically, the person you're talking to, when you lead with, here's where I messed up, people automatically drop their shoulders. right they it's an invitation they lean forward because people are naturally carrying people
Starting point is 00:15:13 and when you say hey i screwed something up people lean in man you're an inspiring guy pretty impressive and um you did what i would call is the next right really really really hard thing that once you decided to stay in the marriage that meant okay i'm going to be a dad and i'm going to raise this child who's followed by another man i'm going to raise her like my own and i'm going to be the best freaking girl dad that's ever existed. That's a level of integrity and character that is rare these days. And it's inspiring.
Starting point is 00:15:44 Well done, my brother. Call anytime. Your wife can call anytime, and if your parents want to call, and talk to them as well. When we come back, a man asks how to support his best friend through his endless marriage problems.
Starting point is 00:15:57 Man, we've all been there. Let me tell you about hallow the number one Christian prayer and meditation app in the world. You'll know this. My life is chaotic. I'm a speaker, I'm a writer, I'm a dad, I'm a husband. I travel all over the country, and I do this show.
Starting point is 00:16:13 And I listen to the daily gospel on hallow almost every morning in the car on the way to work. It's how I pause, breathe, and let the word settle in so that I'm anchored into something bigger than me before I let the chaos take over. It's one of those non-negotiable starts to my day. It's a reset button for my head and my heart. And often at night, when my brain's still fully on, I'll put on one of Hallow's sleep, meditations or a nighttime devotional and it helps me slow things down and I quit going to war with my own head. Hallow has daily devotional's thoughtful meditations about prayer and leading a
Starting point is 00:16:47 spiritual life all in one place. This stuff helps me pause and reflect instead of just reacting to everything. Bottom line, Hallow helps me make space for peace. It helps me anchor in and we all need anchors in this anchorless world we live in. If you want to anchor your day, check out Hallow. Right now when you sign up at hallow.com slash deloni, you get three months for free. Go check them out. It's hallow, h-a-l-l-O-W.com slash deloni for three full months for free. All right, let's roll out to Indianapolis, Indiana, and talk to Matthew. What's up, Matthew?
Starting point is 00:17:26 Holy baloney. I'm talking to Dr. John Deloney. Dude, M-N-M-N-M's on the phone. Look at this. Dude, we got a hip-hop star. What's up? How are we doing, man? I'm doing pretty good.
Starting point is 00:17:39 I just wanted to say real quick, like every caller I feel like does, your podcast has just been really instrumental in me growing my own marriage and just leveling the connection that I didn't think was possible with my own wife. And I just want to give a huge shout out to your crew too. I do production, so I know this is no easy feat. So Kelly, Kelly and all the people working behind the scenes to make it possible, it's very much appreciated. No, I appreciate that, dude.
Starting point is 00:18:04 Yeah, Ben at the board, at Nate Dog on the YouTube screens and Alex call screen and like Kelly 2.0, they're awesome. Kelly 1.0, she's just along for the ride. It's fine. But no, I appreciate that, brother. What's up? So this one's got some layers to it. So I'm very curious where you think I might be in the wrong, maybe where it might be in the right. So my best friend over the last three and a half years has been talking.
Starting point is 00:18:32 at least once a week, if not more, depending on the intensity of his marital troubles, about his, you know, spiraling marriage. And there's always been a looming possibility of doors. They've been, the paperwork has been filed and then pulled back. And then I'm just trying to figure out how can I continue to support him while maintaining my sanity of hearing the same sort of thing and not feeling like my advice is getting through. And or, more importantly, how do I protect my godson as best as I can? from all of this dysfunction
Starting point is 00:19:04 that's going around in his house. That's hard, man. I think the first thing out of the gate is recognizing your friend doesn't want your advice. Yeah. Your friend wants you to serve as a trash can. Yeah. And there's something powerful in a friendship
Starting point is 00:19:27 where one person has the courage to say, hey, do you want me just to listen? Because you don't want my advice. And then there's a next step that's more powerful that is, hey, I've heard when they start going, and then she'd be like, hey, I've heard this. I've heard this part. What's your next move?
Starting point is 00:19:48 Yeah. Right? And it's just stopping this stuff. And I'll tell you this. One of the most important shapeshifter moments in my marriage happened about a year in to me being married. And I was on the road speaking at this event. I was traveling around with the musician and we were doing some stuff.
Starting point is 00:20:08 And the musician, his name was Eric Peters. He's a singer-songwriter here in Nashville. He's been one of my friends for more than two decades. And I'm painting this picture just to show what he did for me and the courage it took. I'm a loud guy, especially when I'm on stage, just kind of chaotic energy, right? And 20 years ago, I was a train wreck, dude. Like my goal on stage was I wanted people to walk away. and get in their car and go, what just happened?
Starting point is 00:20:35 That was my goal, okay? And so, he is an incredible poet. He's one of those guys that's a real artist, not like me who pretends to be an artist. He's a real, that's how he thinks. He paints, he's just a, like he mows lawns thoughtfully, right? He's just that guy. And I'm about a foot taller than him.
Starting point is 00:20:55 I was doing MMA. I'm a loud, brash, tattooed up idiot, right? and I would always have this bit when I was speaking about oh my wife's not here she doesn't travel with me so I'm going to tell you the story because she's not here right that was always part of my like schick yeah and then one day he said this um he said how long have you been married and I said a year and this is just us like in a van or something he said I think there's pretty much two kinds of two kinds of guys guys that make jokes about their wives and guys that don't. You should be the kind that doesn't. And you got to understand, like, I'm a big, loud presence. And this, he's short guy, this short, small, statured artist had the courage to say, be the kind of guy that doesn't talk about his wife at the water cooler, unless it's something
Starting point is 00:21:52 positive. And, bro, that changed my life. If you listen to my show, people call in like, dude, your wife isn't that perfect. She's not, by far. But the stories I'm going to, tell about her are when she like are going to be ones that celebrate her and so i tell you all that to tell you somebody having the courage a friend of mine who's now become a two-decade friend to say hey stop talking about your wife like that was so powerful for me it changed my whole marriage changed my life trajectory and so you can be that guy for your friend yeah it feels like every conversation we have. And it's, I mean, the first year, you listen, you comfort the second year, you start pushing
Starting point is 00:22:37 a little bit, asking for more clarifying questions. I think by the third year, I'm just like saying it as directly as possible, but it, I mean, again, like you were saying, he doesn't want my advice. No. Like, the more I keep sharing, he will headstrong push right through it. Even if I know exactly what the answer is, yeah. He's looking for a teammate against his wife and a real friend won't do that. Yeah
Starting point is 00:23:00 I'm not going to To be one of those guys That's like yeah they I'm not doing that Solve the problem Yeah Or asking even a scarier question Hey when's the last time you did something nice for her
Starting point is 00:23:12 What She did and I know I know When's the last time you got up before she Got up and you made her favorite cup of coffee And brought her to her in bed Yeah I think the access service He tries his best to
Starting point is 00:23:28 But they just don't have any form of communication That's kind of the struggle is, I don't know, this might be too much information, but I keep telling them, I'm like, dude, you could not have picked two more incompatible people. And of course you're struggling. Like, you've always been struggling. So you need to find peace in all of this struggle
Starting point is 00:23:47 and talking to me about all these deep-seated frustrations just feeds it. It's just getting bigger and bigger because you just keep talking about the things that frustrate you and how all these things are unfair to you. And I'm like, dude, there's, two sides to both of this and I'm going to try to back you up as much as I can but I'm also as a man of integrity and not going to pretend like your wife doesn't have an equal share in the conversation
Starting point is 00:24:10 as well. I have to give her the benefit of doubt. Of course there's two sides. Yeah. And I've told the story of my buddy Trevor on this like when I was dating the woman who's now my wife. I was like, can you believe she said this? And he said, this is in college. And he goes, yes. You're an ass. And I was like, what? Yeah. And so he's, he's, I was like, me? And he goes, yes, what are you talking? Are you kidding?
Starting point is 00:24:34 And that, again, that's one of those moments that was like, oh, God, I'm somebody that I didn't even know I was. Yeah. I got to be different, right? But here's the thing, he doesn't want that from you. Yeah. And so at some point, you have to be a person of integrity and character, not to keep saying like, hey, there's two sides, this, whatever. You have to say, I don't want to be a guy that goes home to my wife, frustrated and angry. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:57 And that means I have to say, hey, I don't want to continually show up and hang out with you and you just dump trash all over me. And I think that's kind of the part that sucks the most, though, Dr. John. Like, over these last three and a half years, he's gone from being a person that him and I share a lot of interest and share a lot of common ground. And, you know, we talk about endless different things. And now it feels like literally the only thing we ever talk about is, is it's a, is a lot of, this failing marriage. Okay, so change the narrative. It consumed its personality.
Starting point is 00:25:32 Yeah, change the narrative. Do you think that's something I should approach with them and be like, hey, man, like, you've given up a lot of things that bring you joy just for the sake of fighting for this thing, and you're sacrificing so much for this marriage that has been going in circles for three and a half years, this is all consumed you. And you can have that conversation, but hear me say directly, talking is not going to solve this. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:59 So if that's the path you want to take, great. Invite him to go do the thing. Sure. Hey, we're going to watch the fights. You're coming. Well, you know my wife. Stop, stop, stop, I don't want to hear that. Are you coming or not?
Starting point is 00:26:11 Are you coming or not? Yeah. And then you got to go watch the fights with that. Yeah. Hey, dude, we're all going fishing. We're all going bowling. We're all going knitting. I don't know what you guys do.
Starting point is 00:26:20 But like, I'm going to go do this thing. I want you to come with me. Well, you know my wife? Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop. Are you going to come or you're not going to come? You're a grown man. And so if you get in another conversation about you've given up so much of your life, it's just going to be that same loop.
Starting point is 00:26:35 He's going to bulldoze right through it. Well, I'm a victim here and I can't. He's making choices every minute of every day. Yeah. The thing you need to metabolize is he's not your best friend. You have a fantasy of this friendship that doesn't exist in reality. Yeah. You know what I'm saying?
Starting point is 00:27:01 Yeah, I have been feeling it is more a best friendship because of the years that we've been close, but... Okay, take friendship out of it. Sure, sure, sure. Let's look at business. I had this business that was making a bunch of money one time. And then now, three years later, this business isn't making any money,
Starting point is 00:27:23 but I'm continuing to dump money into it. It's not a business anymore, just a hobby. You're literally paying to do this thing. Yeah. It's called sunk cost fallacy. I've already put all this time into it. I've already put all this investment into it. I just got to keep doing, man, it's not what it was. Yeah. There's definitely like a guilt too of like, man, my friend's going through this really hard thing. I'd feel like such an answer if I just bailed on him. I know, but he's already bailing. He doesn't want you. That's the thing. He doesn't want your support or advice. Yeah. Because I have people close friends of mine, people I don't,
Starting point is 00:27:57 know that well fly in and stay at my house and like I need I need you to walk with me as I do this next hard thing yeah as I go to rehab as I go through this divorce as I rebuild my marriage from the floor up awesome I'll walk with you all day long yeah but if you just want to call and just be like and then and then and then this happened to me and this happened to me I'm probably not the guy for you call a therapist so that you can pay them to do that yeah right um so what do you think my best course of action is like when he tries talking about this stuff just be like hey that sounds like stuff that we've i've heard you say before like if anything changes let me know or just have even harder boundaries where we go hey man i'd love to have relationship with you but you know there has to be
Starting point is 00:28:42 a huge backing off of the discussion about your marriage that may work in your in your friendship dynamic you know him better than me sure if one of my guy friends called me and said hey i really want to have a relationship with you, but I don't want to, I would be like, all right, I'm out. Right. Yeah. I, I, it would be better in the real moment, right? Like Ben and I went to see a comedy show together the other night. If during the show, right before the show, I was like, man, and then my wife, and Ben was like, hey, listen, buddy, I really want to have a relationship with you, but I would be like, all right, I'm done talking to you. That would just be, that's me. But if he said, ah, I don't want to hear that. I don't hear that. I don't hear that. I like your wife. Or I don't want to hear that. Like,
Starting point is 00:29:26 dude, let's go to the comedy show and let's just have a good time and laugh. That would be him setting up boundaries, providing a shared experience that we need together and not just endlessly looping in conversation that doesn't go anywhere.
Starting point is 00:29:39 Yeah. Let me put it this way. There's not a thing probably you haven't said yet that's gonna go, oh, you're right, I haven't considered that. Yeah, that's 100% true.
Starting point is 00:29:51 And that's all, like I've said, it's a humbling place. Everything I could possibly say every different way to Sunday. So, A, stop having imaginary conversations where you finally say the thing and he goes, oh, God, you're right. Yeah. That's you trying to prop up yourself. Sure.
Starting point is 00:30:09 Number two, it's humbling. I do this for a living. It's humbling when you tell somebody here, I can see the next right path for you. And they go, yeah, I don't want to walk that. I just want to sit here in the dog do-do. It's humbling. Yeah. Right?
Starting point is 00:30:23 It bums me out. That, like, I see it. And they're like, no, I don't want to do that. I take that personally, right? And so... Yeah, it's definitely a self-reflection thing. I'm starting to realize now that we're talking because...
Starting point is 00:30:35 It's a bummer. I feel like for so long, I'm like, well, eventually he'll see that this dysfunction is, like, way worse off, and you can't find comfort in dysfunction, and that's obviously not the case. He is so flipping comfortable in the dysfunction. And it's humbling and sad. It's heartbreaking to realize
Starting point is 00:30:55 I extended my hand to a friend who was sitting in a pit to pull him out and he didn't want my hand. He wants to actually stay there. That's heartbreaking. We find the limits of what we can actually do to help. Help takes two people. One person reaching down and the other person to grab your hand and be pulled out.
Starting point is 00:31:17 And he doesn't sound like he wants that right now. And so you recognizing, I've done what I can, I'm not going to continue to ruin my own body, own integrity, my own marriage by constantly having imaginary conversations. Every time his name comes up on the phone, I'm going to resent him that he's even calling me. Choose guilt over resentment. Choose the guilt of sitting down next time you all are out and he starts going, be like, hey, hey, hey, I already heard all these stories. I want to have a night where you're, I just don't listen to you, talk about your wife again. I've heard all these stories. Let's just go watch the fights.
Starting point is 00:31:49 Let's just go watch the comedy club. Let's just go fishing. Let's go do the thing. Are you kidding me, yeah. I mean, no, I'm not kidding. I just don't want to hear about anymore. like when you're ready to make the next step, I'll be right here with you, brother. And probably he'll quit calling you. And you'll have to deal with that sad. But just continuing in the same spin me right round record right round,
Starting point is 00:32:14 you're just going around and around and around. It's just you got to slap it up, flip it, reverse it, and just go somewhere else. I'm thinking another direction with it. But I think the ultimate thing underneath everything is your friendship's not what you are fantasizing that it is in dealing with. that should free you to make the next hard call, which is, bro, I'm tired of talking bad about your
Starting point is 00:32:34 wife and you're not doing anything about it. It just is what it is. But I'm telling you, I'm a product of men like Eric, men like Trevor, men like Todd, men like John calling me out, Kevin, Michael, calling me out personally and saying, hey, you're not acting as though I hear you say you want to be and those men have changed my life. And so you can be that kind of catalyst for him. Thanks for the call, my brother. I'm really grateful, man. When we come back, a woman asks how she can raise her kids well after losing her husband. Montana Knife Company makes the best knives on the planet, period. End of story. Everybody knows that my son and I are big hunters, and I'm always talking about what an amazing cook my wife is.
Starting point is 00:33:20 Between the woods and the kitchen, my family needs knives that actually hold up, that actually handle the rough and tough abuse that we put on them. And listen, I bought the chef's knife set for my wife several years ago. She loved it. It's one of the greatest gifts I've ever bought her. And she still uses those knives every day. And I have a number of Montana Knife Company knives for my outdoor adventures. Their knives are designed, tested, and built by real hunters and real cooks.
Starting point is 00:33:48 When you pick one up, you can instantly feel the quality. They're that amazing. They're proudly made in the USA. the razor sharp right out of the box and they are tough enough to last a lifetime. Montana Knife Company guarantees that my grandkids are going to fight over these knives someday. If your knife ever needs sharpening, which it will if you use it, just send it back and they will sharpen it and send it back to you for free. Give the outdoorsman and the cook in your life a knife they will love and actually use all of the time.
Starting point is 00:34:20 Go to montanananife company.com to see what's available right now. They always sell out. So go check them out as soon as you can. You won't be disappointed. That's montana knife company.com. All right, let's go to Pittsburgh and talk to Maria. What's up, Maria? Hello.
Starting point is 00:34:40 How are you? I'm okay. How are you? I am doing a little bit better than okay. I'm glad that you called. What's up? So my husband passed away a little over a year ago. Oh, gosh.
Starting point is 00:34:54 Hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on. Don't know. Stay there. Stay there with me. What was his name? Daniel. Daniel? Good guy. Very. How old was he? 36.
Starting point is 00:35:09 36. Good God. What happened? Motorcycle accident. Oh, Maria. Daniel, 36. Do you have kids? Three small children. Oh, jeez. I'm sorry, Maria. Thank you. Ugh. What's the funniest thing you remember Daniel doing? Too many? What's one that pops into your mind? A silly thing.
Starting point is 00:35:59 A silly thing. He loved three things, I guess. Anything that he found, he would bring it home. And he found this big metal. We thought that it was a homemade like 1930s cellulite machine. and he brought it home and for something it was like 500 pounds and just to have
Starting point is 00:36:25 bro was he trying to send you a message geez no no he would sit on it and just laugh about it
Starting point is 00:36:34 like that was just him did it work no no I don't know they made plans to make it into some kind of
Starting point is 00:36:45 roaster like chicken roaster or something like that. Yeah. Oh my gosh. Yeah. He was full of everything. Yeah. I tell you what, man.
Starting point is 00:37:03 There's one thing I hope for when I pass away. I hope when somebody says, my wife, was he a good guy? She just gets quiet and says, yeah. So, ma'am, how can I sit with you today? What's going on? So like I said, I have three small children. When he passed, five, two, and six months old. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:37:37 And you've talked about how big of an importance it is for sons to watch their fathers and to like learn how to treat a woman and for daughters to watch their fathers to learn how they want to be treated by a man. He was all that. So my, I'm asking what advice you can give. help instill those values when they no longer have that in their life. Yeah, geez. So it's been over a year, you said? A little over a year, yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:14 Are you at a place grounding wise where you have made the turn that everything is different now? My heart is starting to get to the point where my mind knows that he's not coming back, but it's still, it's a hard. Yeah. hard-faced fact-to-face yeah do you still pick up the phone to text them every once in a while yeah and for people listening to this call who've never experienced the absolute world implosion
Starting point is 00:38:52 that you've experienced that question might sound silly but you know what I mean that there's a daily reality you've got three mouths to feed you've got three kids to get out to school or to daycare you've got bills you got a light bill that keeps coming right like you know innately just robotically you're on you're on your own you got to do all this by yourself but there's like you said it perfectly there's a heart thing you still pick up the phone to call this guy or you still are like oh i got to tell dent right and then this your body just goes
Starting point is 00:39:25 whoosh it's almost like you leave yourself right every morning when you wake up yeah the reality kind of hits like it was another day like there's no i don't say there's no but there's no like, okay, we got through it. Yeah. And maybe that's the best line I can give you is there's not getting through this. You'll just find yourself expanding over time, and it just takes, I wish there was any other thing other than it just takes time. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:02 And now I just, I mean, I can deal. But I just want my kids to grow up, be good people. Hey, listen to me. They will be. And I'll give you a few things you can do, but I want you to rest assured you're doing the right things, okay? It's going to be different, but they're going to look back and see how strong their mom was, and you're going to give them a picture of what strength looks like that few kids will ever get. I hope so.
Starting point is 00:40:35 And you're going to give them a master class in. This is what grief looks like, and this is what doing the next excruciatingly hard thing looks like. and they're going to get to feel what love feels like through how much you miss their dad. Okay? They're going to experience that in real time. They're going to have a compassion that few people have. And there's some pitfalls and challenges.
Starting point is 00:41:07 We can talk through those. But I want to start the conversation with, like you're a deeply caring, powerful, strong woman, and they're going to be good, okay? Okay. They're going to have some hard challenges ahead. No question about it. But, and you are too.
Starting point is 00:41:26 But the fact that you're asking this question now tells me they're going to be, they're going to be great. Okay. Okay. And I'm not just saying that. I wouldn't just make that up, okay? Okay. So does your five-year-old have pictures in his head? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:43 Yeah, he has memories. Okay. And I mean, I think, like, we have a picture, a continuous picture frame with all the pictures and videos, and they look at it every day. And we talk about him and pray about him and all that. But I, and I think he has real memories, but when he's now three, the middle one, I think he just goes by the memories, like by the pictures that he sees. Yeah, he'll create stories behind the pictures, and then his stories, and the stories he hears from his older brother and from you,
Starting point is 00:42:23 will feel like memories, but they're not, right? Yeah. Yeah. And part of that is heartbreaking. That's a whole other level of grief, right? And that's part of his process. So let me say this. For the next six months, for the next year, the next two years,
Starting point is 00:42:47 for the rest of their childhood, even if, and I'm going to say something crazy, okay, feelings-wise, but even if you're going to remarry somebody, you constantly letting them know what kind of man your daddy was, their daddy was. And you know what your dad used to do for me?
Starting point is 00:43:09 He would hold me tight when it was cold. He would always pick up some silly thing, right? And it's, it's, you're going to teach them those lessons through your lived experience. So they might not have a picture of seeing a man treat his wife with such amazing love like he did treat you,
Starting point is 00:43:30 but they're gonna have an internalized sense of the stories because they're gonna feel them from their mom. And is that the same thing? No, it's not, but it's still really powerful. Okay.
Starting point is 00:43:46 Y'all are coming up on Christmas. This guy sounds like he was, I say generous, and what I mean by that is, I don't know what his giving habits were, but generosity, like he seems like a person who was full of life? Very much was.
Starting point is 00:44:01 He gave life to a room or to a household or to his friends. Does that make sense? Yeah. Okay. Yeah, he did. So what a cool thing this year? If you set a table for him at Thanksgiving, set a place for him, and you wrote a letter to him to tell him how amazing his three kids are,
Starting point is 00:44:25 and you read that letter in front of your three kids. Your three-year-old will squirm, won't know what's going on, and might think it's boring. Your five-year-old might kind of remember. Yeah. Your one-and-a-half-year-old will just be babbling around and probably need a diaper change, right?
Starting point is 00:44:49 Like, it's not going to be this big grand hallmark moment. But it'll feel better. I don't even know if you'll feel better, but it will let those kids know. They're anchored in, the other half of themselves was amazing, which means they're amazing too. Yeah. Right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:15 And then if he was a generous person, we're going to set up an annual ritual, whether it's at Thanksgiving, whether it's at Christmas, where the four of y'all, go give somebody a gift, go do something nice because this is what your dad would have done. He was such a giving generous guy. And you look at your three kids and say, that means you all are generous too. Yeah. And so what's a toy that we want to give to somebody who doesn't have any toys? What is something we want to do for a neighbor?
Starting point is 00:45:52 And we're going to just, that's how they're going to begin over time to make meaning of this loss. But man, they, they, those three kids, they lost everything when he left, but man, they won the lottery with you. I'm trying my best.
Starting point is 00:46:19 I know you are. working? Yeah. Do you have family support? Yeah. Not great. Some? Half and half.
Starting point is 00:46:35 Here's another really hard truth. Normally, if we were talking, I would say, hey, next week when you come back, we'll talk about this, but since we're here, I don't want to leave the call without telling you this, okay? This is a lot to take in. your kids are they what is their gender two boys so the oldest one now is just turned seven okay um a three-year-old boy and then a little my little girl is 18 months old okay are you plugged into a church community yes okay your new responsibility is to get
Starting point is 00:47:14 other men into their lives like my friends have really really shown up for me in his friends, but I want you to formalize it. And that's going to feel like another loss all over again. But they do have to have other pictures of men in their lives. And you want it, I want it. They need it to have been their dad. And that's not an option anymore. And so they have to have images. They've got to have real lived experiences with other good men. And so what I would tell you is, it would be one of my highest honors if one of my friends passed away and his wife called me.
Starting point is 00:48:13 I would probably take it on myself, but I do this for a living, right? Not everybody wants to intrude. They don't know what to do next. To say, once a month, would you take my oldest to breakfast? He needs some men in his life, and Daniel trusted you.
Starting point is 00:48:29 So I trust you. Okay? And that becomes your new mission is, I've got to get some good men in their lives. Because the phone, you know what I'm talking about, out here, the harrowing silence after the phone stops ringing, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:49 Because you had tons of guys reaching out wanting to help mowing your lawn, doing that kind of stuff when that first happened. And here you are a year plus later. And that phone quits ringing so much, right? Yeah. Or you get the random text like, hey, do you need anything? Well, what are, you know, what am I supposed to do with that, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:06 And so there is a proactive nature to this. And there's going to be, it's going to be a hodgepodge of emotion where, you know, you're so grateful that Daniel, one of his best friends who lives a couple of streets over, comes over and picks your kid up and takes him to breakfast and then drops him off at school for you
Starting point is 00:49:23 and it's going to feel like a nightmare because that should be Daniel. Yeah. Right? All those feelings are right. Gratitude, grief, sadness, heartbreak, joy, all that is mush together.
Starting point is 00:49:44 Yeah. I appreciate your time. Will you call me anytime you need anything? Yeah. Is there anything that you need? No. Okay. If you need financial resources, if you need psychological resources, if you need anything, you holler back at us and we'll walk alongside you, okay?
Starting point is 00:50:14 Just as a, as a gang, as the OG17 gang listening to this, we're all with you. We're all heartbroken. and for everybody who's currently married to somebody as awesome as Daniel this Thanksgiving I want you to write that husband of yours a letter
Starting point is 00:50:35 and I want you to read it to him in front of your kids we don't celebrate each other well in this culture we just get real busy and we go do the next right thing and we co-manage our households and we co-manage our kids
Starting point is 00:50:46 and our kids need to see us celebrate each other and so if you have an amazing husband like Daniel, a guy who's just a lot, brings home 500 pound broken down cellulite machines, right? He's going to turn into a turkey roaster and he's out riding his motorcycle and he's just a life of every, it's easy to look and be like, oh God, he brought junk home again or it's also just as easy to go.
Starting point is 00:51:12 This guy's awesome. He's crazy. I love him. But we need to celebrate each other. So this Thanksgiving, write your spouse a letter and celebrate him in front of other people. let them know that you see them, that you know them, and that you're so grateful. Thank you for the call, sister.
Starting point is 00:51:30 Super honored that you called. Call anytime. We'll be right back. This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. As we head into the new year, I want you to take an inventory of all the stuff you're carrying, all the things you think you have to do or should do, along with all the past hurts and pains,
Starting point is 00:51:49 past guilt, past shame. Listen, when the world feels heavy, it's important to first look in the mirror and consider setting down all of that old weight and not carry it into 2026. 2026 is going to have enough chaos of its own without you bringing all of the past into it. Therapy can help you identify that heavy stuff, that old guilt, that old shame, and move forward with clarity so you can focus on being light heading into the new year. If you're thinking about therapy, check out my friends at better help.
Starting point is 00:52:21 They have over 30,000 therapists and they're one of the leading online therapy providers on the planet. They're trusted by millions of people around the world with an average rating of 4.9 stars out of 5. It's online so it's easy to fit into your schedule to get started. Just answer a few simple questions and they'll connect you with a licensed therapist who will fit your needs. And if it's not the right fit, you can change therapists at any time for no extra cost. You can't feel lighter without leaving behind what's been weighing you down. Go to BetterHelp.com slash Deloney to get 10% off your first month. That's BetterHelp, help.com slash Deloni.
Starting point is 00:52:58 All right, we're back. So this episode comes out a couple of months after Thanksgiving and or maybe a month and a half after Thanksgiving after Christmas. And I realized the caller I just told, hey, write a letter. I told you guys as the audience. Write a letter during Thanksgiving. Well, it's past that. It's not too late, and I want you to do that this week.
Starting point is 00:53:21 Like gratitude celebrating your ride or die person is something we, as all of us, have to be better at. I've been going through reams of marriage data, and one of the biggest challenges is we don't stop and celebrate each other. We just notice the towels, or we just notice five minutes late, or we just notice the, I wish our sex life was better. All of the state, we just notice, notice, notice negative, negative, negative. And some of that can be transformed through just changing the lens we look at, which is looking for things we're grateful for. And so yes, we're past Thanksgiving. If you're listening to this, you're like, I wish I'd done that at Thanksgiving.
Starting point is 00:53:52 I got it. I'm recording this the week of Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving's actually two days from now. But I want you to begin making this a regular practice to celebrate, to say thank you, to say I see you. Man, that's awesome. I'm grateful for you. And doing it in front of your kids is next level.
Starting point is 00:54:10 Next level. Something cool happened, Kelly 2.0, 3.0. What is it? Yes. So Kelsey writes to us from Chicago. She said, John is always talking about how kids are so quick to cut off their parents. I've not had a great relationship with my father since I was born. We've gone extended periods of time where we didn't talk.
Starting point is 00:54:30 I finally had the opportunity to let my dad know how I fell and put some boundaries in place. They weren't initially taken well, but after a few days, we talked again and forgave each other on various things. Since then, he's been very honest with me. We talk more and more, and I'm so glad I have my dad in my life. I'm really thankful for you, John, to have you in the back of my mind when I wanted to give up on my relationship with my father. Thank you to you and the team. I feel like I have a piece of myself back.
Starting point is 00:54:57 That's awesome, dude. Yeah, in this new year, especially if you're like, man, Christmas was just the same again or we got into big another complaining argument over Thanksgiving or whatever. Make the call. Sometimes, especially when relationships are abusive or whatever, Like, I need to not contact you anymore. Most of the time, it's about having some hard conversations around boundaries that helps
Starting point is 00:55:24 reestablish the relationship. It provides people with guardrails so that we are free to love inside these guardrails. And often that's what people need. We live in a culture that has told us what we all want is no boundaries, no restrictions. And that's just not true. People are desperate for boundaries. and you setting boundaries and then communicating them clearly
Starting point is 00:55:48 to someone as important as your mom, as your dad can be one of the greatest gifts. They might walk away, but they might not. It's awesome. What was her name again, Kelsey? Kelsey. Good on you, Kelsey.
Starting point is 00:56:00 I'm proud of you. I'm proud of you. That's how you change your family tree right there. Love you guys. Happy New Year. Bye.

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