For My Sons Podcast

Curriculum Series #10: The Importance of Reading People | Not Everyone Who Smiles Means You Well | For My Sons

27 min · 13. Juli 2026
Episode Curriculum Series #10: The Importance of Reading People | Not Everyone Who Smiles Means You Well | For My Sons Cover

Beschreibung

Not everyone who speaks your language means you well. Some of the most costly decisions men make are not made in ignorance. They are made with the signals right in front of them — signals they chose not to see. In this Curriculum Series episode, Papa O breaks down one of the most underrated life skills a man can build: the ability to read people accurately. Not with suspicion. Not with paranoia. But with the kind of clear-eyed discernment that protects your time, your resources, and the people depending on you. Drawing on a Yoruba proverb that has stayed with him, and a Japanese cultural tradition called haragei, the art of reading beneath the surface, this episode explores why character is rarely found in what someone says, and almost always found in what they do. You will walk away with one practical discipline for reading people more accurately: how to observe behaviour across time and context, give warmth quickly and trust slowly, and take seriously the quiet signal your instincts send before your mind catches up. This episode is part of the For My Sons Curriculum Series — a deliberate body of principles on masculinity, character, and how to read people, built for men who take their development seriously.   Join the newsletter: formysons.subscribepage.io

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Episode Curriculum Series #10: The Importance of Reading People | Not Everyone Who Smiles Means You Well | For My Sons Cover

Curriculum Series #10: The Importance of Reading People | Not Everyone Who Smiles Means You Well | For My Sons

Not everyone who speaks your language means you well. Some of the most costly decisions men make are not made in ignorance. They are made with the signals right in front of them — signals they chose not to see. In this Curriculum Series episode, Papa O breaks down one of the most underrated life skills a man can build: the ability to read people accurately. Not with suspicion. Not with paranoia. But with the kind of clear-eyed discernment that protects your time, your resources, and the people depending on you. Drawing on a Yoruba proverb that has stayed with him, and a Japanese cultural tradition called haragei, the art of reading beneath the surface, this episode explores why character is rarely found in what someone says, and almost always found in what they do. You will walk away with one practical discipline for reading people more accurately: how to observe behaviour across time and context, give warmth quickly and trust slowly, and take seriously the quiet signal your instincts send before your mind catches up. This episode is part of the For My Sons Curriculum Series — a deliberate body of principles on masculinity, character, and how to read people, built for men who take their development seriously.   Join the newsletter: formysons.subscribepage.io

13. Juli 202627 min
Episode Curriculum Series #9: The Importance of Handling Rejection | What Most Men Get Wrong When the Door Closes | For My Sons Cover

Curriculum Series #9: The Importance of Handling Rejection | What Most Men Get Wrong When the Door Closes | For My Sons

Rejection doesn't announce itself as a lesson. It arrives as a closed door — and most men were never taught what to do once they're standing in front of one. This episode is for every man who has worked hard and been passed over, reached out and been turned away, or quietly made himself smaller after a no he didn't know how to carry. If you have ever wondered how to handle rejection without letting it shrink you or harden you, this is where that conversation begins. The Yoruba proverb at the heart of this episode says it plainly: Igi tó bá fẹ́ gbòòrù gbọdọ̀ farahàn fún ìkọ̀. The tree that wants to grow tall must endure the axe. We follow David — a young man passed over for a role he had genuinely earned — and what one honest question from his father began to open in him. We look at Gus Osei, redirected by a rejection he could not control into a path that made him one of the pioneering black British businessmen of the twentieth century. And at Olusegun Obasanjo — sentenced to death, imprisoned, released, and eventually elected president of Nigeria. One practical step. Three responses to rejection that produce growth rather than bitterness — for any man willing to run them honestly. Join the newsletter: formysons.subscribepage.io

6. Juli 202623 min
Episode Curriculum Series #8: The Importance of Competence | Confidence Without Capability Is Just Noise | For My Sons Cover

Curriculum Series #8: The Importance of Competence | Confidence Without Capability Is Just Noise | For My Sons

Confidence gets you in the room. Competence keeps you there. Most men have never been told the difference — and it costs them more than they realise. In this Curriculum Series episode, we examine one of the most quietly important principles a young man can build his life around: the ability to actually do what you say you can do. Not the performance of capability. The real thing. We look at two men sitting at opposite ends of this principle. One who had every quality the world rewards — presence, articulation, ease — and yet could not deliver when the work arrived. And another who carried self-doubt his entire career, was never the most dazzling person in the room, and went on to win the Nobel Prize — because he spent decades building something the world could not ignore. The Yoruba proverb at the heart of this episode says it plainly: Agbára kò sí nínú ẹnu, ó wà nínú ìṣe. Strength is not in the mouth. It is in the deed. We also look at what the Yoruba blacksmithing tradition understood about earned standing long before the modern world made performance so easy to mistake for substance. One practical step. One framework for building competence that holds under pressure. And a question worth sitting with long after the episode ends. Join the newsletter for the deeper letter that follows this episode: formysons.subscribepage.io

29. Juni 202636 min
Episode Curriculum Series #7: The Importance of Good Health | The Funeral You're Already Writing | For My Sons Cover

Curriculum Series #7: The Importance of Good Health | The Funeral You're Already Writing | For My Sons

Men die an average of five years earlier than women, globally — and silence is most of the reason why. This episode runs nearly three times the normal length, because the subject deserves nothing less. You'll walk away with the actual standard for men's health by decade — the exact screenings to ask your doctor for in your 20s, 30s, 40s and beyond, including why the conversation starts earlier for Black men. Papa O draws the line between surviving and actually pursuing good health, and asks the question most men avoid until it's too late: which funeral are you currently writing? Anchored in the Yoruba proverb "Ara ni aṣọ eni" — the body is one's garment — this is the longest, most important episode in the curriculum so far, by design. For the deeper letter on this, the Masculine Discipline Letters newsletter goes further than the episode has room for. Join the newsletter: formysons.subscribepage.io

22. Juni 20261 h 27 min
Episode Curriculum Series #6: The Importance of Boundaries | How to Protect Your Peace, Standards, and Identity as a Man | For My Sons Cover

Curriculum Series #6: The Importance of Boundaries | How to Protect Your Peace, Standards, and Identity as a Man | For My Sons

Most young men were never taught how to say no. They were taught to be agreeable. Available. Accommodating. And for a while, that looks like a strength. But there comes a point — after enough exhaustion, after enough resentment, after enough of yourself has quietly been given away — when a man realises something. He has spent so long keeping everybody else comfortable that he no longer knows how to keep himself grounded. That is what this episode is about. Not boundaries as a buzzword. Not boundaries as selfishness. But boundaries as the quiet, disciplined act of knowing what you stand for, what you protect, and what deserves access to your life. We explore a Yoruba proverb that cuts to the heart of it: a person who does not know where he stands will be pushed around by life. We talk about the young man who slowly loses himself trying to avoid conflict and keep everybody happy. We look at what Miyamoto Musashi understood about focus and protection that most men never learn. And we break down the three boundaries every man needs: personal, relational, and moral. This is part of the For My Sons Curriculum Series. One story. One proverb. One step. If this is the kind of conversation you have been waiting for, it is here. New episodes every Monday.

15. Juni 202631 min