For My Sons Podcast
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
61 episodes
Comments
0Be the first to comment
Sign up now and become a member of the For My Sons Podcast community!