He Checked Every Box and Still Felt Like a Failure
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Every decade brings men a new label to chase to feel like enough: New Age, red pill, stoic, and now traditional masculinity. Each one promises a checklist: do these five things, and you're a man. But underneath the label, the actual hunger rarely changes. Most men chasing a definition of masculinity aren't really trying to prove they're masculine at all. They're trying to prove they're significant, that they can still kick ass in the world, that they won't be forgotten, left behind, or revealed as not enough. Swap the costume, and the same fear keeps driving from the inside.
In this episode, Timothy sits down with Tripp Lanier. He is a professional coach and the host of The New Man Podcast [https://www.thenewmanpodcast.com/], where he has spent two decades, since 2005, coaching men ranging from Navy SEALs to entrepreneurs to small business owners through career, identity, and relationship transitions. He is the author of This Book Will Make You Dangerous [https://bookshop.org/a/112938/9781608422142], built around the idea that real danger today rarely looks physical and almost always looks like discomfort: the hard phone call, the unproven idea, the conversation that might get a no. His core premise, deliberately at odds with most of the masculinity conversation, is that he has never actually been coaching men toward a definition of manhood. He has been coaching them toward wholeness, whatever that requires them to feel, risk, or admit.
Together, they unpack:
* Proving enough versus proving manhood: Across two decades of coaching, Tripp has noticed his clients are rarely anxious about being masculine enough. They're anxious about being successful enough, significant enough, never invisible. Money becomes a stand-in for security, status, and identity, and the goalposts keep moving long after the original need has been handled. The episode traces how that hunger gets wired in early and why it rarely turns off, even for men who have clearly "made it."
* Redefining danger: Tripp's earlier branding around being a "dangerous man" gave way over the years to language about aliveness, because what counts as danger has quietly shrunk. With almost no physical threat left in modern life, the body still reacts to a hard ask the same way it would react to a real one. Timothy and Tripp dig into why social risk filled the vacuum physical risk left behind, and why playing it safe rarely feels safe from the inside.
* The armour men need, and the armour that costs them: A throughline of the conversation is armour: necessary to move through certain rooms, costly when it never comes off. Tripp describes a wilderness retreat where names and job titles were stripped away entirely, and how fast trust formed once nobody could lean on credentials to be seen. They talk through why the most successful men are often the most isolated, why men's groups work best as something as simple as a few guys agreeing to show up, and why the real goal is flexibility, knowing when armour serves you and when it's just become who you think you have to be.
This is not a conversation about coaching tactics for men deep into personal development circles. It is a conversation about what's actually driving most men long before they'd ever call it a masculinity issue, and why the real work looks less like performing a role well and more like finding out what genuinely matters underneath it. What Tripp offers, after two decades in the work, is permission: a man can be unfinished, messy, and still be a good one.
Guest Information
* Professional coach, podcast host, and founder of The New Man Podcast [https://www.thenewmanpodcast.com/], a platform built around men's coaching, lifestyle design, and what it actually takes for a man to feel alive rather than just functional. He is the author of a book, This Book Will Make You Dangerous [https://bookshop.org/a/112938/9781608422142], which reframes danger away from physical risk and toward the discomfort of building a life around what actually matters.
* Tripp has been coaching men since 2005 and podcasting since 2007, building The New Man into one of the longest-running shows in the men's coaching space, evolving over two decades from a "Become a Dangerous Man" framing toward a focus on aliveness through small, consistent action.
* Known for a humour-forward, irreverent voice that resists the heaviness and self-seriousness common in personal growth spaces, making deep interior work accessible to men, including Navy SEALs, entrepreneurs, and business owners, who might otherwise dismiss it as too soft or too woo.
* Focus areas include the interior drivers underneath status and significance, redefining what counts as danger in a physically safe modern world, the armour men need versus the armour that isolates them, men's groups and community as foundational rather than optional, and wholeness as the goal rather than any fixed model of masculinity.
Note: Tripp Lanier appears in this interview in a personal and professional capacity. The views expressed are his own and do not represent any affiliated institution, clinical body, or organisation.
Here is our affiliate link to buy the books discussed from a local bookstore in your area: https://bookshop.org/shop/AmericanMasculinity [https://bookshop.org/shop/AmericanMasculinity]
Substack Link: https://substack.com/@americanmasculinity?utm_campaign=profile&utm_medium=profile-page [https://substack.com/@americanmasculinity?utm_campaign=profile&utm_medium=profile-page]
Get Tripp’s Book:
This Book Will Make You Dangerous: https://bookshop.org/a/112938/9781608422142 [https://bookshop.org/a/112938/9781608422142]
Connect with Tripp
Website: https://www.tripplanier.com/ [https://www.tripplanier.com/]
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tripplanier/?hl=en [https://www.instagram.com/tripplanier/?hl=en]
Resources Mentioned
The Newman Podcast: 🔗 https://www.thenewmanpodcast.com/ [https://www.thenewmanpodcast.com/]
The American Masculinity Podcast™ is hosted by Timothy Wienecke — licensed psychotherapist, Air Force veteran, and men’s advocate.
Real conversations about masculinity, mental health, growth, and how men can show up better — as partners, leaders, and friends.
We focus on grounded tools, not yelling or clichés. If you have questions or want a tool for something you're wrestling with, leave a comment or send a message — your feedback shapes what we build next.
Note: While this doesn’t replace therapy, it might help you notice something worth exploring.
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