Uncommon: The DadWork Podcast

73 Patriarchy — The Word That Makes People Uncomfortable, And Why That's A Good Thing

55 min · 27. juni 2026
episode 73 Patriarchy — The Word That Makes People Uncomfortable, And Why That's A Good Thing cover

Description

Patriarch. Say it out loud. Notice what happens in your body. Some of you looked around to make sure nobody heard. Some of you felt a fire in your chest. Most of you felt both. Good. This episode is about taking that word back — from the culture that weaponized it, the ideology that turned it into a slur, and the pop culture machine that replaced the father who leads with the father who can't function without his wife saving him. We go back to the origin. Pater. Archon. Patriarkhēs: The father who leads. The paterfamilias of ancient Rome. Zeus energy — not the petty, reactive philanderer of pop mythology, but the integrated king who holds the vision, sets the standard, and takes full responsibility for everything behind him. We talk about how we got here. The Industrial Revolution that pulled the patriarch from the heart of his home. The 1969 consciousness-raising meetings where women with advanced degrees from Columbia and Radcliffe sat in a room and planned — in their own words — the destruction of the American family by destroying the American patriarch. The pop culture machine that finished the job with Homer Simpson, Al Bundy, and a 2026 movie called The Breadwinner where dad can't do laundry. We talk about what a patriarch-less society actually looks like. Not theory. The numbers. 700,000 men a year taking their own lives. Birth rates collapsing. Boys with no masculine elders finding their models in pornography and Andrew Tate. Antidepressant use up 3,000% since 1990. And we talk about the return. Not dominance. Not control. Responsibility. Sacrificial leadership. In the spirit of Christ. The beit av of Chronicles — the father's house — the structure God used to rebuild a shattered people. Family by family. Father by father. That's what this is. And that's why this September I'm building the room. The Patriarch Summit. September 11-13, 2026. Virtual. Live. 9 speakers. Doors open July 1st. Link is right here [https://patriarch2026.squarespace.com/] If this landed — share it with a man who needs it. If you got something out of it — send $5 on Venmo [https://venmo.com/u/robertbilljr] @robbilljr. Top supporters get official producer credits. // Train a child up in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it. Proverbs 22:6 x Rob

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74 episodes

episode 73 Patriarchy — The Word That Makes People Uncomfortable, And Why That's A Good Thing artwork

73 Patriarchy — The Word That Makes People Uncomfortable, And Why That's A Good Thing

Patriarch. Say it out loud. Notice what happens in your body. Some of you looked around to make sure nobody heard. Some of you felt a fire in your chest. Most of you felt both. Good. This episode is about taking that word back — from the culture that weaponized it, the ideology that turned it into a slur, and the pop culture machine that replaced the father who leads with the father who can't function without his wife saving him. We go back to the origin. Pater. Archon. Patriarkhēs: The father who leads. The paterfamilias of ancient Rome. Zeus energy — not the petty, reactive philanderer of pop mythology, but the integrated king who holds the vision, sets the standard, and takes full responsibility for everything behind him. We talk about how we got here. The Industrial Revolution that pulled the patriarch from the heart of his home. The 1969 consciousness-raising meetings where women with advanced degrees from Columbia and Radcliffe sat in a room and planned — in their own words — the destruction of the American family by destroying the American patriarch. The pop culture machine that finished the job with Homer Simpson, Al Bundy, and a 2026 movie called The Breadwinner where dad can't do laundry. We talk about what a patriarch-less society actually looks like. Not theory. The numbers. 700,000 men a year taking their own lives. Birth rates collapsing. Boys with no masculine elders finding their models in pornography and Andrew Tate. Antidepressant use up 3,000% since 1990. And we talk about the return. Not dominance. Not control. Responsibility. Sacrificial leadership. In the spirit of Christ. The beit av of Chronicles — the father's house — the structure God used to rebuild a shattered people. Family by family. Father by father. That's what this is. And that's why this September I'm building the room. The Patriarch Summit. September 11-13, 2026. Virtual. Live. 9 speakers. Doors open July 1st. Link is right here [https://patriarch2026.squarespace.com/] If this landed — share it with a man who needs it. If you got something out of it — send $5 on Venmo [https://venmo.com/u/robertbilljr] @robbilljr. Top supporters get official producer credits. // Train a child up in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it. Proverbs 22:6 x Rob

27. juni 202655 min
episode 72 - Years Running From God — Until God Shook Him Up In The Middle of His Rockstar Fantasy artwork

72 - Years Running From God — Until God Shook Him Up In The Middle of His Rockstar Fantasy

He was nineteen years old, drunk, and coming down off cocaine after playing at a music festival in Minnesota. And then he heard a voice. Not out loud. In his chest. Like words being pressed into his heart. David. Where are you? The same words God said to Adam in the garden. In that moment — everything came to a hilt. The alcohol. The chaos. The broken home. The woundedness he'd been running from his whole life. And he realized: if I keep going down this road, I'm going to die. Body and soul. So he walked to a lake. Sat there until the sun came up. And gave it all to God. That was the beginning. What followed was eight years in seminary, a leather business built from a calling, an Australian wife he fell in love with over video calls during COVID, and a daughter who screams "Papa pick you up" in the middle of the night. David is the founder of Oré Moose [https://www.oremoose.com/] — handmade leather goods that make faith felt. The rosary pouch on my desk is his. The journal my son smelled and said "it smells like Jesus" — his. We talk about what it means to run from God and what it takes to stop running. About faith as a relationship, not a checklist. About seminary as an initiatory process for young men. About art as food for the soul. And about building a home where faith is the natural backdrop — not something pushed, but something lived. This one went deep. If you got something out of it — send $5 on Venmo [https://venmo.com/u/robertbilljr] @robbilljr. Top supporters get official producer credits. // Face your demons or they'll live w/ your wife and raise your children. x Rob

21. juni 20261 h 8 min
episode 71 - Almost Two Men A Minute –Dead – And Nobody's Talking About It artwork

71 - Almost Two Men A Minute –Dead – And Nobody's Talking About It

700,000 men a year. 59,000 a month. 15,000 a week. 2,500 a day. 90 men every single hour. Almost two men every single minute. These are men with wives. With children. With families who need them. And it's "Pride" Month. And nobody's talking about this. This episode is my contribution to changing that. We talk about how we got here. The Industrial Revolution that pulled fathers from their homes and reduced their worth to a paycheck. The Victorian era that split men and women into separate kingdoms and lit the fuse. The feminist ideology — not women, the ideology — that set out in 1969 to destroy the American family by destroying the American patriarch. And the pop culture machine that finished the job. We talk about what's happening inside men. Why male depression doesn't look like sadness. Why men mask it with anger, alcohol, workaholism, and withdrawal. Why the mental health model we have wasn't built for men. And why strength training — not cardio — is one of the most effective interventions we have. We talk about the way through. Brotherhood. Purpose. Faith. The transitional character — the man who looks at the cycle and decides it ends with him. And we talk directly to the man who's standing on the rooftop doing the insurance math right now. Your family doesn't need the money. They need you. If you're struggling — call or text 988. Visit HeadsUpGuys.org [http://HeadsUpGuys.org]. Or DM me directly. I mean that. If this episode lands — don't keep it. Send it to a man who needs it. That's the whole point. If you got value from this episode — send $5 on Venmo [https://venmo.com/u/robertbilljr] @robbilljr. Top supporters get official producer credits on the show. // You Are More Than Enough And This World Is A Better Place With You In It

14. juni 202648 min
episode 70 - He Was Having Panic Attacks At Work & All He Knew How To Do Was Pray w/ Jonathan Conrad artwork

70 - He Was Having Panic Attacks At Work & All He Knew How To Do Was Pray w/ Jonathan Conrad

Jonathan Conrad was having panic attacks at work. Twins on the way. Stress through the roof. Work was his idol and he knew it. The only thing he knew to do was pray. Not because he was holy. Not because he had it figured out. Because it was the one prayer he remembered from childhood — and it was all he had. He started praying the rosary every day on the way to work. Out loud. Fingers on the steering wheel. Not even meditating on the mysteries. Just saying the words. And he didn't pray for himself to change. He prayed for everything around him to change. But he was the one who changed. That's the episode. Jonathan is the founder of Catholic Woodworker — the man behind the rosary that's in my hands every single morning. We talk about what it means to be intentional with your family the same way you're intentional with your business. About the excuse of blaming your kids, your wife, your circumstances. About brotherhood, isolation, and why the lone wolf path is killing men. About Saint Francis. About beauty. About what it means to go to Jesus through Mary. And about what happens when a man stops trying to fix everything wrong with him — and starts discovering the gifts God already put there. This one hit different. Get your hands on Jonathan's work at Catholic Woodworker. [https://catholicwoodworker.com/] If this episode moves you — send $5 on Venmo [https://venmo.com/u/robertbilljr] @robbilljr. Top supporters get official producer credits on the show. // Raise them in the way and when they're grown they will not stray

6. juni 202658 min
episode 69 - Why Unfit Dads Are Dead Weight On Their Families (And What It Does To His Kids) artwork

69 - Why Unfit Dads Are Dead Weight On Their Families (And What It Does To His Kids)

Four months into having my son Theo — I stood up from meditation and found myself on the floor. Hypostatic blood pressure. Dangerously high. Heart rate through the roof. I hadn't been training. I told myself I didn't have time. That was the moment I understood — this isn't about vanity. An unfit dad is a liability to his family. Full stop. Here's the stat that stops me cold every time. Children of active fathers are 3.5x more likely to be physically active themselves. Active moms? 2x. An active dad has nearly double the influence of an active mom on whether his kids move their bodies. Nobody told you that you were that important. 77% of men don't meet the bare minimum federal guidelines for physical activity. 150 minutes of moderate movement per week. A brisk walk. And most men aren't hitting it. Three out of four men you know are functionally useless if they have to do something physical. The dadbod isn't relatable content. It's a message your kids are receiving right now — about what a man's relationship with his body looks like. About complacence. About resignation. And they will repeat it. So here are the three things every dad needs to train. Not nice to haves. Non-negotiables. Strength. Flexibility and prehabilitation. Conditioning. We get into all of it — how to build each one without a gym membership, in the time you actually have, with your kids watching and learning alongside you. Plus the gear system for conditioning that I used to charge people thousands of dollars to measure in a lab. Turns out your breath tells you everything you need to know. Don't waste your money. HomeGrown Fitness [https://homegrownlifting.com/]// American-Made Rediculously Reasonably Priced And we get into what the research says about exercise as a treatment for depression and anxiety — comparable or superior to psychotherapy and pharmacology. You're not just getting fitter. You're getting freer. Last week's programming is live inside The Grit Collective — my free brotherhood. Link here [https://www.skool.com/the-grit-collective-1500]. If this episode hits — send $5 on Venmo [https://venmo.com/u/robertbilljr] @robbilljr. Top supporters get official producer credits on the show.

30. maj 202645 min