Breaking the patterns we inherited from our parents
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This week on DADHOOD, we get real about the traits we inherit from our parents — the ones that helped us survive as kids but might be holding us back as dads, husbands, and men today.
We talk about breaking generational patterns, why we sometimes raise our voices, hustle for validation, struggle with presence, and unknowingly carry childhood survival tools into adulthood. From therapy breakthroughs to parenting awareness, this conversation dives deep into what it actually looks like to evolve as a father and stop passing down the things we’re still healing from ourselves.
If you've ever caught yourself reacting in a way that felt familiar… or wondered why certain parenting moments hit harder than they should — this episode is for you.
We also talk about:
* Why yelling doesn’t create connection
* The pressure dads unknowingly put on themselves
* Childhood coping mechanisms that follow us into adulthood
* Seeking validation from parents, partners, and success
* Why your kids need your presence more than perfection
Because being a better dad sometimes starts with understanding the little boy you used to be.
Chapters
00:00 – DADHOOD Father’s Day Event Announcement
03:12 – The Traits We Inherit From Our Parents
06:08 – Why Dads Raise Their Voice (Without Realizing It)
10:42 – Childhood Survival Tools That Don’t Serve You Anymore
15:18 – Why We Chase Validation as Adults
19:46 – “You’re Dragging the Raft Through the Woods”
24:02 – The Hidden Pressure of Hustle Culture for Dads
29:15 – Are You Truly Present With Your Kids?
34:20 – The Connection We Were Missing Growing Up
39:08 – Parenting While Healing Your Own Childhood
44:15 – Why “That’s Just Who I Am” Is Dangerous
48:27 – Building a Better Version of Fatherhood
52:30 – Final Thoughts + Dadhood Father’s Day Meetup
Takeaways
1. Childhood survival tools don’t always work in adulthood
The habits that protected us as kids — shutting down, yelling, avoiding conflict, people pleasing — may now be hurting our relationships as fathers and partners.
2. Awareness is the first step to breaking generational patterns
You can’t change what you don’t recognize. Becoming aware of inherited behaviors is where growth starts.
3. Raising your voice often comes from stress — not the moment
Most parenting reactions aren’t about the immediate situation. They’re usually tied to deeper stress, pressure, or unresolved experiences.
4. Your kids want your presence more than perfection
Children remember how emotionally available you were far more than achievements, money, or productivity.
5. Many dads are unknowingly chasing validation
Whether through work, success, fitness, or parenting — a lot of men are still trying to earn approval they didn’t fully receive growing up.
6. “That’s just who I am” keeps people stuck
Growth requires honesty. Self-awareness matters more than defending unhealthy patterns.
7. Connection beats performance
Being a great dad isn’t about constantly doing more — it’s about creating meaningful moments of connection.
8. Healing yourself helps heal your family
The more inner work dads do, the less emotional baggage gets passed to their kids.
9. Honest conversations with other dads matter
Fatherhood feels lighter when dads have a space to talk openly without judgment.
10. We’re all evolving in real time
No dad has it fully figured out — but showing up, reflecting, and trying again matters most.
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