Raising Men

Q&A: Raising a Gentleman with a Backbone

12 min · 21 mei 2026
aflevering Q&A: Raising a Gentleman with a Backbone artwork

Beschrijving

In this special mailbag edition, Shaun dives deep into two core questions that surface at the very beginning of the fatherhood journey: how to establish foundational non-negotiables for raising a son of character, and how to navigate the intense emotional mirroring of toddlers. Relying on the collective wisdom of past guests—such as Sean Harvey, Emily Huston, Ryan North, and Paul Kix—Shaun maps out what it truly means to raise a "gentleman with a backbone." He unpacks why character must always trump performance and how true kindness serves as an expression of raw strength. Moving into the "mirror principle," Shaun breaks down the neurobiology of toddler meltdowns using the "Conan the Barbarian" vs. "Sherlock Holmes" brain framework. Key Takeaways * Excellence Through Continuous Failure: Raising a son with a backbone requires modeling that true excellence is born from effort and the willingness to get back up after failing, rather than maintaining a rigid veneer of perfection. * Identity Over Performance: In a culture obsessed with statistics and social media validation, fathers must anchor their son's identity in core character—what he does when no one is watching—rather than tracking external achievements. * Kindness is Tensile Strength: True masculinity blends raw strength with empathy and kindness. Like a bridge built with tensile strength to flex without breaking under pressure, a strong man possesses the backbone to apologize and make things right. * The Primal Mirror Principle: Children, especially toddlers, absorb emotional rhythms and environmental stress through mirror learning as a core survival mechanism. If a parent is vibrating with stress, the child interprets the environment as inherently unsafe. * De-escalating the Conan Brain: A toddler's emotional meltdown is governed entirely by the amygdala (the "Conan the Barbarian" brain). Meeting a meltdown with parental anger only introduces a second barbarian to the room, whereas staying in the prefrontal cortex ("Sherlock Holmes" brain) allows for calm, curious problem-solving. 00:00 – Introduction: Welcome to the Mailbag Edition  01:44 – Defining Healthy Modern Masculinity: A Gentleman with a Backbone  02:29 – Non-Negotiables: Modeling Excellence Through Failure  04:55 – Shifting the Focus: Character Over Performance & Kindness as Strength  07:21 – The Mirror Principle: Decoding Your Toddler's Emotional Rhythms  09:46 – Moving from Judgment to Curiosity & Final Parent Reflections  Books mentioned * Raising an Emotionally Intelligent Child by John Gottman  * Emotional Intelligence by Daniel Goleman  * Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst by Robert Sapolsky  Frameworks & Concepts * The Mirror Principle / Mirror Learning: The developmental process by which children subconsciously absorb behaviors, moods, and emotional rhythms via their parents' nervous systems. * Two-Brain Theory: A psychological metaphor contrasting the Conan the Barbarian brain (the survival-driven amygdala) with the Sherlock Holmes brain (the logical, regulating prefrontal cortex). * Tensile Strength Metaphor: The structural engineering concept used to describe a man's capacity to flex with life's pressures and express vulnerability without shattering. * Rocks in a Rock Polisher: A closing metaphor illustrating how community members and parents intentionally refine, smooth out, and polish one another through shared growth. Episodes mentioned: Sean Harvey: https://raising.men/episodes/no-perfect-dads-allowed-the-truth-about-love-and-showing-up-with-sean-harvey Emily Huston: https://raising.men/episodes/feminism-men-and-the-future-of-raising-strong-boys-with-emily-huston Dr. Gloria Vanderhorst: https://raising.men/episodes/fathers-sons-and-the-lost-language-of-emotion-with-dr-gloria-vanderhorst Paul Kix: https://raising.men/episodes/how-storytelling-helps-us-raise-men-with-paul-kix/ Ryan North: https://raising.men/episodes/what-trauma-informed-parenting-looks-like-at-home-with-ryan-north

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aflevering Q&A Navigating the "Man Box" artwork

Q&A Navigating the "Man Box"

In this insightful Q&A episode of Raising Men, host Shaun Dawson dives deep into the complex personal growth challenges that modern fathers face on the playground and at home. Drawing from the collective insights of previous conversations, Shaun addresses two powerful, listener-submitted questions regarding early childhood cultural conditioning and the struggle for verbal emotional intimacy. He unpacks how deeply emotional boys are at birth and how quickly societal frameworks, like the "man box," begin to systematically restrict their emotional vocabulary. Through a breakdown of modeled behavior, presence, and practical frameworks, this episode challenges fathers to expand emotional permissions within their own households. Shaun candidly shares his own parenting missteps, illustrating that true resilience does not come from flawless perfection, but from a father's willingness to stay regulated, remain present, and learn alongside his children. Key Takeaways * Emotional Conditioning Starts Early: Cultural scripts and the rigid boundaries of the "man box" begin influencing boys by the time they are three years old, often correcting their natural emotional expression and replacing vulnerability with a tough exterior. * The Danger of Archetypal Imbalance: Playground cultures heavily favor the aggressive traits of the warrior archetype while suppressing the lover archetype, which is the true source of empathy, connection, and physical affection. * The 60-30-10 Parenting Model: A parent’s impact is divided into 60% modeled behavior, 30% emotional presence and stability in the room, and only 10% from the actual words spoken. * Presence Communicates Value: Truly showing up by putting down devices and offering undivided attention builds an unshakable sense of self-worth in a child, proving they are valuable without needing a word spoken. * Authentic Vocabulary Bridges Gaps: Fathers who struggle to say "I love you" can bridge the intimacy divide by using low-pressure, true observations to validate their children, which naturally shrinks the emotional gap over time. 00:00 Technical parenting versus personal growth 01:00 Cultural scripts condition toddler boys 02:27 Tony Porter man box framework 04:00 Balancing warrior and lover archetypes 05:30 Practical ways expanding emotional literacy 07:06 Shaun shares personal parenting story 08:30 Addressing verbal intimacy divide difficulties 09:25 Introducing sixty thirty ten model 11:00 Modeling healthy equal household partnerships 11:52 Eve Rodsky fair play system 14:17 Presence metric regulating baseline energy 15:30 Transforming words metric using observation Books, Links and Frameworks Mentioned The Man Box Framework conceptualized by Tony Porter King, Warrior, Magician, Lover by Robert Moore and Douglas Gillette The 60-30-10 Parenting Model shared by Todd Adams Fair Play System by Eve Rodsky Men Living (Organization led by Todd Adams) Todd Adams Raising Men Episode: https://raising.men/episodes/mindful-masculinity-for-modern-dads-with-todd-adams [https://raising.men/episodes/mindful-masculinity-for-modern-dads-with-todd-adams]

Gisteren17 min
aflevering From Reactive to Radical: The Journey to Intentional Fatherhood with Jon Hord artwork

From Reactive to Radical: The Journey to Intentional Fatherhood with Jon Hord

Jon Hord is the founder of the Engaged Father Project. A former high-achieving corporate VP who walked away from a 100-year-old family company after a health-induced epiphany, Jon now coaches dads to move from "reactive survival" to "radical intentionality." 5 Key Takeaways: 1. The "Provider Trap": Connecting your value solely to your income. 2. The "Deathbed Scenario" as a tool for major life decisions. 3. Responding vs. Reacting: How to handle high-stress "Playbook 2" moments. 4. Measuring backwards: Focusing on the "Gain" rather than the "Gap." 5. The "Peace Frog": A practical tool for family feedback and emotional regulation. "If you ask them, 'Hey kids... what would you rather have? A more expensive vacation, or I’m around more?'... [they'd say around more]." "It is so hard for us as human beings to be aware of what’s actually going on in those moments for ourselves, because we’re just reacting." "For there to be an old dad, it means there has to be a new dad. And in that is my progress." 00:00 — Excellence Is Making Smaller Corrections 00:36 — Steering the Car, Not Letting It Drift 01:25 — Welcome Back to Raising Men 01:40 — When Providing Becomes a Trap 02:28 — High Achievement at the Cost of Family 03:05 — The Family Pays the Price 03:58 — What Kids Really Want From Dad 04:46 — The Collapse of Old Institutions 05:33 — Work From Home or Work Takes Over 06:15 — The Slippery Slope of Overwork 07:04 — Ego, Status, and Success 08:01 — When the Perks Disappear 08:38 — Choosing Presence Over Prestige 09:10 — Panic Attacks as a Wake-Up Call 10:02 — Searching for Help in Crisis 10:27 — Discovering the Sedona Method 11:01 — Gaining Awareness of Inner Mechanics 12:01 — From Survival Mode to Choice 13:10 — Questioning the Path You’re On 14:31 — Taking Time Away to Decide 15:09 — The Deathbed Test 16:16 — Choosing the Uncertain Path 16:54 — A Partner Who Already Knew 17:44 — Becoming a Life Coach 18:10 — The Birth of the Engaged Father Project 19:04 — You Can Engineer Your Life 20:18 — The Power of Supportive People 21:22 — Having the Right Partner Matters 21:57 — What the Engaged Father Project Is 22:45 — Parenting Is Taught Through Action 23:07 — Two Playbooks for Life 24:00 — Stress Reveals Who You Really Are 24:41 — Defining the Dad You Want to Be 25:33 — Why “Good Dad” Isn’t Good Enough 26:36 — Choosing to Be an Incredible Dad 27:18 — Turning Feedback Into Growth 28:38 — Letting Kids Hold You Accountable 29:59 — Empowering Kids to Speak Up 31:04 — Defining the Standard 32:24 — Measurement Creates Change 33:17 — Knowing If You’re Doing It Right 34:12 — Asking Kids for Honest Feedback 35:17 — Measuring Progress Backwards 36:23 — When Kids Notice the New You 37:26 — Excellence Requires Constant Correction 38:00 — Lessons From the Blue Angels 39:15 — Small Corrections Beat Big Swings 40:12 — Responding Instead of Reacting 41:03 — Building a Community for Dads 41:59 — The 30-Day Light Your Fire Challenge 43:03 — Listening Creates Deeper Connection 44:14 — Learning From Other Dads’ Experiments 45:00 — Why the Community Is Free 46:09 — One Principle of Excellent Fatherhood 46:41 — Vulnerability as Strength 48:04 — Authenticity Builds Real Connection 49:26 — There Is No Connection Without Vulnerability 50:22 — Masculinity and the Connection Gap 51:01 — Why Human Connection Will Matter More 52:02 — Final Reflections on Intentional Fatherhood 53:06 — Closing Thoughts and Credits Books & Tools: * The Gap and the Gain by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Benjamin Hardy (mentioned) – https://becomingminimalist.com/the-gap-and-the-gain/ [https://becomingminimalist.com/the-gap-and-the-gain/] * The Sedona Method (mentioned) – https://www.sedona.com/ [https://www.sedona.com/] * Super Communicators by Charles Duhigg (mentioned) – https://www.charlesduhigg.com/supercommunicators [https://www.charlesduhigg.com/supercommunicators] Guest Links: * Engaged Father School Community: https://www.skool.com/engaged-father-project/about [https://www.skool.com/engaged-father-project/about] * Website: https://www.engagedfatherproject.com/ [https://www.engagedfatherproject.com/]

1 jun 202653 min
aflevering Q&A: Reclaiming the Safe Harbor artwork

Q&A: Reclaiming the Safe Harbor

In this mailbag edition of Raising Men, host Shaun Dawson addresses two critical parenting dilemmas: emotional withholding and managing high-energy boys. Shaun unpacks the phenomenon of "emotional narrowing," explaining how rigid, fear-based discipline can inadvertently turn a home into an emotional desert. Drawing on insights from trauma-informed parenting, the episode highlights why genuine authority is built on relationship and trust rather than compliance. Later, Shaun shifts to the neurobiology of young boys, validating the developmental gaps driven by prenatal testosterone that often leave boys behind in verbal and fine motor skills. He frames rough-and-tumble play not as misbehavior, but as a biological necessity for prefrontal cortex development. Finally, fathers are challenged to abandon the "project child" mentality—the habit of catastrophizing a child's future based on current behaviors—and instead remain fully present with the child standing in front of them today. Key Takeaways * Authority Relies on Trust, Not Control: True paternal authority is forged through relationship and safety rather than demanding high-pressure, fear-based compliance. * The Trajectory of Emotional Narrowing: Shaming or stonewalling a young boy’s vulnerability causes him to narrow his emotional expression, limiting his psychological vocabulary to silence or anger. * The Biological Male Development Gap: Driven by testosterone surges in the womb, boys experience a distinct biological development gap that frequently places them six to twelve months behind girls in language skills and fine motor capabilities by school age. * Rowdy Play Builds the Brain's Control Center: Physical roughhousing and high-energy boundary testing are neurobiological necessities that actively develop a boy’s prefrontal cortex (the "Sherlock Holmes brain"), which is essential for long-term impulse control. * Ditch the Project-Child Mentality: Parents must break the destructive habit of plotting a child's current flaws on a future timeline; fatherhood requires staying present with the boy standing in front of you right now, rather than fighting a future version you fear he might become. Chapter Markers 00:01 – Introduction: Diving Back Into the Mailbag Q&A 01:30 – Question 1: Unintentional Emotional Deserts & Narrowed Expressions 02:40 – Moving from Control to Trust: Connection Before Correction 04:15 – The Neurobiology of Emotion Coaching vs. Emotional Suppression 05:45 – Question 2: Is Rowdy Behavior Biological or Socialized? 07:10 – The 6-12 Month Biological Development Gap in Boys 08:50 – Real-Time Boundary Testing & Shaun's Minecraft Negotiation Strategy 11:15 – How Roughhouse Play Builds the "Sherlock Holmes" Prefrontal Cortex 12:55 – Breaking the Consultant Trajectory Trap: Present vs. Project Parenting 14:15 – Final Thoughts: Showing Up and Searching for the Answers Together Books Mentioned * Building Boys: Making Sure Our Boys Turn Out Happy, Healthy, and Safe by Jennifer L.W. Fink [http://jenniferlwfink.com/] * The New Manhood & Raising Boys by Steve Biddulph [https://www.stevebiddulph.com/Site_1/Home.html] * Raising an Emotionally Intelligent Child by Dr. John Gottman * Emotional Intelligence by Daniel Goleman * The Male Brain & The Female Brain by Dr. Louann Brizendine Frameworks & Concepts * The Emotional Desert: A psychological dynamic where cultural or parental shaming forces a young boy to internalize and narrow his emotional expressions down to silence or anger. * Connection Before Correction: A relational rule stating that structural discipline will trigger defensiveness and withdrawal unless a baseline of felt safety and empathy is established first. * The Biological Timeline Gap: The developmental reality that prenatal testosterone exposure naturally delays speech and fine motor development loops in early male brains relative to female peers. * The Sherlock Holmes Brain: Shaun’s signature metaphor for the prefrontal cortex—the neurological command center governing logic, emotional regulation, and intentional impulse control. * The Consultant/Graphing Trap: An analytical parenting pitfall where a parent maps a single negative childhood behavior along a linear progression curve to catastrophize who the child will be at age 26. Episode mentioned: Jennifer L.W. Fink: https://raising.men/episodes/raising-great-guys-in-a-world-that-misunderstands-males-with-jennifer-l-w-fink [https://raising.men/episodes/raising-great-guys-in-a-world-that-misunderstands-males-with-jennifer-l-w-fink] Steve Biddulph: https://raising.men/episodes/why-boys-are-falling-behind-and-what-we-can-do-about-it-with-steve-biddulph [https://raising.men/episodes/why-boys-are-falling-behind-and-what-we-can-do-about-it-with-steve-biddulph]

28 mei 202614 min
aflevering Raising Men Under Hard Circumstances with Lisa Johnson artwork

Raising Men Under Hard Circumstances with Lisa Johnson

In this episode of Raising Men, Shawn sits down with Lisa Johnson, a high-conflict divorce strategist, certified domestic violence advocate, and co-founder of Been There, Got Out. After enduring a decade-long legal battle with her ex-husband—including more than 100 court appearances—Lisa transformed her painful experience into a mission to help parents navigate high-conflict divorces and protect their children from emotional harm. She shares the lessons she learned about parental alienation, emotional resilience, and how parents can stay grounded and supportive for their children even when a former partner becomes an adversary.  Key Takeaways 1. Children in high-conflict divorces often express anger or aggression as a fear response and a test of whether their remaining parent will stay emotionally present.  2. Defending yourself when a child repeats accusations from the other parent can deepen the conflict, while validating their feelings helps preserve trust.  3. Protecting children sometimes means shielding them from the legal and emotional chaos while seeking support and therapy for yourself.  4. Consistent connection rituals—even just ten minutes of focused attention—can strengthen the parent-child bond and provide emotional security.  5. A strong, judgment-free relationship with your child is the best long-term protection against alienation and manipulation.  Top Quotes from Lisa Johnson “One of the worst things you can do when your child repeats accusations from your ex is try to correct the record immediately.”  “Kids usually love both parents, so when they hear two completely different versions of the truth, it creates cognitive dissonance.”  “The most important thing is building a relationship with your child where they feel they can tell you anything without being judged.”  Chapter Markers 00:00 — When Kids Parrot the Other Parent 00:35 — Parenting Through a High-Conflict Divorce 01:14 — Meet Lisa Johnson 01:54 — Discovering a Double Life 03:07 — Staying to Protect the “Intact Family” 04:10 — “This Will Be a Really Bad Divorce” 05:29 — Representing Herself in Court 06:20 — When Divorce Never Really Ends 07:01 — A Father Walks Away 08:20 — The Fear of Father Absence 08:55 — Scrambling for Support 09:45 — Finding the Right Therapist for Her Son 11:02 — Aggression as a Cry for Connection 12:13 — Why Kids Test if You’ll Stay 12:51 — Aggression as Fear Response 13:45 — When the Fighting Finally Stopped 14:28 — The College Battle 15:35 — Financial Abuse Through the Courts 16:47 — Why High-Conflict Cases Defy Logic 18:15 — Why People Don’t Believe These Stories 19:06 — Turning Trauma Into Advocacy 19:50 — What She Would Do Differently 21:54 — Why Coaching Matters in High-Conflict Cases 22:12 — Avoiding Barstool Legal Advice 24:05 — How Trauma Shows Up Differently in Sons 25:23 — Shielding Kids From the Conflict 26:41 — “She Kept It Together” 27:30 — The Power of Male Role Models 28:18 — A Grandfather Steps In 28:47 — Debate as a Path to Belonging 30:45 — When Coaches Become Father Figures 31:00 — When an Ex Turns Kids Against You 33:02 — How Parental Alienation Begins 34:26 — Why Defending Yourself Backfires 36:31 — Validating Feelings Before Facts 38:07 — When Humor Becomes Avoidance 39:00 — Planning Responses Before the Storm 40:12 — Parenting From the Calm Brain 42:28 — The 10-Minute Rule 44:43 — Why Rituals Matter 46:29 — Making Time Count as Kids Grow 47:06 — Building a Relationship That Lasts 48:59 — One Principle for Raising Strong Men 50:01 — Closing Reflections Books, Links, and References Mentioned When Your Ex Turns Your Kids Against You – Lisa Johnson https://beentheregotout.com/ [https://beentheregotout.com/] Been There, Got Out – Support and strategy for high-conflict divorces https://beentheregotout.com/ [https://beentheregotout.com/] Splitting: Protecting Yourself While Divorcing Someone with Borderline or Narcissistic Personality Disorder – Bill Eddy https://www.highconflictinstitute.com/bookstores/splitting [https://www.highconflictinstitute.com/bookstores/splitting] High Conflict Institute – Founded by Bill Eddy https://www.highconflictinstitute.com/ [https://www.highconflictinstitute.com/] Frameworks Mentioned The 10-Minute Rule (Child Psychiatrist Strategy) A simple method to strengthen connection with your child: 1. Spend 10 minutes of undivided attention with your child. 2. Let the child lead the activity. 3. Show curiosity about their interests. 4. Give them both control and attention. 5. Repeat consistently to build trust and emotional security.

25 mei 202650 min
aflevering Q&A: Raising a Gentleman with a Backbone artwork

Q&A: Raising a Gentleman with a Backbone

In this special mailbag edition, Shaun dives deep into two core questions that surface at the very beginning of the fatherhood journey: how to establish foundational non-negotiables for raising a son of character, and how to navigate the intense emotional mirroring of toddlers. Relying on the collective wisdom of past guests—such as Sean Harvey, Emily Huston, Ryan North, and Paul Kix—Shaun maps out what it truly means to raise a "gentleman with a backbone." He unpacks why character must always trump performance and how true kindness serves as an expression of raw strength. Moving into the "mirror principle," Shaun breaks down the neurobiology of toddler meltdowns using the "Conan the Barbarian" vs. "Sherlock Holmes" brain framework. Key Takeaways * Excellence Through Continuous Failure: Raising a son with a backbone requires modeling that true excellence is born from effort and the willingness to get back up after failing, rather than maintaining a rigid veneer of perfection. * Identity Over Performance: In a culture obsessed with statistics and social media validation, fathers must anchor their son's identity in core character—what he does when no one is watching—rather than tracking external achievements. * Kindness is Tensile Strength: True masculinity blends raw strength with empathy and kindness. Like a bridge built with tensile strength to flex without breaking under pressure, a strong man possesses the backbone to apologize and make things right. * The Primal Mirror Principle: Children, especially toddlers, absorb emotional rhythms and environmental stress through mirror learning as a core survival mechanism. If a parent is vibrating with stress, the child interprets the environment as inherently unsafe. * De-escalating the Conan Brain: A toddler's emotional meltdown is governed entirely by the amygdala (the "Conan the Barbarian" brain). Meeting a meltdown with parental anger only introduces a second barbarian to the room, whereas staying in the prefrontal cortex ("Sherlock Holmes" brain) allows for calm, curious problem-solving. 00:00 – Introduction: Welcome to the Mailbag Edition  01:44 – Defining Healthy Modern Masculinity: A Gentleman with a Backbone  02:29 – Non-Negotiables: Modeling Excellence Through Failure  04:55 – Shifting the Focus: Character Over Performance & Kindness as Strength  07:21 – The Mirror Principle: Decoding Your Toddler's Emotional Rhythms  09:46 – Moving from Judgment to Curiosity & Final Parent Reflections  Books mentioned * Raising an Emotionally Intelligent Child by John Gottman  * Emotional Intelligence by Daniel Goleman  * Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst by Robert Sapolsky  Frameworks & Concepts * The Mirror Principle / Mirror Learning: The developmental process by which children subconsciously absorb behaviors, moods, and emotional rhythms via their parents' nervous systems. * Two-Brain Theory: A psychological metaphor contrasting the Conan the Barbarian brain (the survival-driven amygdala) with the Sherlock Holmes brain (the logical, regulating prefrontal cortex). * Tensile Strength Metaphor: The structural engineering concept used to describe a man's capacity to flex with life's pressures and express vulnerability without shattering. * Rocks in a Rock Polisher: A closing metaphor illustrating how community members and parents intentionally refine, smooth out, and polish one another through shared growth. Episodes mentioned: Sean Harvey: https://raising.men/episodes/no-perfect-dads-allowed-the-truth-about-love-and-showing-up-with-sean-harvey Emily Huston: https://raising.men/episodes/feminism-men-and-the-future-of-raising-strong-boys-with-emily-huston Dr. Gloria Vanderhorst: https://raising.men/episodes/fathers-sons-and-the-lost-language-of-emotion-with-dr-gloria-vanderhorst Paul Kix: https://raising.men/episodes/how-storytelling-helps-us-raise-men-with-paul-kix/ Ryan North: https://raising.men/episodes/what-trauma-informed-parenting-looks-like-at-home-with-ryan-north

21 mei 202612 min