Raising Men

Ryan North, co-founder of One Big Happy Home, shares his journey raising six children—four of whom were adopted from the child welfare system—and how those experiences shaped his trauma-informed approach to parenting. This episode explores the "connection-first" methodology, the essential balance between nurture and structure, and the vital distinction between raising "nice" boys and "good" men.

1. Why Trauma-Informed Parenting Matters for Every Dad
Ryan explains why trauma-informed principles apply far beyond adoption and foster care — because every child faces adversity, stress, and emotional wounds in today’s world. 
2. Connection vs. Control
Ryan breaks down why traditional discipline focuses on control, but healing and strong fatherhood come from prioritizing connection — without sliding into permissiveness. 
3. The Power of “Yes When We Can, No When We Must”
He shares the philosophy that shaped his home: saying yes when it builds relationship, and saying no only when it’s truly in the child’s long-term best interest. 
4. Raising Boys in a Digital, Post-Pandemic, AI-Distracted World
From screen addiction to AI “companions,” Ryan reveals why today is the hardest era in 100+ years to be a child — and how dads can anchor their sons in stability, presence, and emotional safety. r
5. What It Means to Raise Good Men (Not Just “Nice” Ones)
Ryan draws a powerful distinction between “nice” men and “good” men — and how fathers can raise sons who protect, provide, and lead with courage and compassion.

Quotes by Ryan North
“Authority isn’t about control — it’s about trust.”

“The point of parenting is not to make my life easy — the point of parenting is to develop another person.”

“We’re not trying to raise nice men. We’re trying to raise good men — the kind who run into the burning building, not film it for likes.”

Timestamps 
00:00 — Holding Kids to Adult Standards
00:30 — Welcome & Meet Ryan North
01:10 — What Drew Ryan Into Trauma-Informed Care
02:10 — Parenting Adopted and Biological Children the Same Way
03:20 — Connection vs. Compliance
04:17 — Why This Isn’t Permissive Parenting
05:10 — Parenting Isn’t Meant to Be Convenient
06:06 — Saying Yes When You Can, No When You Must
07:24 — The Swaddling Metaphor
08:20 — Secure Attachment Creates Confident Exploration
10:04 — Proof of Concept: Parenting Over Time
12:19 — Challenging Limiting Labels
12:46 — Small Traumas Still Matter
13:30 — Harmful Parenting Beliefs We Inherit
14:42 — Children Are Fragile and Capable of Resilience
15:55 — Parenting in a Digital, AI-Driven World
17:51 — Trauma vs. Adversity
18:45 — You’re the Parent, Not Their Friend
19:09 — Authority Without Fear or Control
20:15 — Screen Boundaries Explained, Not Enforced
21:30 — Calm Presence in Conflict
23:13 — Saying Yes to Needs, Not Wants
25:15 — Withholding Connection Is Not Discipline
27:12 — Defiance vs. Addiction
29:09 — Behaviour Is Communication
30:41 — Why “Crying It Out” Causes Harm
32:40 — How Behaviour Becomes a Strategy
35:29 — Teaching Independence Through Dependence
37:15 — The Danger of Raising “Nice” Men
39:01 — Raising Men Who Protect and Lead
41:02 — Protection, Provision, and Presence
42:53 — Male Mental Health and Suicide
44:45 — Choosing the Right Partner Matters
47:09 — Parenting as a Partnership
48:35 — The “Pineapple” Exit Strategy
50:00 — Planning Outside the Moment
53:12 — Kids Learn What We Model
55:10 — Teaching the Art of Repair
57:33 — Repairing Relationships After Rupture
01:01:48 — What a “Happy Home” Really Means
01:02:48 — Operating Principle: Curiosity Over Judgment
01:03:17 — Final Reflections
01:05:07 — Closing Credits

Supporting Content
  • Secure Base / Attachment Research – foundational attachment science discussed when exploring dependence → independence.
  • Nurture + Structure = Felt Safety – illustrated through the “baby swaddle” metaphor.
  • “Yes When We Can, No When We Must” Parenting Framework — Ryan’s family rule.
  • “Pineapple Strategy” – A pre-agreed cue between Ryan and his wife to step out of heated moments with dignity.
  • Apology Framework (Own it → Say sorry → Ask forgiveness → Commit to do better) — modeled to his children and now mirrored back by them.
  • The Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/730610/the-anxious-generation-by-jonathan-haidt/
  • One Big Happy Home Website https://www.onebighappyhome.com/
  • One Big Happy Home Podcast https://www.onebighappyhome.com/podcast/



What is Raising Men?

Raising Men is a podcast about parenting, masculinity, and the lifelong journey of raising sons—and ourselves—to be men of courage, character, and purpose. Hosted by Shaun Dawson, each episode features real conversations with parents, leaders, and thinkers redefining what it means to raising men in today’s world.

when we as adults often fail to meet our own

expectations with respect to that

and yet we're holding these children to this

it's insane

it is insane that that's one of Ryan's governing

self governing principles

I will not require better behavior from an adult

myself included than I

I will not require better behavior from a child

than I will require from an adult

hello welcome back to raising Men

today

we're exploring what it really means to raise boys

who are emotionally safe and connected

especially when they come from hard places

or carry hidden trauma my guest is Ryan North

he's the co founder of One Big Happy Home

he's a host of their podcast

and a leading voice in trauma informed parenting Ryan

thanks for joining me and welcome to the podcast

hey thanks for having me on

it's good to be with you

it's an absolute pleasure Brian

before we talk about strategies

can you just share what first LED you into this field

yeah so I'll

I'll try to do like

the one minute answer for a 30 minute story

but um

I don't

I don't remember a time in my life

when I wasn't fascinated by people's motivation

I I remember as a child

going to sporting events

and wondering why people dressed the way they did

and so I I think because my

my mind's kind of wired for why anything in

in the realm of psychology was always

gonna be an option and so a lot

a lot of trauma informed care falls under the

the umbrella of developmental psychology

and so um

that that's sort of the way my mind's wired

but then the way I am wired collided with my reality

because my wife and I are um

parents to six children four of those six

adopted from the child welfare system in Texas

and so trying to understand them in ways

that we could help them

and recognizing that that raising kids

not born to you

is different than raising kids born to you

and trying to get all of the help

and the equipping that we got

and then we knew somebody who said look

once your life's 55% settled and 45% chaotic

you're in a place where you can help somebody else

and so we kind of took that to heart

and once things started to settle

just a little bit at the house

we just educated equipped and

and started speaking and writing and teaching on

on on trauma informed care

to help adults create spaces where children feel safe

welcome and loved

I love that explain

so how would you explain why

this approach matters to every parent

raising boys

not just people who are dealing with sort of

the unique situations that you're dealing with

yeah so that

that is a great question because

you know at our house

like I said four of our six kids

were adopted from the child welfare system and

and we made the decision early on

in our parenting

that we were gonna parent everybody the same way

and it wasn't some deep

philosophical issue rooted in our enormous intellect

it was it's just too much to keep up with

having two different parenting styles

and so what

what we Learned in in the midst of all of that

because because in the realm of trauma

informed care and connection based parenting

what

one of the foundational principles in all of that is

is having the supremacy of the relationship be

obviously the thing that you're driving for

a lot of parents want compliance from their children

but this

this methodology talks about building the connection

and working on the relationship

one of the things we have to guard against is

people say well

that just sounds like permissive parenting

but there's a lot of data on having a permissive

parents really bad for your kids

and so we have to navigate that saying look

there there's a lot of nurture

but there's an equal amount of structure

and what we found is that's just been a really

really great recipe for raising kids who are connected

now the real value in that is

is when there is trouble in their life

if when they're struggling with something

they'll come to you rather than hide it from you

and we found

as all of my kids are teens or elders or older

I have two in their 20s and four in their teens

and and I've discovered that that connection first idea

um is

is raising the kind of people that we want to

release as adults into the world

yeah and I think that notion

I think it gets maligned a little bit

because it can also be a cop out right

it could be a oh well

I'm just gonna let my kids do whatever I want

because it's more important that we have a connection

than I ever discipline them

but it it's

it's actually not the case that it's way easier

and it takes way less work to

to give the connection that primacy

you actually have to do a lot of hard work

to create the boundaries that

you know create the edges of the sandbox

yeah so that

so that because because you can't just

just whip them into shape

they have to be able to find the boundaries themselves

and test them and still not exceed

yeah so

that's one

things

I tell parents of middle schoolers and teens a lot is

is part of them figuring out who they are

and how they fit into this world

and finding out what they're good at

is through the process of pushing boundaries

and so that's a natural part of human development

is pushing boundaries

we just don't like it when we're the recipient

of said boundaries being pushed right uh

but but

one of the things that I had to reconcile a long time

ago is that

is that

the point of parenting is not to make my life easy

the point of parenting is to develop another person and

and so when

when you kind of reframe your thinking like that you

you will understand that

when you're operating in the best interest of somebody

yes is a good word and no is a good word too

you know um

we try this

our rule in our house is we say yes when we can

we say yes when we can and no if we have to

and so and so

that's also eliminated trying to be a parent

who's

trying to make their life as convenient as possible

because sometimes saying yes isn't

isn't the easiest thing to do

but if unless I have a good reason

that is in the interest of your development

I try really hard not to say no

I have found that to be such

I surprisingly difficult yeah

and I try to do that as well

and but my reflex is

when my boy comes to me and ask me for something

my reflex is almost always to say no

that is absolutely right

and then we wonder why the toddler

one of your 18 to 22 year old

month old child says no to you a lot

well you've

you've mentioned it right into them

yeah

yeah it

it's it's such a tough thing

and I had to put in I had to put a rule to myself

exactly the same kind of thing

I had to assign a rule that said no

I always say yes

and then I need to have a good reason to say yeah and

and one of the other ways we

we look at that Sean

is is we say

does saying yes allow us to build

a deeper and stronger connection with the child

now now again

one of the ways that

that I illustrate this is if you have a baby

I don't know if you remember having babies

but you likely swaddle them right

and sometimes you call those baby burritos

and then so you make your little baby burrito and

and one of the reasons that

unless there's an underlying medical issue

the child's ill or has some sort of medical condition

swaddling a baby will invariably cause them to settle

almost immediately because

it illustrates the principle of what the child needs

and that is that the child needs the security

of being held tight by the blanket

but also simultaneously

the nurture of being held tight by the blanket

and so

we now realize that kids need equal levels of nurture

and structure to develop optimally

and and what that typically looks like

you know in the simplest form is yes represents nurture

and no represents structure

so yeah

my kids hear no and

but they only hear it no that

you know I lie to you

I try to make it that they only hear it when

no is in their best interest

the aspiration yeah

yeah I mean

obviously sometimes I just

you know it's 9:30 at night

and I just wanna watch the hockey game

you know you can kind of

that's how it went last night but

I I

I like that metaphor with the swaddling because I found

you know my

my experience is that is that giving them

reinforcing that connection

is what allows them to feel comfortable

exploring the world and pushing the boundaries

and so it's it's like when they're a baby

they need to feel I mean

they need to be really really tightly wound

and then they can feel free to look around

instead of complaining and crying and being worried and

and then

that just continues all the way until they're adults

where they need to be able to ground themselves

in that connection so that they can feel comfortable

doing what it is they want to do

and expressing their yeah

so attachment

researchers talk about needing a secure base right

and so that that

that's a trust based issue

and once the children

come to realize that you are a trusted

adult in their lives they can confide in you

and then they having that secure base

actually is what allows them to explore the world

and so you know

we've over the years

had some criticism from some

friends and family members

about the way we've parented our children

particularly not using what what

we would just call traditional family methods

with the bio kiddos

but I will tell you today that my 17 year old daughter

she works at a fast food restaurant

and gets home at about 11:30 at night from her shift

when on the nights that she works

wow and she comes home

she puts her food that she's taken for her dinner

in the fridge

she walks into our room kicks her shoes off

and climbs into the bed between me and my wife

and just tells us about her day

and then she goes and eats her dinner

and I love that and and

and I and I wouldn't trade that for anything right

cause I know a lot of people who

their complaint is all my kids don't speak to me

my 17 year olds always in her room

and they don't let me in and I'm like

well the time

the time for creating that

that relationship

where they trust you and let you into the universe

is not when they're sixteen

so when they're 16 months or younger

you know what I mean and so

we have now been doing this for long enough

and raise enough kids that

that I think we're now seeing proof of concept in in

in that as they as they turn 21 today

my oldest daughter my 23 year old son

as they go off to school as they move out of the house

and have their own apartments

and their own jobs and pay their bills

and all the things that that she

sort of base level

adult functionality for me to see them

and then you know

the struggles that some of them had early on and some

the predictions that the psychologists

made about their lives you know

our oldest son we

we were told um

he was almost 4 when he was placed with us

and we were told in a pre placement meeting that he

we need to know what we're signing up for

because he'll never

ever have the be able to live on his own

he'll never be able to live independently

he's gonna live um

he's gonna have to live with you and

and I guess I was young enough and brazen enough

and I just looked at my wife and I said

challenge accepted but

but today he's 23 years old

he lives in his own apartment

he has a car that he paid for

he has a job which he has been promoted several times

the last few years um

he now is an operations director for a company that um

I don't know can I mention brands on here Sean

yeah so

so he works for a company that owns multiple UPS stores

and he's at 23

the operations director of all of their stores

that's incredible yeah

and that's the kid who I was told 19 years ago

would never be able to live outside of my

house and so I

I would I would make a strong argument the

the connection first um

trying to develop him for his good

and preparing him as somebody

who can function as an independent

contributing member of society

cause that's kind of our overarching theme here

I I

at the end of the story that's

that's yeah

so I think we're seeing

we're living sort of proof of concept now

what are the lessons that we can take from

you know you've dealt with kids that have really

really severe emotional wounds and traumas

I feel like I don't have to deal with that but

but my kid has much smaller traumas

and I suspect that

the strategies and tactics

and techniques that I need

in order to deal with those smaller traumas

are just miniature versions

of the things that you deal with

um in

in in a much bigger scale

yeah so there are a lot of things that I think we

there's a lot of things that

I know that we believe in error about children

I'll give you a couple of examples

um sometimes when I'm speaking at an event

I like to play this game with the audience

to prove that we already have this

built in view of how we view children

and I'll say I'm gonna start a sentence

and I need you to complete it

and I'll say children should be seen

and then the crowd yells back and not heard

I brought you into this world

they yell back and I take you out you

you could have completed all of those

and I have several of those that I do well

one of those

those are all horrible ways to look at children

one of the things um

that I think we do in error about

about parenting is we think that go big or go home is

is a great parenting strategy

it's not uh

because if you have to employ go big or go home

you invariably gonna then do the next step

which is

leverage their pain points to get them to comply

and that is literally the antithesis

of how to build a good relationship with a human being

uh we also believe that children are resilient

and I would say that children have the

human beings have the capacity for resilience and

and that in order to be resilient

you actually need to be connected to somebody

who cares deeply about you and

and helps you in your in your interest

because once we believe that children are resilient

we tend to ignore the fact that children are fragile

and and so

now

that kind of brings it into realm of general parenting

not just trauma informed parenting

because the world's a hard place right

being a child today I would argue

is the hardest it's been being a child for a long

long time um

I'm not gonna discount what it was like

being a kid

at the beginning of the industrial revolution

when 8 year olds were in coal mines and not do that

right but certainly in our lifetime

it seems like it's way

I would argue that the post World War 1

it's the hardest version of the world to be a child

and sometimes

we parent children the way we were parented

and I don't know how old you are

I was born in 75

but I would certainly suggest that the parenting

strategies of the mid 70s

and mid 80s are not effective at all today

cause my parents didn't have to deal with anything

I have to deal with today

right the new the new one AI chatbots as

as boyfriends right

I mean I read something this morning

that 31% of teenagers say

they'd rather be in a relationship with a chatbot

than with an actual human

that's terrifying and it also makes perfect sense

it's terrifying

it makes perfect sense because the chatbot will never

I mean just blow smoke doesn't disagree with you

it's just thrilled

it just reinforce everything you want to believe

yeah and so I can see the appeal of that

but but 31

full third of teenagers

surveyed said they'd rather have an AI

significant other than a human one

well that is if you don't think that's terrifying um

I can share my email

and we can jump on a call and unpack why

that's horribly terrifying

and some of the reasons it's terrifying is

when you look at the research connected to anxiety

and depression

related to screen usage particularly amongst girls

now this phenomenon of the AI

companion is overwhelmingly girls with AI

robots than with uh

with AI boyfriends over boys with AI girlfriends right

and so so when we

we we

we look at that

and so now they're more in the screen thing

and when you look at um

you know one of the great resources for this is

Jonathan Haidt's book The Anxious Generation

cause he talks about a lot of the research

and there's a lot of charts and graphs in it but

but the enormous increase

the exponential increase in anxiety depression

self harm

and suicide amongst teenage girls is astounding

well well

I my parents didn't have to counter the influence

of a computer telling me what to do

and that it's okay to eat batteries or whatever

you know a lot of these things are coming out now right

and so what we have to understand is that

the world is a difficult place

and we have to understand that

this generation of children lives in the AI world

they live in the social media world

they live in a post pandemic world

when we talk about complex developmental trauma we

we do add screens and and

and post pandemic

because that changed how they relate to people

and so to say that that we live in a trauma free

world would be rather foolish

and to say that there's a single human being

that has not experienced some level of adversity

and sometimes we use the words

trauma and adversity interchangeably

cause trauma scares people

and it's also an easy one for them dismiss

cause they said well

you know my child was born to me

everything's fine but the reality of the world is

is these kids are are getting bullied online

in person

um they feel alone

and isolated in ways that generations haven't before

and so it's now more important than ever

for every single parent to understand connection first

parenting principles

while also understanding that we're not

playing the permissive game

you know you're the child's parent

not their friend

don't don't try to be their friend

be their parent you can be their friend when they're 25

but don't be their parent when they're 15

don't be their friend when they're 15

you're just their parent

you know I

we you talked a lot earlier you

you mentioned about kind of

the traditional discipline that you and I grew up with

right which is really focused on control

and you you

essentially postulated a different model

that focuses on connection

instead but I can imagine

that people who might be resistant to that

might feel that they were losing authority

what do you have to say about that

um do you have enough time

ha ha we got all the time

alright so uh

I would say a couple things about that

if you constantly have to be reminding your children

that you're in charge

then they know what you suspect you're not in charge

and and

and

and people who have experienced adversity

need predictability and stability right

anything that's not predictable or unstable

causes them to to dysregulate

well children

and whether they come from adversity

or come from the perfect childhood

they still need to feel like somebody's in charge

and so my home is not a consequence free environment

my home is not one where lessons aren't reinforced

but it's also one where those lessons are explained

that they're for the benefit of the children

I'll give an example um

we have we have some pretty hard rules

around screen usage in our home

including that um

past 10 o'clock in the evening

and even with the teenagers

past 10 o'clock in the evening

the only screens that are permitted in our home are

big television screens so

so phones and and

and tablets and laptops go night

night at 10 o'clock at our house

unless you have a paper due or whatever

obviously we're reasonable people

yeah and so

and so our son who um

because of his particular trauma set and in some of the

some of the ways that that has impacted his

his brain um

is really really prone to addictive behaviour

if he likes something he will um

he will want it all of the

time and

and the biggest villains in his life are sugar

and screens and

and so and so I have to tell him look

it's 10:00 we need to um

we need to put our phones away

and he'll go why

now I will tell you

the part of connected parenting

particularly the older the children get

but we did this pretty pretty early on with them

is they are entitled to to understand

why they're being required to do something

now my parents would never

ever agree with that principle that

that you should explain yourself to a child

but I want the child to understand

our reasoning behind it

and so our son's been struggling

and he also struggles with math

and I said to him look

the reason that you keep engaging that phone is

over time

lessening your ability to concentrate

and also lessening your ability to think creatively

there's there's studies on this

now these aren't my opinions right

they found that the

teenage boys

that play an excessive amount of video games

and to lose their ability to be problem solvers

and they become and they're less intelligent over time

and so I said look

I don't want you to struggle with math

but even more than that

I want you to be successful one day I

I want you to have the kind of job you want

I want you to be good at that job

I don't want you to be beholden

to the fact that that you can't think for yourself

because you could not put your phone down

and as a result of that I'm gonna need you to give me

your phone to me at 10 o'clock at night

didn't like it um

he thinks I'm ridiculous because you know

teenage boys have that privilege of thinking

their dads are ridiculous

I know I did I guess

you probably thought your old man was

ridiculous when you were 17 but

but I still

very calmly last night had to explain that to him

because um

at midnight

as I was making sure the house was all shut down

before we turned our light out

I discovered he was just downstairs on his phone

and I'm like no dude

and he's like I don't see what the big deal is

and I explained to him for like the hundredth time

this is what it's doing to your brain

and I'm trying to help you here

and you can be mad at me if you want to

that's your call but I really hope you won't

because I'm not interested in raising um

I'm not interested

in being a contributing factor to an adult

who has no capacity for personal growth and success

you know do you know Jimmy Carr is the British comedian

I do I do very

very funny yeah

I I really like have you heard

I saw him in an interview

this wasn't what wasn't part of

his stand up

I think he was on the diary of a CEO podcast and

and he said um

he said

here's the thing you need to understand about parenting

anybody can say yes but

but if you're saying yes to what kids want

then you're saying yes to ice cream

video games and staying up all night

but what you need to say yes to is what they need

doing their homework eating their vegetables

and doing chores around the house

he said

because if you keep saying yes to what they want

you're mortgaging their future

and this is what he said

if you keep feeding kids video games and ice cream

and letting them stay up all more hours of the night

in the future you will have fat

lazy stupid people

but if you make them eat their vegetables

make them do their homework

and teach them how to do chores around the house

in the future you will have raised intellectual

intelligent responsible adults

and so that's the real battle you have to fight

are you trying to have compliance in the moment

or you trying to raise a successful human being

and I think that's where we

we we get lost

because what's shifted over time is

we see more and more in parenting

permissive parenting

is kind of the sexy version of parenting now

particularly in the social media age where

you know you go through TikTok and every 4th video is a

mom and her daughter doing a dance together

cause they're friends right

and so yeah

but but

you know when we were kids

compliance was was brought by threat and coercion

now compliance is brought by

by just saying yes constantly

well giving somebody what they want all of the time

will not do anything they

they won't like you more they

they won't be happier

um yeah

you know you can't always get what you want

like Mick Jagger said

and you certainly shouldn't either

yeah there

you're not mature

enough to know what you should be wanting

and it's your job as the parent to

get them to learn that lesson

you know

and you're not gonna learn that lesson by being over

the I never said no to ice cream when I was 10

I rarely eat ice cream now

because my doctor told me I have to stop

high amounts of sugar intake

right

you know I love this story that you told about

about your son and the phone at midnight um

I I would have absolutely flipped out

in that circumstance

I don't get very angry very quickly very often

but when it's something like that

that it's just a fundamental like

it's like finding rot in the foundation of the home

or something like that

that would drive me absolutely nuts

and part of what I really like about that story is

you didn't have that reaction um

you were kind of a

model of calm presence in that circumstance

and

I think that was probably a really important aspect

of the way that you dealt with that situation

you obviously could not have been happy about it

no not at all

not at all but

so this is why this is kind of why

why over time I have

um I'll say trained myself to respond like that

because what

often the reason parents flip out in that situation

based on what I've observed and what I've been told by

by parents that we work with

is that the child's defiant

and we have to stomp out Defiance at every at

at every opportunity right

parents typically

come down really hard on what they deem to be

defiant behaviour

and what they deem to be dishonest behaviour

those are that's the double d of

of of parenting distress

Defiance and dishonest

and so but what I realize is

it's not defined behavior from him

um I think that it is

it is the behavior of somebody who is literally

addicted to his screen and so if

if I had a child

that I discovered they had a drug problem

I would engage them kindly and I'd cut off their supply

and so now I have to I have to think about it that way

I engage him kindly yeah

and I want to cut off that supply

but there's a second level to the way

the way I've chosen to interact and

that is because

I need him to see that the appropriate response

when encountering something that you don't like

that you disagree with

or is against your wishes and instructions

whatever on that spectrum right

whatever's on that spectrum

that you can engage it thoughtfully and respectfully

because he's still a human being

who is worthy of being treated with respect

even when he does things that I don't like

and so I want him to learn that that is how he then

will one day engage his wife

his children his employees

his co workers his friends

and so for me to always

if we can always create a situation

where we're addressing the behavior with kindness

and understanding

but also mentoring how somebody should

should act in that given situation

then I consider that a win ultimately

I think the reflex that I would have

that I need to train myself out of

to withdraw connection yep

almost as a as a shaming activity

and what you're what you're saying is no

no no

this is an opportunity to reinforce the connection

and still enforce the boundary

yes because what happens is

we do use that shame that you said as a tool

we leverage it we withhold

we withhold affection from people who

even on the worst day in your parenting journey

with the most rebellious teen you can possibly imagine

that child yeah

still inside of them seeks connection to you

you know many people have

argued over the years that

poor behavior is a way to get a parent's attention

well if that is true

then you should learn from that

that we need to do more things together

you know my yeah

like I said it's my daughter's birthday today

we're going out for dinner

and then

her and her mom are going to some tattoo parlor

and she's getting her like 9th piercing or whatever

um but yeah

you know when she got her nose ring when she was 17

I think and her and my wife yeah

got their noses pierced together uh as

as a connection activity now

if you knew my wife Shawn

you would know that when I met her

on the list of things I was convinced I would never see

is her with a with a

with a nose piercing but

you know she did it to have fun together

and I think parents take themselves too seriously

and I think parents take their children's behavior

too personally we

we always act like the behavior we're dealing with

is meant to give us the middle finger

and i'mma tell you that half of the time

your child's behavior you were not a factored in at all

yeah yeah

they're just doing what it feels like they wanna do

and it is not it's not some scheme

well I mean

in that I remember

I remember feeling that way about the baby

when he was crying and and

I felt my reflex was

I felt like he was trying to manipulate me

and I had to beat that out of me

like this is a baby

he's not trying to

he's just hungry or in pain or whatever

I mean babies cry for a very limited unless again

the caveat always being

unless it's an underlying medical condition

but they cry cause they're hungry

um they're lonely

they're tired or they need a clean diaper right

it's a real it's a real short of

of needs that babies have and

and then to to have

to have somebody say that a baby is manipulative

um

yeah but

but that's what it feels like in the moment

it feels like you're getting manipulated

oh they're trying to do this long term game and

and it's just not the case

and it's not the case when they get older either

it's not it

they just it's

they're just doing their thing

well I mean

think about human beings right

we all have needs and we all try to get our needs met

and then um

we over time

if we cannot get our needs met in a healthy way

we will we will enact maladaptive

strategies to get our needs met

and so right

here's what I mean by that

you have financial resources

so if you're hungry you'll buy yourself some food

but if you don't have any money

and you don't have anybody who can help you and

your options are be really

really hungry or steal

you can be the most moral person on the planet

and I guarantee you with complete certainty

that you will steal food

if you ever find yourself in that situation

because you have a need for sustenance

and over time when

when positive and healthy strategies

buying food depending on the on

on your family or your friends

strangers whatever

local community organizations

a church whatever it is right

if those resources don't give you what you need

then you will eventually steal food

well what we don't remember about children is

they're exactly the same way

and so

plus but except for two things

they don't have the resources that adults have

to get their needs met

so they head for maladaptive pretty quickly

they also don't have the cognitive function to

to kind of think the problem through

it goes from right and

and then the third thing is

children and adults do this too

but children more than adults confuse needs and wants

and so

now something you want becomes something you need

and then

you will do whatever you need to do to get that

yeah um

and so the negative outcome of that is that

children get their needs met by their behavior

then they will increasingly engage

in behavior to get their needs met

rather than

if they get their needs met with their words

they will increasingly use their words to try to get

their behavior met which is why you have to pick up

their need met excuse me

which is why you have to pick up a crying baby

cause the the cry is the only way the baby communicates

that he or she has a need

well if you don't

if you let the baby cry it out

which is one of the worst pieces of parenting advice

of the last 30 years you know

just let the baby cry it out

if you let the baby cry it out

the baby will eventually learn

that their need doesn't go away

but their needs also not met

and then

they start associating

you as the person who doesn't meet their need and

and they and

and the relationship is harmed in

in very

very serious ways by simply letting the baby cry it out

now do you need to stand next to the crib

and pick the baby up the moment they go eh

no of course not

but if you hear a baby cry

and you give it a minute

to see if he or she will settle

and then you go in there and pick him up then

then that's fine

because that allows them that they hadn't

they had distress but somebody relieved their distress

and over time

they can learn that

that you can be trusted and that their voice has power

well once

once we teach somebody

that their voice doesn't have power

then you see

all the behaviors you don't wanna deal with

which I the behavior yeah

which cause the behavior will always have power

because at some point

somebody just won't want to deal with it anymore right

my younger brother's like

like this yeah

when when his youngest daughter was young she

she was pretty a pretty demanding little kid

and she'd want something and he'd say no

and he'd want something and she'd say

he'd say no and then every time she wanted it

the uh

intensity of the ask increased and wanted it

wanted it wanted it

and eventually when he'd had enough of her behavior

he just yelled at her

and told her she could do what she wanted

and and my

my wife has um

uh my wife's a good sister in law

because she has a pretty

good relationship with both of my brothers

and she pulled him aside one day and she said

all you're teaching her is to yell

to get what she wants

because you give her what she wants in any case

so what's the point of saying no

right you might as well say yes to begin with

the only lesson learning here is

if I scream and throw things

that I get what I want well

if that lesson is taught and reinforced over time

then we go to screaming and yelling

things way earlier than we used to

because it's how we get what we want

that's what works yep

you know I

I so we've talked a lot here about

about focusing the primacy of

of the connection

and there's there's another side to the kids needs too

and there's so there's the

they need the connection

and they need that basis of connection

but then they also need independence

yes

and those there's a tension between those things right

you know you can't be fully connected to somebody

and also be independent and vice versa

and so how do you think about that

and how do you cultivate

the independent side of that coin

well attachment research tells us that

somebody cannot be fully independent

if they weren't once fully dependent

so dependence is a prerequisite for independence

knowing that you can depend on somebody is what allows

we talked about that earlier

with a secure base right

you can go into the world and be you

if you know that there's a landing place for you

well if you don't trust that

that the adults who raised you cause

cause I know not everybody's raising kids

are raising kids born to them right

we got aunties and uncles

and grandma and grandpa raising kiddos

as well as adoption foster care families

um if they don't learn that you are somebody

who will depend they can depend on

then they won't have

feel the security to try to be themselves

well there's a real problem with having adults

who are not independent

because what happens is they seek

validation in others

they cannot function without

without the high fives um

and what happens is

is if you have that view of the world

you tend to over time and I know I say over time a lot

but we have to think about things in

in the context of over time

not in in the moment yeah

um over time

you start making some really bad decisions

because

you don't make decisions that are in your own self

interest you don't make decisions that are in the self

interest of your community

or your company or your family

you start making decisions

that will get people to like you

and now you're not an independent person

because you are beholden

to the ideas and whims of others

yeah and

and think about think about the horror of that

the only way that you can feel safe

the only way that you can feel good at all

is completely dependent upon what other people do

that's true and

and so I the way I think about that is

is we don't use the word the phrase be nice in our home

we we kind of we

we we kick that out of

out of the the

the home vocabulary you know

a decade ago because

because the word nice always

the concept of nice

always implies that you have to do something

to make somebody else happy

you know like so

so you you say you got a kid

who has a toy it's good enough

yes you have a kid who has a toy

and they have a sibling

who wants to play with said toy and

and Kid a whose toy it is

doesn't want Kid B to play with the toy

when mum and dad will say

oh

be nice to your brother and let him play with your toy

well so what does that mean

in order to be nice you have to give in

and do what other people want you to do

well that's a horrible parenting philosophy

and it's a horrible sustaining democracy philosophy

if you will and I don't mean to be super theatrical

or even sound political

but what happens is that when you're nice

you roll over but when you're good

a good man so we wanna raise

you know this is the context of of

of raising men over here um

we wanna raise good men not nice men

and sometimes we think it's the same but

but good men you know

not to sound you know

all ancient world

but they will stand in the city gates and defend that

which they are responsible for

nice men will avoid conflict and step aside

and let all manner of evil into their community

and so that's that's what I want I

I'm trying to raise men who

a 23 year old now and a 17 year old

who will be 18 in January

who who are good men

who will who will run into burning buildings

when there's a fire to save their neighbours

rather than take out their phones and film the video

the burning the building burning

so they can get likes and views on social media

and and

and to me that's

that's a real simple example of the

of the difference

of what we're trying to do with our boys

as opposed to

maybe what's happening now in the culture at large

is

we got too many people who want to capture the moment

because it might lead to issue deal from Adidas

because of their views on social media

rather than saving actual human lives

who are in a very very terrifying situation

yeah I think that is a really good observation and

and and yeah

I mean it's our our

our role as a parent is is to

is to give our sons this

the skills to thrive yeah

in in the world

and you know

when we want them to be as you say

you want them to be good men

and what does that mean

that means that they're a good provider

it means that they're a good protector

and um

and beyond that you know

that's that's kind of the ball game

that is the ball game you know

I asked my wife in front of

in front of my boys I said babe

do you have doubt in any way

that I would jump in front of a

bullet to save your life and she immediately said no

I do not

and and

and I said and I said to my boys because

because being a good man means that you do protect

you do provide um the my

my wife has zero doubt that she means the world to me

my children

have zero doubt that they mean the world to me

but none of them

and I don't always like it but but

but I will

I I will

I will gently push back on things that I think man

if we could just do this differently

um then we'd

we'd reap the benefits they don't always like it yeah

uh but

but my job is not to be liked

my job is to raise good men and and

and women who and girls who know one day

when they are out of my house

to know what they want for themselves and to know

to look for good men um

because we

we need people who are interested in investing

in subsequent generations

as in order to preserve the world we wanna live in

yeah

yeah and

I mean just in order

in order to thrive as

you know if you're a young man today and you don't

and you sort of you know

you give into the addiction of your phone and you

and you fall into all of these pitfalls

that nobody even I mean

they didn't exist five or 10 years ago these pitfalls

you're not I mean you're not gonna

look back on your life when you're 30 or 40

and feel like you're thriving yeah

I'm and that's really scary I mean

that's why how you get this

that's how you get the statistics where

you know four out of every five suicides is a male yeah

and that's terrible well and

and the interesting thing about those suicide

statistics is

when you look at suicide statistics

in the United States

they're almost identical in the United Kingdom

and so it's not an American problem

it is it is arguably um and I

I don't know if there's any statistics on this

from the eastern world or from developing nations

but I do know in the western world that it is

that it is a um

a man um

I don't want to say almostly exclusively

but but but over time it shows that

and it's also men like in their 40s too

if I remember looking at the stats correctly

it's not that it's teenage boys right

it's

it's people who get to to that midlife crisis if 49

45 is midlife I don't know if that is anymore but um

right but and

and and you start going well

because the way you were molded

raised trained mentored

and then the decisions you made as a result of that

you start having you

you've lived long enough and I'm 50 now

so I can speak with some authority of what

it was like being 45

I remember my 40th birthday was

was really difficult for me because I

I just felt funky I won't say depressed

because that's obviously a clinical diagnosis but

but I felt down because because I started

cause I started thinking myself

have I done as much as I wanted to

have I done enough have I contributed anything

and and my wife is

is somewhere between a gentle spirit

and a straight shooter she is a native of Texas

so she has no choice in the straight shooter department

um right

but um

I don't know if you know many Texans Shawn

but um

I do I

I grew up in Texas that's true yeah

yeah so yeah

I forgot that you told me that

my apologies but yeah

um but you know what it's like and

and so she said to me look

you need to feel sorry stop feeling sorry for yourself

snap out of it you've know

you've done things that matter

we're not cuddling this today

yeah that makes her a good woman

not a nice one I love that

yeah it does

what I love about that statement is it wasn't just

you know rub dirt on it like

you know go she

she gave you what you need to do

she you know

you know you've done good things

yeah

so stop pretending that you haven't

yeah and stand up and go do your

we don't wanna deal with mopey Ryan today

yeah so yeah

so you make yes ma'am

hahaha I love

you know

finding a good partner

is such an important aspect of this journey

yeah and it is

I can't imagine how much more difficult

uh parenting would be

if I didn't feel like I had someone who had my back yes

and I feel you know

my wife has got to feel the exact same way

and I just can't imagine

how much more difficult it would be

and a lot of people don't experience that

and so

like cultivating a good relationship with your partner

and and

and you know

it begins at the outset when

when you select that person um

but then cultivating that relationship over time

it's so cool yeah

I mean it holds in so many aspects of life

I was I was watching an interview with um

oh who is it

um Kevin Mister Wonderful

the guy from the Shark Shark Tank

the Canadian investor and he was being interviewed yeah

uh

and he said that the most important financial decision

that you will ever make is who you

who choosing who you marry

and the interviewer said well

you know make that make sense for me

and he said well

think about it if

if you if you build wealth over time

and then you get divorced

because the marriage didn't work

uh 50% of your wealth is gone plus yeah

50% of your earnings are gonna go

as well in the future and he said

and if you just kind of do some rough

back of the napkin math

um

divorce will cost you 67% of your wealth over time

and he said and and any financial investment

where you're gonna have a negative return of 67%

nobody engages in it

so so so he said you have to choose very

very wisely who you marry

because they have to be somebody who compliments you

they have to be somebody that challenges you

and they have to be somebody

who's willing to invest in you um

and you know

one of the great things about our marriage is

my wife and I are bothered by different things

and so if one of the kids is doing something

that's just really getting her hot under the collar

I can say hey

I got it and if they're doing something that's really

working on my last nerve she's like

she'll just like

put her hand on my shoulder and start talking and

and we made

we made some agreements outside of the moment

when everybody was emotionally regulated

that if that if somebody was just losing it

and one of us put the hand on their shoulder

calmly interjected or said

can you go to the store and buy me a pineapple

which is our little if if your spouse says

can you go to the store and buy me a pineapple

that means I've already pre agreed that

I'm exiting the discussion

and so we used that for a long time

until the kids figured that out

and then you know

our smart mouth now 23 year old

when he's a teenage boy

walks into the room and says to his mother mum

I think you need I think you need to get a pineapple

that is really funny yeah

that put two people in the line of fire that day

not just one

oh man

that's beautiful yeah

that's but you got

you also have to kind of appreciate

the ingenuity there you

you you

you you have to get mad a little bit

but you also have to go you know what

excellent Touche

my friend that was a really good one

I can assure you that after the fact

she thought it was clever

yeah you know

you know I uh

my wife and I have a similar dynamic yeah

where where one person needs to tap out and

and the other person sees that and says

you know OK

I got this from here

but we don't have a really healthy way of doing that

that that results in the person who's dysregulated

leaving the engagement feeling good about it

it's it

it it

it happens organically and so the person who

who leaves the engagement might feel shame about it

so if I'm you know

freaking out over the kids and my wife says

I got this from here or she

you know she's go take a walk

then I feel like I failed

or I feel like I've done something bad

but this pineapple strategy that you have

it's a pre existing condition

and it enables

it enables the person to parachute in and say

I've got this

in a way that allows the other person to escape

with their dignity yeah

or without feeling like oh

this is a failure it's like yeah

I mean we acknowledge that this happens all the time

and so this is how we deal with it

and it's just part of the process

yeah and

and one and so we did the pineapple thing

because it's intentionally semi disarming

because it's random and so yeah

yeah and it'll

it'll jerk you out of the yes

because your your brain pays attention to to

to new information and so that's new information

plus also

it's completely

unrelated to whatever discussion is going on

right we

we've never had an argument in our house

about pineapples

and so we felt like that was a pretty safe one to

to do of course

now that I've told you that

I'm sure we'll have a pineapple

I know now

you're gonna start having arguments about pineapples

all the time I'll email you and let you know that that

and thank you for that um

but but

but the other thing is like your

your phrasing their pre existing condition

and so and so we discuss these when we're regulated

and and we discuss them in the moment

and so one of the things we've Learned

you know and

and maybe this is easy for us to

to learn this because we run our own business

but you have to think of your family as uh

as a business you know and

and because we do we have to manage

manage the kids we have to manage schedules

we have to innovate

we have to do year end bonuses or as we call them

Christmas gifts at the house

um we

we have to manage calendars

you know as you imagine

when all six kids were living at the house

between theatre productions

sporting events

um

school and social stuff it

you know we

we

we were basically just an Uber service

and so we have to be able to manage those things

and so you know

my wife and I will have meetings

sometimes it's on Sunday night

sometimes it's on Monday morning over coffee

just thinking about the week

where we have business meetings

if we have upcoming travel

all those kinds of things and and and

and you know we

you use the word partner for your wife a lot

and I think that

that when we sit down and

and have those discussions

and talk about what we want for our family

my wife and I know what our goals for our family are

one day when they move out of the house

they will call us and say hey

are we doing Christmas at your house this year

that's it

because I know a lot of people whose kids be

grudgingly go to mom and Dad's house for Christmas

because they just don't want mom or dad to be mad again

right but

but we've never done that with our children you know

we're doing something for New Years well

I wanna go with my friend OK

well tell me who's gonna be there what are you doing

blah blah blah have fun you know

we've never forced the kids to be around us

and as a result of that

um and as a result of that

we now have children

who willingly choose to be around us

because we worked on the on the relationship here

here's the other thing cause

cause I do wanna

I do wanna make sure that anybody who listens

doesn't just dismiss this conversation as

those are the words of a permissive man but

but one of the things

that we need to understand about parenting

is that is that behavior is caught

at least as much as it's taught

um and so

we often think that if we just sort of

treat parenting like a college lecture

and you just explain what you need to do

then

then we're gonna have we have the best results well

we know that children

who grow up in houses where adults drink alcohol

are more likely to drink alcohol

children who

grow up in houses where people smoke because

because you tend to become what you see right

people who who were yelled at as children

their their

their parenting go to movies yelling to get compliance

right we tend to go with what's mentored into us

what's taught to us

and so one of the things we did early on in this

I this

this idea to try to build

a healthy relationship with the children

is we started apologizing to them when we were wrong

now I don't

and a lot of people will still tell me

they're not apologizing to their children

and my

and I try to convince them that they should do that

but over time I've realized that

that the hardest thing to change is somebody's belief

system

and so before you change their belief system

you have to consider that

that belief system was likely once an opinion

but you can't even change their opinion

what you have to do is

you have to try to change their perspective

and so and so

the best way

I know to change your perspective is to tell you hey

we tried this for 10 years

here were the results

I'm not telling you what you need to do

I'm just telling you what worked for us yeah

here's here's yeah

here's my experience yeah

and take it or leave it and so we would apologize

and so at our house the apology had a formula

say that you are sorry for

the very specific thing that you are sorry for

don't say I'm sorry yeah

if you yell at the children

and you know you shouldn't have yelled at them

you go and you say sweetheart

I am sorry that I yelled at you earlier

and then you also ask them

would you please forgive me

you admit what you did

you say you're sorry and you ask for forgiveness

and then you also committed

trying to do differently in the future

and so

and so we never taught that formula to our children

all of my children apologize like that now

will come to us unprompted and say daddy

I'm sorry that earlier I yelled at you when you were in

you came to talk to me will you please forgive me

just like that

and the only thing we actually taught them is

when somebody says I'm sorry that I yelled at you

or whatever they're sorry for

you don't have to say that's okay

because often times we'll just say that's okay

but I don't want my children to learn to

for them to

to validate and endorse being treated poorly

so you can say thank you yeah

thank you is a perfectly polite response

yes

but you should see how that unsettles adults

when my children say thank you

I I

I remember one time there was an incident at

at this school they do like a co op thing there on

campus couple of days and at home the rest of the time

and yeah and one of the classrooms um

there there was an issue and

and it bubbled up to my wife's ears

so she took my daughter and said look

you have to apologize to your teacher

and so this is one of the you know

unprompted at the house how to prompt it there

because they tend to spirits a little bit more shame

with people they're not connected to

and so she went to teacher sure

and she said I am really sorry that I

and before she even got to own her behavior

the teacher said oh it's fine

and my 10 year old daughter at 10 at the time said

but I really need to apologize and she said

oh no honey you don't it's fine

and my wife said my daughter was getting really

really frustrated and at 10 said to her teacher look

I behave poorly in class

I need to apologize and ask your forgiveness

why won't you let me

and so that was a proud daddy moment because

because now my children understand that I'm sorry

right relation let me let me say it this way

relationships are never without rupture

there's never there's never a time when your wife

no matter how much she knows that she loves you

there is never gonna be a time when she never ever

ever is annoyed by you frustrated by you mad

at you doesn't wanna speak to you

those are the realities of relationships

but if we can

once we've done something to rupture the relationship

we go back and repair the relationship

that teaches people that they matter because you hum

cause cause apologizing is an act of humility

you have to admit you were wrong

in some form of fashion in order to do it

and so when they will learn that their daddy um

is is humble enough

and cares about them enough

in order to make things right with them

then again they feel more valuable as human beings

which again with raising girls

I certainly wanna raise young women who feel valued

yeah I had a

I had an a

an experience this morning

this very morning

where I wish I had that apology framework

yeah um

my my daughter had hit my son

and he got upset with her about that

she apologized well

she said she was sorry but she didn't apologize in the

in any kind of framework

and he was still upset with her

and so you know

he said I

you know I acknowledge your apology

but I I don't accept it

and so she was very upset that he didn't

that she didn't actually get to experience

like

she didn't actually get to apologize and he didn't

and he didn't accept it and it was

it ended up being this really

really negative situation for everybody because

you know obviously

she done something wrong

he didn't feel like she had repaired it well enough

and so was still trying to punish her

she didn't feel that she was absolved in any way

or that you know

she got to make up for it

and so she was feeling punished and and unhappy

and so it was all bad but I think

if we had the reflex that you were talking about

things might have turned out differently well

and and one of the things

in that situation'cause we have had kids say

I don't accept your apology and so one of the things

you know

that so so you can say thank you for an apology

and the second thing are

the only things we taught after the fact not

not on how to apologize initially and that is that um

now we're working on grudge holding

and so the person

who was not willing to grant their forgiveness

I may an hour later go and say hey

you OK yeah

let's talk about what happened because now they're

they're

they're typically gonna be emotionally regulated again

about an hour or so later right yeah

there's there's very little agreement

very little things

that rises to them staying mad for days at a time

so we'll give them a little bit of time to kind of

to kind of settle and interact with them and say hey

look baby

we don't want to be the kind of people who hold

grudges and so and so um

are you still unwilling to forgive your brother

no okay

well then I just need to go and tell him thanks

your apology I forgive you

and so we've been able to work that in down the line

because I don't want yeah

I I don't want the people

the person is apologizing

to have unrealistic expectations

and I certainly don't want the person who's

receiving the apology to be unrealistic about it

because sometimes forgiveness takes time

and I can't

I can't predict how long it's gonna take you to forgive

because everybody's different because

you know somebody lies to me

I'm like don't lie to me

somebody lies to my wife it unsettles her

and so we all have different responses to

to human interaction and so I I

I don't want then

the person who was harmed

to feel like they're being held hostage

until they say I'm forgiven

so we've had to learn how to navigate that relationally

and so yeah

and so yeah

I mean over time that has

that has turned out to be a really great thing

in our home and so

you know our business is called one big happy home my

my my

my wife wanted wanted it called that years ago

um before we even had the business

we just had a blog

and she want to call one big happy home

because she wanted you know

six kids in peace

uh and so

I will I

I I told her recently

that's the only time she's ever engaged in

name it and claim it theology

with the one big happy home

uh right because

because all things considered

my house is not

is not a place where it's absent of conflict

absent of struggles but on balance

it is a place where people get along

where people love each other

work for each other

and and

and so yeah

so so

so maybe now it is a big happy home not

not not a conflict free home

not not an anxiety free home

but the overarching theme of our home is

a place where people know they are loved

and where they learn how to thrive

Ryan at the end of every Raising Men episode

I'd like to ask my guest

to give me one operating principle

something maybe a truth

that you try to live or raise your children by or

or just think is important

so I'll put you on the spot

give me one operating principle um

I'm I'm gonna combine two and say it in one sentence

so it feels like one operating principle perfect

that's great

curiosity is a better mindset than judgment

because most people are doing the best they can

even if it doesn't look that way to you

yeah that's a really

really really good one

because for the children it's often a matter of skill

not a matter of will

right yeah

yeah and

you don't get mad at them

for not being able to write their name

yet you don't get mad at them

cause they can't

run 100 meters in less than 10 seconds

right

and yet you'll get mad at them for not having really

really deep

emotional skills that require prefrontal cortex yes

it's it's amazing

yeah it's amazing

you have to we as parents

we just have to remind ourselves about yeah

and all and

and I think the thing that's frustrating for me

initially about my own behavior was that

that a lot of this is simple

um but we choose to complicate it

because what we just talked about a minute ago

that's pretty simple

right I wouldn't yell at the kid

for not being able to run 100 meters

cause I already know they can't

but I assume that they have the full emotional spectrum

and cognitive function of an adult

right yeah

and when

when we as adults

often fail to meet our own expectations

with respect to that

and yet we're holding these children to this

it's insane

it is insane that that's one of Ryan's governing

self governing principles

I will not require better behavior from an adult

myself included than I

I will not require better behavior from a child

than I will require from an adult

yeah yeah

ah so we

you know we got two principles for the price of one

actually we got three

oh my gosh I'm just

gonna put under my signature Ryan

thank you so much for sharing your wisdom today

this has been a delightful conversation

I hope we can do it again sometime

I love how you remind us that uh

that connection is

is primal and that it's strong and that it's steady

and it's what every boy needs from their parents

uh for anybody who wants to go deeper

please check out Ryan's work

and the one Big Happy Home podcast

their URL is one big happy home.com

the link is in the show notes

and this has been raising men

I'm Shawn Dawson and you are a great parent

raising men is produced by Phil Hernandez

this episode was edited by Ralph Tolentino