Raising Men

Shaun Dawson opens Raising Men with a simple truth: our sons aren’t just watching us—they’re becoming us. This is where the journey begins to raise men of purpose, strength, and heart.

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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.

welcome to this initial episode of Raising Men

my name is Sean Dawson

I'm starting this podcast because well

the world my boy will inherit

is nothing like the one that I grew up in

I'm not an expert with all the answers

I'm a dad who's just trying to recognize his humility

and ask better questions

if you're listening to this

maybe you've been asking some of the same ones

I'll tell you what keeps me up at night

we're raising boys in a culture

that's simultaneously telling them

that they're too much they're not enough

they're too aggressive and not assertive enough

they're too emotional but also too stoic

the growing up with unlimited access to everything

except clarity

about what it actually means to be a good man

and while we their parents

are debating masculinity

in conference rooms and comment sections

our sons are learning from YouTube algorithms

and social media influencers

they're getting their blueprint for manhood

from people who've never changed a diaper

or stayed up all night with a sick kid

or took him to the hospital

frankly

they're getting their blueprint from people

you'd shield them from if you ran into them on a train

let me tell you a story now

my wife and I we agonized

over the decision about whether or not to have kids

so I did what I presume all engineers do

I conducted an analysis and a field study of the matter

now I

at the time

I was traveling a lot

so I sat next to a lot of strangers on airplanes

and I interviewed just about everybody I knew

and everybody I met on those planes

about how they felt about their decision

whether or not to have kids

the main thing that I Learned

is that there was no wrong answer

pretty much everyone I talked to was pretty happy

about whatever decision they made

but the thing that I noticed

was that the parents were happy in this fundamental

almost spiritual way whereas the non parents

well

they were mostly just bragging

about how much money they still had

the best response that I got

came from a person I very much admire

we were

we were sitting on his porch

and his gorgeous wife and their three year old son

we're playing Frisbee

with their border collie in the yard

he said

you know

said I love my wife she's great

but that boy

that boy is my soulmate

man my experience

in the early days

could not have been more opposite to this

one of the suspicions I had

in fact is that

all of that positivity that I experienced

during my research was just a ruse to make non parents

just as miserable as the parents were

my wife and my lives were obliterated

it was so grueling and awful that my wife and I

we were at each other's throats constantly

and we had to make an explicit

agreement that we wouldn't get divorced

before the boy was at least a year old

for example uh

his stomach was both very elastic

but also way smaller than his appetite

so he would projectile vomit

three or four times his body length

like a bottle of Diet Coke

with a Mentos dropped into it

between that

and the dirty diapers that we left all over the place

the dogs were in paradise

believe me

now the first time

I had a twinge of what my friend was talking about

with the soulmate thing

the boy was about 4 months old

and I just finished changing his diaper

I held out my index fingers

and he reached up and he pulled himself up by

it was the very first time

that I taught him anything at all

and it clicked for me that my job my role

is to foster an environment

where he can build the skills

that he needs to make his place in the world

and for the very first time I felt it

I understood a little bit

about what my friend meant by soulmate

it reminded me of a time years earlier

when I was 12 years old

I went on a work trip with my dad one summer

now this was towards the end of the trip

we were in Arlington Texas

and I was stuck for two days in a hotel room

literally looking down at the six flags amusement park

that was across the highway from our hotel

but I was completely I was unable to go

it was it was kind of torture frankly

but the Texas State Fair was going on

and on the very last day of the trip

my dad took me to the fair

now the centerpiece of the Texas State Fair

is this enormous Ferris wheel

my dad and I rode it together

near the top

looking out over the lights of the city

my dad puts his arm around me and he says

I think you're gonna be a great man someday

and you know

I was too wrapped up in my own stuff at the time

I'm 12 going on 13

but what I realize now

is that this was his way of saying to me

however imperfectly son

you're my soulmate

my wife and I we have some friends

who lost their two and a/2 year old boy in this

freak accident they were hiking in the woods

and a tree just fell down and hit the boy

he was gone just like that his dad

standing right next to him

and I think about that dad

every day

that is the manifestation of all of my life's fears

and worries all at once

I wouldn't know how to live through it

and it drove home to me

that you can lose them at any time

so what do you do

well one of the things I did was to take my boy camping

I'd mentioned it as a possibility one time

and he kind of pestered me about it

he asked me about it several times

and so I set it up and one of the pleasures

that I find about being a parent it's

it's like when

you meet a friend

who's never seen a movie that you particularly like

like oh

my gosh you've never seen The Usual Suspects

we have to go see it right now

and then you get to experience it anew

through their eyes that's

well that's the way your kid is about everything

and camping was definitely like that

this is my first time in a sleeping bag

and this is my first time being inside of a tent

we built a fire we made hot dogs

s'mores about 1:30 in the morning

we were sleeping in the tent

it was very cold

very dark

and we could

we could hear the coyotes roaming around and howling

and he stirred

he said dad

can you keep me warm

I unzipped my sleeping bag a little bit

I pulled him close

I said of course buddy

I'll always keep you warm

but what I was really trying to say

was son you're my soulmate

he doesn't understand that any more than I did

on the Ferris wheel back then

and hopefully I'll get better over time

and decades from now he'll be able to say it to his son

a little bit better than I said it to him

now

this isn't a podcast about returning to some mythical

good old days this frankly

those days weren't that good for a lot of people

this this is about moving forward with intention

because here's what I've Learned

our sons they don't need us to be perfect

they need us to be present

they don't need us to have all the answers

they need us to be willing

to wrestle with difficult questions

questions like

how do we teach them to be strong without being brittle

how do we navigate a culture that either works

the worst parts of masculinity

or tries to vilify it out of existence entirely

how do we show them that real strength

stems from recognizing and admitting

when you're wrong how do we prepare them for a world

where emotional intelligence is mandatory

how do we raise men who can lead with both conviction

and compassion

maybe the hardest question of all is

what kind of man should I model for my son

now look

I don't want to be dramatic

but the statistics about this stuff are really sobering

young men

they're struggling with purpose

with connection

and mental health at unprecedented rates

they're more isolated they're more likely

I'm sorry they're less likely to have close friendships

and they're increasingly disconnected

from the kind of mentorship that used to happen

naturally

but here's what gives me hope

intentional parents

parents who are willing to do the work

not just on their sons but on themselves too

because our boys

they're not really even just listening to what we say

they're watching what we do

and they're becoming who we are

raising men will be honest

conversations about raising sons with purpose

some episodes

might just be me wrestling with questions that

keep me up at night

others will be conversations with parents

experts and folks who've walked this road before us

who've succeeded and failed

we'll talk about discipline that builds character

not compliance about teaching boys to navigate emotions

without drowning in them

about raising men who can disagree without demonizing

who can be confident without being arrogant

who can be tender without being weak

now it's not always gonna be comfortable

but it will always be authentic

and it will always be real

so if you're still listening

I want to invite you to something bigger than a podcast

I want you to

invite you into this notion of intentional parenthood

because frankly the world needs more men of character

and character does not happen by accident

it's forged in the daily decisions of parents

who refuse to let their sons be raised by default

by a potentially toxic culture

so here's what happens next

subscribe to the show and really importantly

if you can share it with another dad

who might be asking the same questions

and connect with me on social at Raising Men Podcast

because this conversation doesn't end

when the episode does most importantly

take a look at your son today

really look at him

ask yourself

what kind of man is he gonna become

because of who I choose to be

so it starts

thanks so much for being here

so let's go raise some men together