I hope you’re having a great week.
I used to wear my “perfect dad” cape like a shield. I thought fatherhood meant never showing weakness, always having answers, and hiding any struggles.
But I was exhausting myself trying to maintain an image that was costing me real connection with my kids.
The turning point came unexpectedly from my son’s perspective. Recently, he mentioned something about me yelling at him years ago, and when I asked when it happened, he said, “It was before your transformation.”
That floored me. I still raise my voice sometimes (I’m human!), but the difference is that he no longer sees those moments as my identity. He sees me as someone who’s growing and changing.
Many of us dads operate with a double standard: if our phone hits 1% battery, we rush to charge it. But when our mental, emotional, physical or spiritual energy hits 1%, we “tough it out” or “push through.”
This approach fails because presence is impossible when we’re depleted. We might physically be there for our kids, but we’re not really there.
What changed for me was realizing that true fatherhood power comes from these four pillars:
- Mental Well-being: I’m intentional about what I consume and the stories I tell myself. I give myself grace when I fall short rather than harsh self-criticism.
- Emotional Well-being: I stopped suppressing feelings and embraced vulnerability. Just yesterday I apologized to my son for shutting down his feelings in a store. Four years ago, I would never have had that conversation.
- Physical Well-being: Simple routines like three gym sessions weekly, regular walks (sometimes alone, sometimes with my kids), and better eating have changed how I show up.
- Spiritual Well-being: This isn’t necessarily religious. It’s about connecting to something larger than yourself and approaching life with compassion rather than self-centeredness.
I dive much deeper into these 4 pillars, and share more about that moment with my son in this week’s episode. You can watch the full talk on YouTube or listen on the Podcast.
The bottom line? Your kids notice when you’re working on yourself.
When I started prioritizing these four areas, my son literally called it my “transformation.” That’s powerful. Not because I became perfect but because he saw me actively growing.
Presence isn’t about performing perfection but showing up fully in all four dimensions: physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually.
Want to begin your own transformation? My 365 Dad Journal can help you start processing your feelings and tracking your growth. Because the best gift you can give your children isn’t perfection but your authentic, evolving self.
That’s all for today.
See you next week.