
The Dad Manual
21 episodes
Episode 20: How a Tough Childhood Built a Better Dad with Daniel Ramsey
Ep 19: Girl Dad Wisdom: Building Trust, Traditions, and Unbreakable Bonds
Ep 18: Breaking the Pattern - How One Dad Rewired His Approach to Raising Kids
Ep 17: Find Your Tribe: A Girl Dad's Guide to Fatherhood and Evolving
Ep 16: What Your Kids Learn When You're Not Looking

Ep 15Ep 15: From Classroom to Fatherhood: How Teaching Made Mike a Better Dad
What if the best thing you can do for your kids is get out of their way?Tony sits down with Mike Mendelson — a former high school teacher, devoted co-parent, and self-described "great dad" — for a wide-ranging conversation about raising capable, independent kids. Mike shares how teaching shaped his parenting philosophy, why the word "yet" is a game-changer, and what it really looks like to co-parent with purpose. From a near-miss mountain adventure to gut-punch moments with his son, Mike opens up about the wins, the mistakes, and the mindset shifts that have made him a better father.Key Takeaways:The "growth mindset" (Carol Dweck's work) is one of the most powerful frameworks a dad can bring home from the classroomThe word "yet" reframes limitation as a temporary state — and it changes everything for kidsCo-parenting well requires treating the other parent as a business partner with a shared mission: the kids' wellbeingHaving solo parenting time creates a kind of focused "full-on dad mode" that's hard to replicate otherwiseA less risk-tolerant partner provides real safety value — autonomy in parenting has a trade-off"Parenting for independence" — modeled by Mike's own father — is about asking "how will you do this when I'm not here?"Wait time is a tactical, teachable skill: ask a question, be silent, and let the kid find the answerBreaking generational patterns starts with noticing the unconscious ones — like pushing a child past what's age-appropriateConfidence in your own way of dadding matters — no one else dads exactly like youIf you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/(00:00) - – Intro & cold open (01:08) - – Mike introduces himself as a dad and teacher (03:06) - – The word "can't" is banned — why mindset starts at home (05:15) - – Mike's family: co-parenting, cadence, and consistency (07:17) - – Co-parenting as a business partnership (08:13) - – The upside of solo parenting time — full focus, full autonomy (11:51) - – The risk trade-off: when no co-pilot is a double-edged sword (12:00) - – The mountain story: a near-miss and the lessons it left (15:01) - – Mistakes that change you as a parent (17:08) - – Mike's childhood: parents, New York roots, and a dad who built the internet (20:02) - – "Parenting for independence" — hands behind the back, figure it out (22:04) - – Helping vs. unlocking: how to give the smallest hint that opens the door (23:48) - – The always-on world and why presence is harder now than ever (25:10) - – Breaking generational patterns: catching yourself pushing too hard (29:31) - – Bringing play into fathering — kids learn through play (29:46) - – Gut-punch moment: "I didn't have as big a brain then, Dad" (31:00) - – The three cycles of childhood and what each phase needs from dad (35:38) - – Holding a stance as a dad without being locked in (36:06) - – Closing advice: wait time, trust your instincts, you've got this

Ep 14Ep 14: Apologies, Accountability, and the Art of Being an Imperfect Dad
He had twins at 23, no money, and no idea what he was doing…Jeff Speer has been Tony's friend for 15 years, and this episode is one of the most honest, candid conversations The Dad Manual has had yet. Jeff opens up about becoming a father to twins right out of college during a recession, navigating the friction of two people with different upbringings raising kids together, and what it actually takes to build trust with your children over a lifetime. This is a fatherhood podcast conversation for any dad who's ever had to apologize and mean it.Key Takeaways:Every kid is different — even identical twins need to be parented as individualsLeaning on your partner's strengths isn't weakness; it's smart parentingBeing emotionally transparent with your kids models accountabilityThe goal is to raise kids who act for themselves, not for your approvalConflict with your kids often reveals more about you than it does about them"Effective communicator" and "good talker" are not the same thingLetting go of control is a skill that takes years to developApologizing to your kids — and meaning it — matters more than pretending you're perfectWorking hard and staying content are not opposites; Jeff's early years are proofYour relationship with your partner is the foundation everything else is built onIf you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/

Ep 13Ep 13: The Stepfather's Journey: Blended Families, Boundaries, and Unwavering Love
You can be physically present every single day — and still miss everything that matters.Evan Miller is a husband, father of two, and someone who's learned the hard way that showing up isn't enough — you have to actually be there. In this conversation, Tony and Evan explore the difference between attendance and presence, navigating stepfatherhood, raising kids who can handle real conversations, and how sobriety transformed Evan's relationship with his family. Evan also unpacks a jaw-dropping family origin story involving a 23andMe test, a baseball player, and a secret that stayed buried for four decades.Key Takeaways:Presence and attendance are two completely different things — and your kids know the difference.Stepparenting adds layers of complexity that two-parent households don't face — respect that reality.Nature plays a massive role in who your children become, regardless of your parenting environment.Unwavering love and support doesn't mean accepting bad behavior — it means the two are never confused.Treating your kids like capable human beings, not fragile children, builds confident, articulate adults.Alcohol and other disconnectors rob you of time you can't get back — even when you're in the room.Patience isn't a natural gift — it's a skill you develop, and physical exercise helps more than you think.Letting kids experience failure, discomfort, and hard conversations is part of the job.Your kids don't need to be shielded from the world — they need to be prepared for it.The way you model ambition, activity, and a full life is one of the most powerful parenting tools you have.If you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/

Ep 12Ep 12: Screwing Up and Showing Up: Mike Knittel on Sobriety, Redemption, and Fatherhood
What happens when a dad hits rock bottom — and chooses to rebuild himself for his kids?Mike Knittel has lived through addiction, CPS intervention, family breakdown, and a long road to sobriety — and he's come out the other side as a father his kids actually call when they need help. In this raw and honest conversation, Mike shares the moments that broke him, the choices that rebuilt him, and the lessons every dad can take away regardless of where they are in their journey.Key Takeaways:Sobriety fundamentally changed Mike's ability to be present — and presence matters more than perfectionKids are far more resilient than we give them credit for, but genuine apologies require open hands, not closed fistsSelf-forgiveness is the hardest work of all — and the most necessaryYour kids don't need a perfect father. They need a real oneModelling vulnerability teaches your children it's safe to be vulnerable tooNature vs. nurture: Mike lands firmly on the side of nurture — how you show up mattersThe four pillars that supported Mike's recovery: community, faith, books, and radical honestyParenting from anger never works — learning to step away is a skill worth developingThe goal isn't just that your kids survive your parenting — it's that they choose to call you when they're hurtingSit on the floor. Play make-believe. Never underestimate imagination and Nerf guns.This is one of those conversations that will stick with you — whether you're a new dad podcast listener discovering this show for the first time or a veteran father still doing the inner work.If you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/(00:00) - Introduction & episode preview (00:37) - Meet Mike Knittel (00:49) - Mike's blended family & grandkids (01:46) - Nature vs. nurture — where Mike stands (03:15) - Sobriety and its impact on fatherhood (05:30) - Victimhood, resentment & forgiving his parents (07:09) - What life looked like before sobriety (08:57) - CPS, heroin, and hitting rock bottom (11:25) - How Mike began repairing with his kids (13:30) - The open-hand apology with his daughter Madison (16:13) - Control, anger, and character defects in parenting (18:49) - Self-forgiveness: the hardest and most necessary work (23:14) - The books that changed his perspective (25:55) - Reconnecting to the inner child through grandkids (26:24) - What shaped Mike's ideas about fatherhood growing up (28:16) - The birth of his firstborn, Gabe (32:07) - Raising his boys as a single dad with his brother (34:46) - The parenting moment that changed everything with his son (38:26) - Cassie's influence and open communication as a skill (41:20) - Memorable screw-ups and what he learned (43:51) - Parenting from anger — and learning not to (47:14) - What kids absorb when you're not trying to teach them (49:19) - Hopes for his adult children (51:27) - What Mike wants his kids to remember (52:13) - Advice for new dads: sit on the floor, bring the Nerf guns (54:36) - Final words and wrap-up

Ep 11Ep 11: Co-Parenting as a Superpower: Raising Kids Through Conscious Separation
Your kid isn't just testing your patience — they're revealing everything you still need to heal.Shane Metcalf is a father who made a decision most dads never do: to do the deep inner work before the hard moments arrived. His daughter Ava is almost six, and Shane hasn't yelled at her once. Not because she's an easy kid — she's strong-willed, irrational, and negotiates like a seasoned attorney — but because Shane made an internal decision rooted in years of personal growth, therapy, and a clear-eyed look at the cycles he wanted to break.In this conversation with host Tony Cooper, Shane opens up about growing up in a household full of verbal anger, what it took to consciously choose a different path, and how co-parenting after divorce can actually become one of the most powerful gifts you give your child. He shares the thought experiments he uses when frustration peaks, the philosophy behind gentle-but-boundaried parenting, and why roughhousing with your daughter matters just as much as with your son.This is an honest, raw, and deeply practical conversation for any dad serious about showing up differently.Key Takeaways:The relationship you build with your child now — at 5 or 6 — directly shapes the trust they'll have in you at 16 and 36.Your child's triggers are a mirror for your own unhealed wounds. That's the gift, not the inconvenience.Yelling doesn't work. The Inuit understood it — when you raise your voice, kids stop listening and stop trusting.Breaking generational cycles is one of the greatest things a father can do. Shane's dad broke physical abuse. Shane broke verbal anger.Co-parenting done right — with shared values and mutual respect — can be one of the most functional family structures available.Use the "last day" thought experiment: imagine this is your final day with your child, and watch how fast the frustration dissolves.The "love bank" concept applies to your relationship with your partner just as much as with your kids — make more deposits than withdrawals.Seven-year cycles shape child development. The next phase (7–14) is emotional — prepare for it intentionally.Nature matters, but nurture is where you have power: attachment, physical play, repair, and actually listening to big feelings.Roughhouse with your kids — boys and girls. Physical play is foundational for embodiment and connection.If you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/(00:00) - Shane's opening moment of fatherhood (01:19) - Crushing it as a dad — Shane's honest take (03:06) - Building a lifelong friendship with your kid (04:36) - Parenting reveals your shadows (07:37) - Healthy masculinity vs. force and anger (08:53) - Revisiting childhood through your child (10:22) - Breaking the cycle: dental care and swimming (11:36) - Growing up with verbal abuse (12:31) - The internal decision to never yell (14:19) - Learning from the Inuit approach (16:26) - The relationship breakdown and co-parenting (18:22) - Rebuilding love and trust after divorce (20:17) - Intentional separation — a different approach (22:15) - The nesting model and the 2-2-5-5 schedule (25:19) - Relationship as a cauldron of transformation (28:34) - One-on-one time: co-parenting's hidden gift (30:14) - Loving a child into existence (32:18) - The "last day" thought experiment (35:57) - The next seven-year cycle: adding boundaries (39:11) - Nature vs. nurture and your child's true self (41:30) - Holding space while pushing comfort zones (43:14) - Roughhousing with girls — why it matters (45:35) - Kids are here to raise us (45:59) - Advice for new dads: worship the ground she walks on (47:22) - Don't let the marriage slip into sexlessness (48:17) - Trust the process, enjoy the ride

Ep 10Ep 10: Before the Baby Arrives: Real Talk From a Soon-to-Be Father
What does it look like to become a father through the windshield — not the rearview mirror?Tony Cooper sits down with Brad Barnes, a transformational trainer and dad-to-be at 12 weeks, for a conversation unlike any other on this fatherhood podcast. Brad shares the raw, unfiltered experience of stepping into fatherhood for the second time — carrying the grief of a pregnancy loss, the wisdom of a decade of personal growth, and a fierce commitment to showing up differently. This is fatherhood in real time, not in hindsight.Key Takeaways:Choosing your partner is also choosing to become a dad — and that decision carries enormous weightGrief from pregnancy loss doesn't fully "heal," but it can become a source of meaning and forward motionThe gap between who you are today and who you need to be as a father is something you can close — intentionallyAt 24, Brad exploded his life overnight when he found out he was going to be a dad. At 33, nothing needed to change. That's what a decade of inner work looks like.Generational patterns can't all be interrupted consciously — but the tools you carry into parenthood matter more than perfectionThe ego gets tested like nowhere else in fatherhood. Brad is already feeling it during his wife's pregnancy."Better than my dad" is a ceiling, not a destination. Real growth means crafting the father you are meant to be.Vulnerability with your partner — especially about your fears around fatherhood — can open unexpected doorsGiving yourself permission to fall, ask for support, and be a mess is not weakness. It's the foundation of conscious parenting.Fatherhood is the number one course on the planet. There's no way to do it right — and no way to not fail. That's the gift.If you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/(00:00) - Brad's story begins (02:31) - Finding out they're expecting (04:23) - The first fear: grief from pregnancy loss (07:34) - The "angel baby" concept and healing (10:35) - Tony's own angel baby story (13:18) - What no one tells you about pregnancy loss (15:35) - The night they conceived — a vulnerable conversation (19:34) - Through the windshield, not the rearview mirror (20:23) - At 24 vs. 33: exploding your life or staying the course (24:51) - Financial fears and the gap from zero to two kids (27:05) - Brad's upbringing and relationship with his dad (33:29) - "Better than my dad" is a ceiling, not a destination (37:22) - Why interrupting every pattern is impossible — and that's OK (40:51) - Fatherhood is the number one course on the planet (44:02) - Staying present during the pregnancy (45:07) - Advice to himself: permission to fall (46:33) - The time capsule gift of documenting this journey

Ep 9Ep 9: Being a Girl Dad: Modeling Manhood When Daughters Are Watching
Tony Cooper sits down with friend and fellow dad Aaron Pava for a deeply personal conversation about the fatherhood he inherited and the father he's working to become. From growing up between a strict stepfather and a hands-off biological dad — with no clear middle way — to proudly identifying as a girl dad, Tony reflects with honesty and vulnerability on the patterns that shaped him and the practices that continue to sharpen him. This is The Dad Manual getting real about the man behind the mic.Key Takeaways:Growing up with two extreme parenting models — one overly strict, one completely hands-off — can leave you without a template for the middle way.Being a girl dad carries a specific responsibility: modeling what integrity and uprightness look like for young women navigating the world.Anger in parenting often has deep roots — knowing where it comes from is the first step toward managing it.Men's groups that do real, honest, challenging work are one of the most powerful tools available to fathers seeking to grow.The family dinner table, when it's consistent, becomes one of the most underrated rituals in a child's sense of security.Kids don't always need your attention on them — watching parents work together toward something meaningful is its own powerful form of modeling.Regret can be reframed: time spent building something alongside your children, even when the focus isn't on them, has lasting value.Direct, vulnerable conversations with your kids about how your behavior affects them are rare and important — and often overdue.Personal growth work — workshops, transformational courses, self-reflection — compounds directly into better parenting over time.The patterns we inherit aren't destiny. Awareness, community, and consistent small rituals are how we write new ones.If you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/

Ep 8Ep 8: Break the Bad, Pass on the Good: Second Chances at Fatherhood with Paul Crawford
Breaking cycles and building bonds across two families and thirty years.Paul Crawford raised four children across two marriages and now brings grandfather wisdom to modern parenting challenges. From becoming a father at 29 while in grad school to navigating divorce, strained relationships, and ultimately reconnecting with his adult children, Paul shares raw insights about intergenerational trauma and conscious healing. This parenting podcast explores attachment theory, the critical importance of unconditional love, and how sometimes the best thing you can do for your kids is work on your relationship with your partner. Whether you're a new dad or navigating complex family dynamics, Paul's journey offers perspective on breaking bad patterns and passing on the good.Key Takeaways:Intergenerational trauma works itself out through you as a parentThe first two years establish whether children trust their caregiversWorking on your partnership is one of the best things you can do for your kidsGrandparenting offers a second chance to apply hard-won wisdomBreaking cycles requires awareness of both good and bad impulsesAllowing kids to fail teaches resilience and problem-solvingReconnection with estranged children is possible through patienceManaging emotions during conflict creates better outcomes than winning argumentsThe biological bond with grandchildren is powerful and immediateNew fathers should embrace good impulses while staying aware of inherited traumaIf you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/(00:00) - Introduction and Paul's background (02:07) - Becoming a dad at 29 (03:38) - Divorce and co-parenting challenges (06:12) - When his son moved back in (12:38) - Getting remarried and blending families (18:25) - Tension between old and new families (22:14) - Letting kids fail builds resilience (28:42) - Managing conflict without winning (34:16) - Working on your partnership first (38:50) - Why the first two years matter (42:20) - Becoming a grandfather to twins (46:53) - Attachment theory and unconditional love (52:08) - Advice for brand new fathers (57:01) - Breaking cycles and passing on wisdom

Ep 7Ep 7: Fatherhood Through Cancer, Grief, and a Child's Transition
Parenting doesn't follow a script, and sometimes life throws you every curveball imaginable.Danny Cooper shares his raw, honest journey of raising his child Sari while navigating his wife Emily's decade-long battle with breast cancer that began when Sari was just three months old. From aggressive chemotherapy and stem cell transplants to ultimately losing Emily when Sari was 10, Danny had to step into both parental roles while dealing with his own grief. Years later, Sari came out as transgender, transitioning from female to male at age 26. Danny opens up about the emotional complexity of celebrating his child's happiness while grieving the daughter he thought he had, and what it means to reprogram yourself as a father when your child's identity shifts. This conversation explores resilience, unconditional love, and showing up for your kids no matter what life brings.Key Takeaways:How to be present for your child during a partner's terminal illnessBalancing work demands with being there for critical family momentsTeaching kids self-reliance while providing unwavering supportProcessing grief as a parent while keeping your child stableSupporting a child through gender transition as an adultThe psychological process of accepting your child's new identityCreating safety and unconditional love in single parentingInstilling values like empathy, work ethic, and kindness through adversityWhy being hands-on from birth matters for long-term connectionChoosing your child over work when it truly mattersIf you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/ (00:00) - - Introduction (01:35) - - Meeting Sari and early parenthood (03:45) - - Emily's breast cancer diagnosis (07:20) - - Aggressive treatments and survival (11:45) - - Being a dad during medical crisis (15:30) - - Emily's passing when Sari was 10 (19:15) - - Single fatherhood and stepping up (23:40) - - Sari's gender transition at 26 (27:50) - - Grieving the daughter you thought you had (32:10) - - Becoming a boy dad unexpectedly (36:25) - - Values and principles for raising kids (40:15) - - Hopes and dreams for Sari's future (43:50) - - Advice for brand new fathers

Ep 6Ep 6: Sports, Character, and Growing Up: A Father's Journey with His Son
When your teenager starts reflecting your own traits back at you, parenting gets realMichael Guidotti shares his journey raising 13-year-old Donovan, a remarkable young man who chooses family time over friends and stands firm when his character gets attacked. From sports bonding and travel adventures to navigating split households and teenage development, Michael reveals how authentic parenting means paving your own path while staying open to feedback. This fatherhood podcast explores the beautiful complexity of watching your child develop their identity while seeing yourself reflected in their choices.Key Takeaways: Start becoming a parent before the baby arrivesKids mirror our behaviors more than we realizeCharacter matters more than popularity to some teensFamily-oriented values can emerge naturally in childrenTeenage identity development requires support, not controlSports create powerful bonding opportunities between fathers and sonsSplit households can still raise well-adjusted, family-focused kidsConfidence in your parenting path is essentialMistakes are inevitable and valuable in the parenting journeyCharacter attacks hurt deeply when integrity matters to your childIf you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/

Ep 5Ep 5: Co-Parenting with Intention: Building a Better Legacy for Sons
When one positive pregnancy test changes everything, transformation becomes inevitable.Diego Kuri's life shifted the moment he discovered he was becoming a father. From addressing his relationship with alcohol to breaking cycles of rage and anxiety, Diego shares how fatherhood pushed him toward becoming his best self. Now co-parenting two strong-willed boys in Miami, he's navigating the balance between nature and nurture, breaking generational patterns, and creating a legacy of presence and unconditional love. This conversation explores the inner work required to show up authentically for your children.Key Takeaways:Discovering fatherhood can trigger immediate personal transformationLeading by example is the most powerful parenting toolBreaking generational trauma is the greatest legacy we can leaveCo-parenting requires flexibility, communication, and shared valuesStrong personalities in children reflect opportunities for self-awarenessInner work before crisis prevents future disconnection with kidsNature shapes who children are, but values guide how they navigate lifePresence and unconditional love matter more than perfectionSmall moments of joy often become the most treasured memoriesStarting therapy or self-work early creates healthier parent-child relationshipsIf you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/

Ep 4Ep 4: Aggression and Masculinity in Parenting with Circling Founder Guy Sengstock
What happens when a master of human connection realizes he's barely talked about his most important role?Guy Sengstock, co-founder of Circling and dialogical practices expert, joins me to explore the implicit nature of fatherhood. With a 22-year-old son and a 4-year-old, Guy shares raw insights on the wonder of witnessing consciousness emerge, the profound regret of signing away proximity to his eldest, and why aggression needs socialization, not suppression. We discuss how fathers teach most powerfully when they're not trying, the cosmological significance of rough-and-tumble play, and what it means to midwife young beings into self-awareness.Key Takeaways:Why parenting happens most powerfully in implicit, unplanned momentsThe respect and otherness experienced during childbirthHow physical play socializes healthy masculine aggressionThe deep regret of allowing distance from your childWhat it means to be present with wonder as a fatherHow perspective becomes a father's greatest giftWhy ending generational trauma matters more than legacyThe importance of being fully present at birth and beyondIf you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/

Ep 3Ep 3: Everything I Learned as a Girl Dad - Raising Daughters with Tony Elliott
Tony Elliott shares his journey raising two daughters through the lens of game styles, Love & Logic principles, and real-world trial and error. From tea parties to state championships, discover how understanding biological styles under pressure transforms parenting. Tony opens up about being harder on daughters versus sons, navigating different game styles between siblings, and why supporting the mother is the single most important job for any new dad. Whether you're a new dad podcast listener or raising teenagers, this conversation offers wisdom earned through decades of fatherhood.Key Takeaways:How Love & Logic consequences with empathy shaped parenting decisionsUnderstanding your child's biological game style reduces conflictGirl dads experience unexpected fulfillment in father-daughter relationshipsSupporting the mother is the primary job for new fathersYou don't need all the answers right now—solve one problem at a timeBeing present at every event matters more than you realizeDifferent game styles require different parenting approachesSleep deprivation is the first problem to solve togetherYour job transitions from provider to supporter as kids growThe joy in their accomplishments surpasses any personal achievementIf you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/

Ep 2Ep 2: Parenting Through Teasing, Trust, and One Thousand Tiny Conversations
This week on The Dad Manual, I’ve invited my friend Adam Hibble, father to 16-year-old Maya, to share his unconventional approach to modern fatherhood that began before pregnancy: a vision statement that evolved through playful teasing, open-ended questions, and countless short conversations. Adam reveals how his parenting style emerged from his own father's listening-first approach and the community of men around him. He opens up about the mistakes he made—including inadvertently limiting his daughter's emotional expression—and how he's worked to heal his own childhood wounds to break generational cycles. This parenting podcast explores the balance between fun and boundaries, the importance of apologizing when jokes don't land, and why being a dad means constantly learning on the job. Maya's confidence and emotional intelligence stand as testament to the power of being present, patient, and willing to do the hard work of self-reflection.Key Takeaways:Create a parenting vision statement with your partner before your child arrivesModel the ability to apologize when your attempts at humor or discipline don't land wellAsk yourself "What would I have wanted at this age?" to guide your parenting decisionsFocus on 1,000 short conversations rather than a few long, heavy talksHeal your own childhood wounds before trying to instill values you don't embody yourselfUse playful teasing strategically to build resilience and humor in your childrenPractice listening more than talking and asking open-ended questionsAllow children to express emotions without needing to categorize or justify themTake care of yourself first so you can better care for your familyRemember that parenting is learn-as-you-go; you don't need all the answers upfrontIf you enjoyed The Dad Manual, leave us a rating on your podcast app! If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/

Ep 1Ep 1: They're Not As Fragile As You Think: Real Talk About Modern Fatherhood
Parenthood isn't about perfection—it's about showing up, opening up, and caring deeply.Rodrigo Lagos shares his transformation into a sports dad and how driving his 16-year-old daughter Willow to volleyball created unexpected moments of connection. He discusses navigating the teenage years with authenticity, supporting his son Drake's passion for archery and robotics, and why vulnerability strengthens father-child relationships. This parenting podcast explores the power of family rituals, from their annual Lago Summer Kickoff Event to holiday cooking traditions, and offers wisdom on building resilience through consistent care.Key Takeaways:Sports involvement creates natural conversation opportunities with teenagersKids are more resilient than we think when we show up for themFamily rituals evolve as children grow and contribute their own ideasVulnerability and apologizing to your kids builds deeper trustOpening up to your children happens earlier than most fathers expectScreen-free time in the car offers valuable connection windowsPhysical exhaustion after sports helps kids be more presentLetting kids participate fully in family life teaches ownershipIf you enjoyed The Dad Manual, please like and subscribe. If you loved it, share this episode with a Dad! Send your questions to [email protected] with Tony Cooper: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thetonycooper/