<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><?xml-stylesheet href="https://feeds.captivate.fm/style.xsl" type="text/xsl"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0" xmlns:googleplay="http://www.google.com/schemas/play-podcasts/1.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/" xmlns:podcast="https://podcastindex.org/namespace/1.0"><channel><atom:link href="https://feeds.captivate.fm/building-up-fathers/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><title><![CDATA[Building Up Fathers]]></title><podcast:guid>2653d0db-2997-5b30-9734-42a330d9e2ad</podcast:guid><lastBuildDate>Tue, 12 May 2026 15:55:23 +0000</lastBuildDate><generator>Captivate.fm</generator><language><![CDATA[en]]></language><copyright><![CDATA[Copyright 2026 Jared and Ryan]]></copyright><managingEditor>Jared and Ryan</managingEditor><itunes:summary><![CDATA[Building up fathers in a way that encourages them to love themselves and their families the way God loves His people. ]]></itunes:summary><image><url>https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png</url><title>Building Up Fathers</title><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link></image><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><itunes:owner><itunes:name>Jared and Ryan</itunes:name></itunes:owner><itunes:author>Jared and Ryan</itunes:author><description>Building up fathers in a way that encourages them to love themselves and their families the way God loves His people. </description><link>https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm</link><atom:link href="https://pubsubhubbub.appspot.com" rel="hub"/><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type><itunes:category text="Kids &amp; Family"><itunes:category text="Parenting"/></itunes:category><itunes:category text="Education"><itunes:category text="Self-Improvement"/></itunes:category><itunes:category text="Religion &amp; Spirituality"><itunes:category text="Christianity"/></itunes:category><podcast:locked>no</podcast:locked><podcast:medium>podcast</podcast:medium><item><title>14. Fathers and Technology: You Can’t Shortcut Presence - 1 of 2</title><itunes:title>Fathers and Technology: You Can’t Shortcut Presence - 1 of 2</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>Technology has become one of the most powerful forces shaping family life, not because every device is bad, but because it quietly competes for a father’s attention. This episode looks at the way phones, social/entertainment media, work access, short-form video, and AI can pull dads away from the very people they most want to love well. The issue is not just screen time. It is presence, connection, and whether our kids experience us as available.</p><p></p><p>This conversation does not come from a place of having it all figured out. It comes from the real struggle of being tired, distracted, stressed, tempted to escape, and trying to lead a home while also battling the pull of technology personally. Fathers are not called to be perfect, but they are called to pay attention. Presence cannot be automated, outsourced, or replaced by good intentions. It has to be chosen in the ordinary moments where our kids are looking for our eyes, our voice, and our attention.</p><p></p><p>In This Episode:</p><p>• Why technology, social media, AI, and entertainment media are becoming one of the biggest relational challenges for fathers and families</p><p>• The difference between leading your home through rules and leading first by your own example</p><p>• How phones can quietly communicate emotional unavailability to kids, even when dads are physically nearby</p><p>• Why children often escalate behavior when they are trying to regain a distracted parent’s attention</p><p>• The danger of using social media, short-form video, gaming, or online identity as an escape from stress, anxiety, boredom, or pain</p><p>• The importance of admitting when technology has more control over you than you want it to have</p><p>• Practical starting points like phone-free meals, the first ten minutes at home, protected daily rhythms, and replacing screen time with real connection</p><p>• Why getting help, creating accountability, or removing access is not weakness, but real leadership</p><p></p><p>Key Themes:</p><p>• Undivided presence over distraction</p><p>• Spiritual leadership through personal example</p><p>• Emotional safety and availability</p><p>• Honest self-assessment</p><p>• Technology boundaries in the home</p><p>• Connection that cannot be shortcut</p><p></p><p>Takeaway:</p><p>The heart of this episode is simple but weighty: your attention matters more than you think. Your kids do not just need you in the room. They need to know you are available, responsive, and willing to choose them over whatever is pulling at you. That does not mean every father needs to throw his phone away or fix every habit overnight. It means taking one honest step toward reclaiming the moments that matter. Put the phone down at the table. Look your child in the eyes when you get home. Tell the truth about where technology has a grip on you. Ask for help where you need help. Growth begins when a father stops hiding, brings the struggle into the light, and chooses presence again. Not perfectly, but faithfully.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Technology has become one of the most powerful forces shaping family life, not because every device is bad, but because it quietly competes for a father’s attention. This episode looks at the way phones, social/entertainment media, work access, short-form video, and AI can pull dads away from the very people they most want to love well. The issue is not just screen time. It is presence, connection, and whether our kids experience us as available.</p><p></p><p>This conversation does not come from a place of having it all figured out. It comes from the real struggle of being tired, distracted, stressed, tempted to escape, and trying to lead a home while also battling the pull of technology personally. Fathers are not called to be perfect, but they are called to pay attention. Presence cannot be automated, outsourced, or replaced by good intentions. It has to be chosen in the ordinary moments where our kids are looking for our eyes, our voice, and our attention.</p><p></p><p>In This Episode:</p><p>• Why technology, social media, AI, and entertainment media are becoming one of the biggest relational challenges for fathers and families</p><p>• The difference between leading your home through rules and leading first by your own example</p><p>• How phones can quietly communicate emotional unavailability to kids, even when dads are physically nearby</p><p>• Why children often escalate behavior when they are trying to regain a distracted parent’s attention</p><p>• The danger of using social media, short-form video, gaming, or online identity as an escape from stress, anxiety, boredom, or pain</p><p>• The importance of admitting when technology has more control over you than you want it to have</p><p>• Practical starting points like phone-free meals, the first ten minutes at home, protected daily rhythms, and replacing screen time with real connection</p><p>• Why getting help, creating accountability, or removing access is not weakness, but real leadership</p><p></p><p>Key Themes:</p><p>• Undivided presence over distraction</p><p>• Spiritual leadership through personal example</p><p>• Emotional safety and availability</p><p>• Honest self-assessment</p><p>• Technology boundaries in the home</p><p>• Connection that cannot be shortcut</p><p></p><p>Takeaway:</p><p>The heart of this episode is simple but weighty: your attention matters more than you think. Your kids do not just need you in the room. They need to know you are available, responsive, and willing to choose them over whatever is pulling at you. That does not mean every father needs to throw his phone away or fix every habit overnight. It means taking one honest step toward reclaiming the moments that matter. Put the phone down at the table. Look your child in the eyes when you get home. Tell the truth about where technology has a grip on you. Ask for help where you need help. Growth begins when a father stops hiding, brings the struggle into the light, and chooses presence again. Not perfectly, but faithfully.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">e8b7db59-7262-488f-93ae-c8cf0316cd19</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 12 May 2026 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/e8b7db59-7262-488f-93ae-c8cf0316cd19.mp3" length="201793920" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>01:24:05</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>13. Breaking the Cycle w/ Kevin O&apos;Donnell</title><itunes:title>Breaking the Cycle w/ Kevin O&apos;Donnell</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>What does it look like to be on the other side of fatherhood? In this episode, the conversation shifts from the daily grind of raising young kids to a long-view perspective from a father who has walked through it all. The tension is real for many dads. You’re in the middle of diapers, discipline, and exhaustion, trying to make the right decisions without knowing how it all plays out. This episode brings clarity to that uncertainty by showing what matters most over time.</p><p></p><p>Through honest reflection and lived experience, this conversation centers on the idea that fatherhood is not about getting everything right, but about staying present, intentional, and grounded in what truly shapes your kids. It’s a look at how small, consistent choices compound over years into trust, connection, and lasting influence.</p><p></p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• What it looks like to move from active parenting into the “grown and gone” season and why it lasts longer than you think</p><p>• How one father broke unhealthy generational patterns and chose a different path for his family</p><p>• The role of mentorship and why many young fathers are navigating life without guidance</p><p>• Why discipline in time, prayer, and daily rhythms matters more than most dads realize</p><p>• How modeling respect and love in marriage shapes what your kids will look for in relationships</p><p>• The importance of creating consistent space for communication, even when life feels too busy</p><p>• Navigating challenging seasons like teenage years, dating, and letting go of control</p><p>• A real picture of what your kids remember and value most when they look back</p><p></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Generational responsibility and intentional change</p><p>• Presence over control</p><p>• Modeling identity through action</p><p>• Emotional safety and open communication</p><p>• Discipline in spiritual leadership</p><p>• Long-term impact over short-term wins</p><p></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Fatherhood is built in moments that feel small and often unnoticed. The way you listen, the way you treat your spouse, the way you show up when you’re tired. These are the things that shape your children far more than perfect decisions ever could. You won’t control every outcome, and you won’t get every moment right, but you can choose to stay present, stay humble, and stay committed to growing. Over time, that kind of fatherhood leaves a mark that carries far beyond your home and into the generations that follow.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What does it look like to be on the other side of fatherhood? In this episode, the conversation shifts from the daily grind of raising young kids to a long-view perspective from a father who has walked through it all. The tension is real for many dads. You’re in the middle of diapers, discipline, and exhaustion, trying to make the right decisions without knowing how it all plays out. This episode brings clarity to that uncertainty by showing what matters most over time.</p><p></p><p>Through honest reflection and lived experience, this conversation centers on the idea that fatherhood is not about getting everything right, but about staying present, intentional, and grounded in what truly shapes your kids. It’s a look at how small, consistent choices compound over years into trust, connection, and lasting influence.</p><p></p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• What it looks like to move from active parenting into the “grown and gone” season and why it lasts longer than you think</p><p>• How one father broke unhealthy generational patterns and chose a different path for his family</p><p>• The role of mentorship and why many young fathers are navigating life without guidance</p><p>• Why discipline in time, prayer, and daily rhythms matters more than most dads realize</p><p>• How modeling respect and love in marriage shapes what your kids will look for in relationships</p><p>• The importance of creating consistent space for communication, even when life feels too busy</p><p>• Navigating challenging seasons like teenage years, dating, and letting go of control</p><p>• A real picture of what your kids remember and value most when they look back</p><p></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Generational responsibility and intentional change</p><p>• Presence over control</p><p>• Modeling identity through action</p><p>• Emotional safety and open communication</p><p>• Discipline in spiritual leadership</p><p>• Long-term impact over short-term wins</p><p></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Fatherhood is built in moments that feel small and often unnoticed. The way you listen, the way you treat your spouse, the way you show up when you’re tired. These are the things that shape your children far more than perfect decisions ever could. You won’t control every outcome, and you won’t get every moment right, but you can choose to stay present, stay humble, and stay committed to growing. Over time, that kind of fatherhood leaves a mark that carries far beyond your home and into the generations that follow.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">3611998e-009a-4519-b0b8-9e93ec6f7a50</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 28 Apr 2026 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/3611998e-009a-4519-b0b8-9e93ec6f7a50.mp3" length="125904000" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>52:28</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>12. Breaking the Cycle: Becoming the Interruption - 5 of 5</title><itunes:title>Breaking the Cycle: Becoming the Interruption - 5 of 5</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>This episode brings the series to a close by zooming out and asking a bigger question: what kind of legacy are you building in your home right now? Not the distant, abstract kind, but the everyday patterns your kids are already absorbing and calling “normal.” The conversation centers on the quiet weight fathers carry, knowing their reactions, habits, and emotional tone are shaping how their children will one day live, relate, and parent.</p><p>There’s an honest tension here. Many dads feel like they’re behind, like they’ve already missed too many moments or made too many mistakes. But instead of staying stuck in that, this episode reframes the goal. It’s not about catching up perfectly. It’s about choosing a direction and becoming the interruption that changes the trajectory for the next generation.</p><p></p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• A candid look at how kids mirror what we say and do, even when it doesn’t reflect our true heart</p><p>• The realization that everyday reactions, especially in frustration, shape a child’s sense of safety</p><p>• Practical shifts from reacting to coaching, helping kids understand their choices instead of just correcting them</p><p>• The idea that patterns don’t stop on their own and require intentional interruption</p><p>• A story of choosing connection over frustration in a bedtime conflict</p><p>• Why consistency in the small, mundane moments matters more than big parenting “wins”</p><p>• The emotional atmosphere of a home and how a father sets the tone without realizing it</p><p>• A challenge to identify and confront one significant pattern instead of avoiding it</p><p></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Generational patterns and intentional interruption</p><p>• Presence and emotional atmosphere in the home</p><p>• Consistency over intensity</p><p>• Faithfulness over flawlessness</p><p>• Identity, humility, and growth</p><p>• Legacy through everyday choices</p><p></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>You don’t have to fix everything at once, and you don’t have to become a perfect dad. What matters is deciding that the patterns you’ve inherited don’t get to continue unchecked. Every small choice to pause, connect, apologize, or respond differently is part of building something new. Your kids are already forming their understanding of what’s normal, and you have the opportunity to shape that in a better direction starting today. Stay consistent, stay humble, and keep moving forward. The work you’re doing right now is bigger than you can see, and it’s worth it.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This episode brings the series to a close by zooming out and asking a bigger question: what kind of legacy are you building in your home right now? Not the distant, abstract kind, but the everyday patterns your kids are already absorbing and calling “normal.” The conversation centers on the quiet weight fathers carry, knowing their reactions, habits, and emotional tone are shaping how their children will one day live, relate, and parent.</p><p>There’s an honest tension here. Many dads feel like they’re behind, like they’ve already missed too many moments or made too many mistakes. But instead of staying stuck in that, this episode reframes the goal. It’s not about catching up perfectly. It’s about choosing a direction and becoming the interruption that changes the trajectory for the next generation.</p><p></p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• A candid look at how kids mirror what we say and do, even when it doesn’t reflect our true heart</p><p>• The realization that everyday reactions, especially in frustration, shape a child’s sense of safety</p><p>• Practical shifts from reacting to coaching, helping kids understand their choices instead of just correcting them</p><p>• The idea that patterns don’t stop on their own and require intentional interruption</p><p>• A story of choosing connection over frustration in a bedtime conflict</p><p>• Why consistency in the small, mundane moments matters more than big parenting “wins”</p><p>• The emotional atmosphere of a home and how a father sets the tone without realizing it</p><p>• A challenge to identify and confront one significant pattern instead of avoiding it</p><p></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Generational patterns and intentional interruption</p><p>• Presence and emotional atmosphere in the home</p><p>• Consistency over intensity</p><p>• Faithfulness over flawlessness</p><p>• Identity, humility, and growth</p><p>• Legacy through everyday choices</p><p></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>You don’t have to fix everything at once, and you don’t have to become a perfect dad. What matters is deciding that the patterns you’ve inherited don’t get to continue unchecked. Every small choice to pause, connect, apologize, or respond differently is part of building something new. Your kids are already forming their understanding of what’s normal, and you have the opportunity to shape that in a better direction starting today. Stay consistent, stay humble, and keep moving forward. The work you’re doing right now is bigger than you can see, and it’s worth it.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">704dc26d-2f71-4668-8dd2-9d00f3f59be9</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 14 Apr 2026 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/704dc26d-2f71-4668-8dd2-9d00f3f59be9.mp3" length="175644480" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>01:13:11</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>11. Breaking the Cycle: Rewriting the Pattern in Real Time - 4 of 5</title><itunes:title>11. Breaking the Cycle: Rewriting the Pattern in Real Time - 4 of 5</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>There are moments in fatherhood where you can feel it building. The pressure, the frustration, the sense that you’re about to react in a way you know you’ll regret. This episode steps directly into those moments and asks a simple but difficult question: what if change doesn’t happen later, but right there in real time?</p><p>As fathers, we often recognize patterns after the fact. But the real work is learning to interrupt them while they’re happening. This conversation explores how small, intentional pauses can reshape how you respond under pressure, helping you move from reaction to leadership in the moments that matter most.</p><p></p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• Real-life moments where frustration builds and the choice to pause changes the outcome</p><p>• The hidden “story” we tell ourselves that drives our reactions in stressful situations</p><p>• Why pressure reveals who we are rather than changing who we are.</p><p>• The challenge of coming home depleted and still choosing presence with your kids</p><p>• How mornings, time pressure, and chaos expose gaps in patience and preparation</p><p>• A simple framework for change: pause, name what’s happening, and choose your response</p><p>• The role of apology and repair in breaking long-standing patterns</p><p></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Self-awareness in high-pressure moments</p><p>• Emotional regulation over reaction</p><p>• Ownership without defensiveness</p><p>• Consistency in small decisions</p><p>• Modeling emotional health for children</p><p>• Identity shaped through intentional action</p><p></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Real change in fatherhood doesn’t come from big declarations, but from small decisions made in the middle of real life. The pause, even if it’s just a few seconds, creates space to choose who you want to be instead of falling back into who you’ve always been. You won’t get it right every time, but each moment is an opportunity to grow, repair, and lead with intention. Over time, those small choices reshape not just your patterns, but the kind of father your children experience every day.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There are moments in fatherhood where you can feel it building. The pressure, the frustration, the sense that you’re about to react in a way you know you’ll regret. This episode steps directly into those moments and asks a simple but difficult question: what if change doesn’t happen later, but right there in real time?</p><p>As fathers, we often recognize patterns after the fact. But the real work is learning to interrupt them while they’re happening. This conversation explores how small, intentional pauses can reshape how you respond under pressure, helping you move from reaction to leadership in the moments that matter most.</p><p></p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• Real-life moments where frustration builds and the choice to pause changes the outcome</p><p>• The hidden “story” we tell ourselves that drives our reactions in stressful situations</p><p>• Why pressure reveals who we are rather than changing who we are.</p><p>• The challenge of coming home depleted and still choosing presence with your kids</p><p>• How mornings, time pressure, and chaos expose gaps in patience and preparation</p><p>• A simple framework for change: pause, name what’s happening, and choose your response</p><p>• The role of apology and repair in breaking long-standing patterns</p><p></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Self-awareness in high-pressure moments</p><p>• Emotional regulation over reaction</p><p>• Ownership without defensiveness</p><p>• Consistency in small decisions</p><p>• Modeling emotional health for children</p><p>• Identity shaped through intentional action</p><p></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Real change in fatherhood doesn’t come from big declarations, but from small decisions made in the middle of real life. The pause, even if it’s just a few seconds, creates space to choose who you want to be instead of falling back into who you’ve always been. You won’t get it right every time, but each moment is an opportunity to grow, repair, and lead with intention. Over time, those small choices reshape not just your patterns, but the kind of father your children experience every day.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">58caaad8-50c0-4d65-bce2-88dc899df428</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 31 Mar 2026 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/58caaad8-50c0-4d65-bce2-88dc899df428.mp3" length="125328960" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>52:13</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>10. Breaking the Cycle: Taking Ownership Without Carrying Shame - 3 of 5</title><itunes:title>Breaking the Cycle: Taking Ownership Without Carrying Shame - 3 of 5</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>Every father has moments he wishes he could rewind. A reaction that came out too sharp. A promise forgotten. A situation where the response had more to do with his own stress or past than with what his child actually needed. Those moments can quietly shape how a father sees himself. Some men use them as a chance to grow. Others begin to believe they are simply failing.</p><p>In this episode, the podcast explores the difference between taking ownership and carrying shame. Fathers cannot break unhealthy cycles if they refuse to look honestly at their patterns. But growth also cannot happen if a man begins to believe his failures define him. Real change begins when a father learns how to acknowledge what needs to change while beginning to live into the identity that has been given to him by our creator.</p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• Why a father’s personal health and inner life always place a ceiling on the quality of his relationships with his kids</p><p>• A discussion about how awareness of unhealthy patterns is only the first step toward real change</p><p>• The critical difference between guilt that leads to growth and shame that attacks a man’s identity</p><p>• Personal stories about seasons of addiction, overwork, and the ways shame can quietly isolate fathers from their families</p><p>• How statements like “this is just the way I am” lock unhealthy cycles in place and prevent transformation</p><p>• What ownership actually looks like in everyday parenting moments such as apologizing, repairing trust, and adjusting responses</p><p>• Why humility and long term commitment to growth matter far more than trying to be a perfect father</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Ownership without shame</p><p>• Identity rooted beyond failure</p><p>• Humility as the path to growth</p><p>• Generational patterns and intentional change</p><p>• Repentance as realignment rather than condemnation</p><p>• Long term transformation in fatherhood</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Breaking unhealthy cycles in fatherhood does not begin with perfection. It begins with honesty. A father who is willing to admit where he has fallen short, apologize when necessary, and keep growing is already moving in the right direction. Shame tells a man that his failures define him and that change is impossible. Ownership says something different. It says that while mistakes are real, growth is still possible. When fathers learn to take responsibility without losing hope, they become the kind of steady and humble men their children need. Over time, those small moments of ownership become the foundation for a new legacy.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Every father has moments he wishes he could rewind. A reaction that came out too sharp. A promise forgotten. A situation where the response had more to do with his own stress or past than with what his child actually needed. Those moments can quietly shape how a father sees himself. Some men use them as a chance to grow. Others begin to believe they are simply failing.</p><p>In this episode, the podcast explores the difference between taking ownership and carrying shame. Fathers cannot break unhealthy cycles if they refuse to look honestly at their patterns. But growth also cannot happen if a man begins to believe his failures define him. Real change begins when a father learns how to acknowledge what needs to change while beginning to live into the identity that has been given to him by our creator.</p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• Why a father’s personal health and inner life always place a ceiling on the quality of his relationships with his kids</p><p>• A discussion about how awareness of unhealthy patterns is only the first step toward real change</p><p>• The critical difference between guilt that leads to growth and shame that attacks a man’s identity</p><p>• Personal stories about seasons of addiction, overwork, and the ways shame can quietly isolate fathers from their families</p><p>• How statements like “this is just the way I am” lock unhealthy cycles in place and prevent transformation</p><p>• What ownership actually looks like in everyday parenting moments such as apologizing, repairing trust, and adjusting responses</p><p>• Why humility and long term commitment to growth matter far more than trying to be a perfect father</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Ownership without shame</p><p>• Identity rooted beyond failure</p><p>• Humility as the path to growth</p><p>• Generational patterns and intentional change</p><p>• Repentance as realignment rather than condemnation</p><p>• Long term transformation in fatherhood</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Breaking unhealthy cycles in fatherhood does not begin with perfection. It begins with honesty. A father who is willing to admit where he has fallen short, apologize when necessary, and keep growing is already moving in the right direction. Shame tells a man that his failures define him and that change is impossible. Ownership says something different. It says that while mistakes are real, growth is still possible. When fathers learn to take responsibility without losing hope, they become the kind of steady and humble men their children need. Over time, those small moments of ownership become the foundation for a new legacy.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">e1a4584e-9555-499d-a327-d1a6caec4ec2</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 17 Mar 2026 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/e1a4584e-9555-499d-a327-d1a6caec4ec2.mp3" length="127139520" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>52:58</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>09. Breaking the Cycle: Separating Inheritance from Identity - 2 of 5</title><itunes:title>Breaking the Cycle: Separating Inheritance from Identity - 2 of 5</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>What shaped you is not the same thing as who you are. In this episode, we slow down and examine the messages we absorbed growing up about masculinity, emotions, discipline, success, and worth. Most of us never consciously chose those beliefs. We inherited them. And over time, those inherited scripts quietly began to feel like identity.</p><p>The tension is real. How do you honor your story without being defined by it? How do you acknowledge what your father modeled without automatically repeating it? This conversation invites you to separate understanding from excuse, inheritance from identity. Presence, not perfection, becomes the path forward.</p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• The difference between becoming aware of patterns and untangling the beliefs underneath them</p><p>• How messages about masculinity and emotional restraint shape the way we lead at home</p><p>• The subtle ways work, conflict, and discipline habits get carried into our own marriages and parenting</p><p>• What it means to “borrow” emotional regulation from our parents and how that impacts our kids</p><p>• The hidden inner scripts many men carry, like “I’m not enough” or “I have to handle this alone”</p><p>• Why understanding your story is healthy, but using it as an excuse keeps you stuck</p><p>• A practical reframing of identity through intentional choices and renewed thinking</p><p>• Real reflections on slow growth, grinding change, and learning to parent differently over time</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Inheritance versus identity</p><p>• Emotional availability and regulation</p><p>• Personal responsibility and growth</p><p>• Intentional fatherhood over autopilot living</p><p>• Generational impact through daily choices</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>What shaped you may explain you, but it does not define you. The beliefs you absorbed, the wounds you carry, and the patterns you learned are a starting point, not a sentence. Growth begins when you move the script from “this is who I am” to “this is something I learned.” From there, you choose differently. Small, steady changes practiced daily can shift the trajectory of your home for generations. You did not choose the family you were raised in, but you do get to choose the family you are building. And every time you choose intention over pattern, you are breaking the cycle.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What shaped you is not the same thing as who you are. In this episode, we slow down and examine the messages we absorbed growing up about masculinity, emotions, discipline, success, and worth. Most of us never consciously chose those beliefs. We inherited them. And over time, those inherited scripts quietly began to feel like identity.</p><p>The tension is real. How do you honor your story without being defined by it? How do you acknowledge what your father modeled without automatically repeating it? This conversation invites you to separate understanding from excuse, inheritance from identity. Presence, not perfection, becomes the path forward.</p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• The difference between becoming aware of patterns and untangling the beliefs underneath them</p><p>• How messages about masculinity and emotional restraint shape the way we lead at home</p><p>• The subtle ways work, conflict, and discipline habits get carried into our own marriages and parenting</p><p>• What it means to “borrow” emotional regulation from our parents and how that impacts our kids</p><p>• The hidden inner scripts many men carry, like “I’m not enough” or “I have to handle this alone”</p><p>• Why understanding your story is healthy, but using it as an excuse keeps you stuck</p><p>• A practical reframing of identity through intentional choices and renewed thinking</p><p>• Real reflections on slow growth, grinding change, and learning to parent differently over time</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Inheritance versus identity</p><p>• Emotional availability and regulation</p><p>• Personal responsibility and growth</p><p>• Intentional fatherhood over autopilot living</p><p>• Generational impact through daily choices</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>What shaped you may explain you, but it does not define you. The beliefs you absorbed, the wounds you carry, and the patterns you learned are a starting point, not a sentence. Growth begins when you move the script from “this is who I am” to “this is something I learned.” From there, you choose differently. Small, steady changes practiced daily can shift the trajectory of your home for generations. You did not choose the family you were raised in, but you do get to choose the family you are building. And every time you choose intention over pattern, you are breaking the cycle.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">6c0849dd-6802-4298-be6d-f0fddaeadb0f</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 03 Mar 2026 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/6c0849dd-6802-4298-be6d-f0fddaeadb0f.mp3" length="184411200" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>01:16:50</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>08. Breaking the Cycle: Seeing the Cycle Clearly - 1 of 5</title><itunes:title>Breaking the Cycle: Seeing the Cycle Clearly - 1 of 5</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>Every father carries something into parenting that he didn’t consciously choose. Patterns. Reactions. Assumptions. Some are good. Some quietly cause damage. In this episode, we begin a new series focused on breaking cycles that were formed long before we ever held our own children.</p><p>You may have had a great dad. You may have had a difficult one. Either way, fatherhood has a way of exposing parts of you that were buried for years. The goal is not to blame the past. It’s to become aware of it. Because awareness is where growth begins. You don’t have to be perfect. But you do have to be present and honest about what shaped you.</p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• Why copying your father or doing the opposite of him both miss the deeper work</p><p>• How parenting exposes stress patterns and emotional reactions you didn’t know were there</p><p>• The difference between treating behaviors and addressing root wounds</p><p>• The concept of “no bad parts” and approaching your struggles with curiosity instead of shame</p><p>• How childhood wounds quietly shape your responses to conflict, intimacy, work, and discipline</p><p>• The connection between hidden shame and destructive coping patterns</p><p>• Why awareness is the first step toward breaking generational cycles</p><p>• Practical encouragement to slow down and identify unhealthy patterns before trying to fix them</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Generational cycles and inherited patterns</p><p>• Awareness before correction</p><p>• Shame-free self-examination</p><p>• Emotional maturity and ownership</p><p>• Healing old wounds to protect future generations</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway</strong></p><p>Breaking the cycle starts with honesty. Not blame. Not shame. Just clarity. When you slow down and ask what shaped you, you begin separating who you are from what you inherited. You are not defined by your wounds, but you are responsible for how you respond to them. The work may feel uncomfortable, but it is deeply hopeful. Every step toward awareness is a step toward becoming the steady, present father your children need.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Every father carries something into parenting that he didn’t consciously choose. Patterns. Reactions. Assumptions. Some are good. Some quietly cause damage. In this episode, we begin a new series focused on breaking cycles that were formed long before we ever held our own children.</p><p>You may have had a great dad. You may have had a difficult one. Either way, fatherhood has a way of exposing parts of you that were buried for years. The goal is not to blame the past. It’s to become aware of it. Because awareness is where growth begins. You don’t have to be perfect. But you do have to be present and honest about what shaped you.</p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• Why copying your father or doing the opposite of him both miss the deeper work</p><p>• How parenting exposes stress patterns and emotional reactions you didn’t know were there</p><p>• The difference between treating behaviors and addressing root wounds</p><p>• The concept of “no bad parts” and approaching your struggles with curiosity instead of shame</p><p>• How childhood wounds quietly shape your responses to conflict, intimacy, work, and discipline</p><p>• The connection between hidden shame and destructive coping patterns</p><p>• Why awareness is the first step toward breaking generational cycles</p><p>• Practical encouragement to slow down and identify unhealthy patterns before trying to fix them</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Generational cycles and inherited patterns</p><p>• Awareness before correction</p><p>• Shame-free self-examination</p><p>• Emotional maturity and ownership</p><p>• Healing old wounds to protect future generations</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway</strong></p><p>Breaking the cycle starts with honesty. Not blame. Not shame. Just clarity. When you slow down and ask what shaped you, you begin separating who you are from what you inherited. You are not defined by your wounds, but you are responsible for how you respond to them. The work may feel uncomfortable, but it is deeply hopeful. Every step toward awareness is a step toward becoming the steady, present father your children need.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">d2b8a90b-e9f3-4288-b0bf-fbb5fdefe1d1</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 17 Feb 2026 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/d2b8a90b-e9f3-4288-b0bf-fbb5fdefe1d1.mp3" length="126621120" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>52:46</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>07. The Long Game of Influence w/ Joel Kovacs</title><itunes:title>The Long Game of Influence w/ Joel Kovacs</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>In this wrap-up conversation for the Presence over Perfection theme, we sit down with our first guest father, Joel Kovacs, to explore what presence looks like over the long haul. This episode steps back from tactics and zooms out to the deeper work of fatherhood: how presence, health, and intentionality shape who our kids become over time.</p><p>We explore the tension many dads feel between providing, leading, and staying emotionally connected. This episode confronts the reality that being physically present is not the same as being emotionally safe, and that influence with our kids is built slowly through trust, consistency, and humility, not control or perfection.</p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• How early assumptions about fatherhood often form unconsciously</p><p>• The difference between being reactionary as a dad and leading with intention</p><p>• Why healing your own story matters for how your kids experience you</p><p>• How presence creates influence, especially as kids grow into their teenage years</p><p>• The role of trust, emotional safety, and timing in shaping your child’s growth</p><p>• Learning when to speak, when to listen, and when to wait</p><p>• Why leadership in the home is more about influence than authority</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Presence as a long-term investment</p><p>• Emotional health and self-awareness</p><p>• Influence built through trust</p><p>• Leadership through humility and clarity</p><p>• Intentional parenting over reactive parenting</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Presence is not a momentary choice, it is a posture built over years. This episode reminds us that our kids are always learning from who we are when we show up, not just from what we say. Growth in fatherhood requires both action and inner work, choosing to lead even when we feel unprepared, while committing to become healthier along the way. When fathers pursue presence with humility and intention, they create space for trust, influence, and lasting connection that carries far beyond childhood.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this wrap-up conversation for the Presence over Perfection theme, we sit down with our first guest father, Joel Kovacs, to explore what presence looks like over the long haul. This episode steps back from tactics and zooms out to the deeper work of fatherhood: how presence, health, and intentionality shape who our kids become over time.</p><p>We explore the tension many dads feel between providing, leading, and staying emotionally connected. This episode confronts the reality that being physically present is not the same as being emotionally safe, and that influence with our kids is built slowly through trust, consistency, and humility, not control or perfection.</p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• How early assumptions about fatherhood often form unconsciously</p><p>• The difference between being reactionary as a dad and leading with intention</p><p>• Why healing your own story matters for how your kids experience you</p><p>• How presence creates influence, especially as kids grow into their teenage years</p><p>• The role of trust, emotional safety, and timing in shaping your child’s growth</p><p>• Learning when to speak, when to listen, and when to wait</p><p>• Why leadership in the home is more about influence than authority</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Presence as a long-term investment</p><p>• Emotional health and self-awareness</p><p>• Influence built through trust</p><p>• Leadership through humility and clarity</p><p>• Intentional parenting over reactive parenting</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Presence is not a momentary choice, it is a posture built over years. This episode reminds us that our kids are always learning from who we are when we show up, not just from what we say. Growth in fatherhood requires both action and inner work, choosing to lead even when we feel unprepared, while committing to become healthier along the way. When fathers pursue presence with humility and intention, they create space for trust, influence, and lasting connection that carries far beyond childhood.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">2e390cf6-e273-4e2e-8ae7-9538fef20b76</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 03 Feb 2026 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/2e390cf6-e273-4e2e-8ae7-9538fef20b76.mp3" length="175342080" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>01:13:04</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>06. Presence over Perfection: Slowing Down to See Them - 4 of 4</title><itunes:title>Presence over Perfection: Slowing Down to See Them - 4 of 4</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Episode 4 of 4: Presence over Perfection: Slowing Down to See Them</strong></p><p>In this episode of Building Up Fathers, we close out our Presence over Perfection series by addressing one of the quietest but most destructive threats to connection in the home: unchecked busyness. Not bad intentions. Not lack of love. But a pace of life that leaves no room to actually see our kids.</p><p>We explore how presence doesn’t usually disappear in dramatic ways. It erodes slowly through hurry, distraction, and the belief that providing and productivity can substitute for connection. This conversation invites fathers to slow down, create margin, and recognize that the most meaningful moments with our kids often happen in the unplanned spaces.</p><p>Through real stories, analogies, and reflection, we look at how intentional slowing down builds safety, trust, and long-term relational health with our children.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• Why busyness is the quiet enemy of presence, even when it feels responsible</p><p>• How kids experience rushed parents as unavailable parents</p><p>• The difference between scheduling connection and creating margin for it</p><p>• Why presence usually happens side by side, not face to face</p><p>• How hurried homes feel like hallways instead of rooms</p><p>• The long-term cost of trading once-in-a-lifetime moments for productivity</p><p>• Why providing for our families can become a hiding place instead of a gift</p><p>• How predictable rhythms and unhurried spaces build trust over time</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Key Themes</strong>:</p><p>• Slowing down is about sustainability, not laziness</p><p>• Margin creates the space where real connection forms</p><p>• Children feel safest when access to us is predictable and pressure-free</p><p>• Presence shapes a child’s sense of worth more than accomplishment</p><p>• God’s posture toward us as fathers is steady, patient, and unhurried</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Presence grows when we slow our pace enough to notice what is right in front of us. Our kids do not need more productivity, better schedules, or finished projects. They need access to us. When we create margin, we create room for trust. And when trust is built, relationships last far beyond the season when our children still need us.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Episode 4 of 4: Presence over Perfection: Slowing Down to See Them</strong></p><p>In this episode of Building Up Fathers, we close out our Presence over Perfection series by addressing one of the quietest but most destructive threats to connection in the home: unchecked busyness. Not bad intentions. Not lack of love. But a pace of life that leaves no room to actually see our kids.</p><p>We explore how presence doesn’t usually disappear in dramatic ways. It erodes slowly through hurry, distraction, and the belief that providing and productivity can substitute for connection. This conversation invites fathers to slow down, create margin, and recognize that the most meaningful moments with our kids often happen in the unplanned spaces.</p><p>Through real stories, analogies, and reflection, we look at how intentional slowing down builds safety, trust, and long-term relational health with our children.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• Why busyness is the quiet enemy of presence, even when it feels responsible</p><p>• How kids experience rushed parents as unavailable parents</p><p>• The difference between scheduling connection and creating margin for it</p><p>• Why presence usually happens side by side, not face to face</p><p>• How hurried homes feel like hallways instead of rooms</p><p>• The long-term cost of trading once-in-a-lifetime moments for productivity</p><p>• Why providing for our families can become a hiding place instead of a gift</p><p>• How predictable rhythms and unhurried spaces build trust over time</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Key Themes</strong>:</p><p>• Slowing down is about sustainability, not laziness</p><p>• Margin creates the space where real connection forms</p><p>• Children feel safest when access to us is predictable and pressure-free</p><p>• Presence shapes a child’s sense of worth more than accomplishment</p><p>• God’s posture toward us as fathers is steady, patient, and unhurried</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Presence grows when we slow our pace enough to notice what is right in front of us. Our kids do not need more productivity, better schedules, or finished projects. They need access to us. When we create margin, we create room for trust. And when trust is built, relationships last far beyond the season when our children still need us.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">7f67dd0c-76c4-4988-b625-6d55d99da81a</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 20 Jan 2026 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/7f67dd0c-76c4-4988-b625-6d55d99da81a.mp3" length="149037120" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>01:02:06</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>05. Presence over Perfection: When You Fall Short - 3 of 4</title><itunes:title>Presence over Perfection: When You Fall Short - 3 of 4</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Episode 3 of 4: Presence over Perfection: When You Fall Short</strong></p><p>In this episode of Building Up Fathers, we step into one of the most uncomfortable but necessary parts of fatherhood: what happens when we miss it. Losing patience, speaking too harshly, choosing control over connection. Not if it happens, but when it happens.</p><p>We talk honestly about real moments of failure, especially around bedtime, stress, and exhaustion, and how those moments reveal what kind of father we believe ourselves to be. More importantly, we explore how presence shows up most clearly not in getting everything right, but in how we respond after we get it wrong.</p><p>Drawing from personal stories, parenting struggles, and hard-earned insight, this episode reframes failure as a crossroads. One path leads to shame and withdrawal. The other leads back toward humility, repair, and deeper trust with our kids.</p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• Real stories of falling short as dads and the tension between control and compassion</p><p>• Why bedtime often exposes our limits more than any other part of the day</p><p>• The difference between guilt and shame, and how each one shapes our response</p><p>• Why conviction invites repair while condemnation pushes us into isolation</p><p>• The power of apologizing to our kids and how it models strength, not weakness</p><p>• How our children learn how to handle failure by watching how we handle ours</p><p>• The long-term impact of choosing reconnection over defensiveness</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Presence is proven in repair, not perfection</p><p>• Guilt points us toward growth while shame attacks our identity</p><p>• Our value as fathers is not defined by our worst moments</p><p>• Children need honesty and humility more than flawless leadership</p><p>• Healing in our kids often begins when we take responsibility without excuses</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Every father falls short. The question is what we do next. When we choose humility over pride and reconnection over retreat, we show our kids that love is stronger than failure. Presence is not about never messing up. It is about coming back, owning it, and staying engaged. That is where trust is rebuilt. That is where hearts stay connected.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Episode 3 of 4: Presence over Perfection: When You Fall Short</strong></p><p>In this episode of Building Up Fathers, we step into one of the most uncomfortable but necessary parts of fatherhood: what happens when we miss it. Losing patience, speaking too harshly, choosing control over connection. Not if it happens, but when it happens.</p><p>We talk honestly about real moments of failure, especially around bedtime, stress, and exhaustion, and how those moments reveal what kind of father we believe ourselves to be. More importantly, we explore how presence shows up most clearly not in getting everything right, but in how we respond after we get it wrong.</p><p>Drawing from personal stories, parenting struggles, and hard-earned insight, this episode reframes failure as a crossroads. One path leads to shame and withdrawal. The other leads back toward humility, repair, and deeper trust with our kids.</p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• Real stories of falling short as dads and the tension between control and compassion</p><p>• Why bedtime often exposes our limits more than any other part of the day</p><p>• The difference between guilt and shame, and how each one shapes our response</p><p>• Why conviction invites repair while condemnation pushes us into isolation</p><p>• The power of apologizing to our kids and how it models strength, not weakness</p><p>• How our children learn how to handle failure by watching how we handle ours</p><p>• The long-term impact of choosing reconnection over defensiveness</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Presence is proven in repair, not perfection</p><p>• Guilt points us toward growth while shame attacks our identity</p><p>• Our value as fathers is not defined by our worst moments</p><p>• Children need honesty and humility more than flawless leadership</p><p>• Healing in our kids often begins when we take responsibility without excuses</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Every father falls short. The question is what we do next. When we choose humility over pride and reconnection over retreat, we show our kids that love is stronger than failure. Presence is not about never messing up. It is about coming back, owning it, and staying engaged. That is where trust is rebuilt. That is where hearts stay connected.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">1099316b-7892-4054-9150-a1f3adbf578f</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 23 Dec 2025 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/1099316b-7892-4054-9150-a1f3adbf578f.mp3" length="170213760" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>01:10:55</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>04. Presence over Perfection: The Power of Being Present - 2 of 4</title><itunes:title>Presence over Perfection: The Power of Being Present - 2 of 4</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Episode 2 of 4: Presence over Perfection: The Power of Being Present</strong></p><p>In this episode of Building Up Fathers, we continue our exploration of what it means to show up for our kids in ways that shape them for life. Last week we confronted the myth of the perfect dad. This week we take a deeper step: learning that&nbsp;<strong>presence isn’t just being in the room. It’s offering our uninhibited attention.</strong></p><p>Using real moments from our homes and research that reveals how kids interpret our focus, we dig into why presence is so hard in the modern world and how small intentional shifts can radically change the way our children experience us. The goal isn’t guilt. It’s clarity, encouragement, and a renewed invitation to enter our kids’ world the way our Father enters ours.</p><h3><strong>In This Episode:</strong></h3><p>• Why presence is more than proximity and how kids feel the difference by age two</p><p>• The mental and emotional load fathers carry when they walk through the door</p><p>• How distraction unintentionally communicates disinterest, even when we don’t mean it</p><p>• Research showing how phones, screens, and “technoference” affect a child’s sense of security</p><p>• The contrast between what dads feel internally (stress, deadlines, fatigue) and what kids interpret</p><p>• Why kids misbehave more when they’re disconnected, and how behavior is often a bid for reconnection</p><p>• Setting family expectations: building small rhythms that help everyone transition well</p><p>• The weight of keeping our word and how broken promises, even small ones, shape trust</p><p>• Why entering your child’s world through play communicates love in a language they understand</p><p>• How only 20–30% attuned moments are enough to form strong, secure attachment</p><h3><strong>Key Themes:</strong></h3><p>• Presence is attentive, not perfect</p><p>• Children don’t understand our stress; they understand our availability</p><p>• Misbehavior is often a signal, not an attack</p><p>• The way we handle transitions shapes the emotional climate of home</p><p>• Small rhythms of connection build long-term security</p><p>• Our attention reflects God’s heart: near, steady, and engaged</p><p><br></p><h3><strong>Takeaway:</strong></h3><p>Your kids aren’t asking for a flawless dad. They’re asking for&nbsp;<em>you</em>. Even short moments of genuine attention anchor them in safety and belonging. Presence isn’t a grand gesture. It’s a repeated decision to enter their world, meet them where they are, and show them that nothing in your life is more important than their heart in that moment. This is where connection deepens, trust grows, and the foundation of fatherhood is strengthened, one attentive moment at a time.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Episode 2 of 4: Presence over Perfection: The Power of Being Present</strong></p><p>In this episode of Building Up Fathers, we continue our exploration of what it means to show up for our kids in ways that shape them for life. Last week we confronted the myth of the perfect dad. This week we take a deeper step: learning that&nbsp;<strong>presence isn’t just being in the room. It’s offering our uninhibited attention.</strong></p><p>Using real moments from our homes and research that reveals how kids interpret our focus, we dig into why presence is so hard in the modern world and how small intentional shifts can radically change the way our children experience us. The goal isn’t guilt. It’s clarity, encouragement, and a renewed invitation to enter our kids’ world the way our Father enters ours.</p><h3><strong>In This Episode:</strong></h3><p>• Why presence is more than proximity and how kids feel the difference by age two</p><p>• The mental and emotional load fathers carry when they walk through the door</p><p>• How distraction unintentionally communicates disinterest, even when we don’t mean it</p><p>• Research showing how phones, screens, and “technoference” affect a child’s sense of security</p><p>• The contrast between what dads feel internally (stress, deadlines, fatigue) and what kids interpret</p><p>• Why kids misbehave more when they’re disconnected, and how behavior is often a bid for reconnection</p><p>• Setting family expectations: building small rhythms that help everyone transition well</p><p>• The weight of keeping our word and how broken promises, even small ones, shape trust</p><p>• Why entering your child’s world through play communicates love in a language they understand</p><p>• How only 20–30% attuned moments are enough to form strong, secure attachment</p><h3><strong>Key Themes:</strong></h3><p>• Presence is attentive, not perfect</p><p>• Children don’t understand our stress; they understand our availability</p><p>• Misbehavior is often a signal, not an attack</p><p>• The way we handle transitions shapes the emotional climate of home</p><p>• Small rhythms of connection build long-term security</p><p>• Our attention reflects God’s heart: near, steady, and engaged</p><p><br></p><h3><strong>Takeaway:</strong></h3><p>Your kids aren’t asking for a flawless dad. They’re asking for&nbsp;<em>you</em>. Even short moments of genuine attention anchor them in safety and belonging. Presence isn’t a grand gesture. It’s a repeated decision to enter their world, meet them where they are, and show them that nothing in your life is more important than their heart in that moment. This is where connection deepens, trust grows, and the foundation of fatherhood is strengthened, one attentive moment at a time.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">30b32246-dacc-43ff-af34-7353cf23be88</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 09 Dec 2025 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/30b32246-dacc-43ff-af34-7353cf23be88.mp3" length="135741120" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>56:34</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>03. Presence over Perfection: The Myth of the Perfect Dad - 1 of 4</title><itunes:title> Presence over Perfection: The Myth of the Perfect Dad - 1 of 4</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Episode 1 of 4: Presence over Perfection: The Myth of the Perfect Dad</strong></p><p>In this episode of Building Up Fathers, we begin a four-week journey exploring how real change as fathers starts with presence, not perfection. We often think improvement begins with fixing ourselves, getting organized, or trying to become the “ideal” parent. But our kids aren’t waiting for a flawless dad. They’re longing for one who simply shows up.</p><p>Drawing from real stories, honest failures, and everyday moments that feel heavier than they should, we talk through the pressures dads experience, especially the lies we believe about needing to be perfect before we can be present.</p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• The power of simple gratitude and how it reframes a father’s day &nbsp;</p><p>• Parenting fail stories that remind us how perceptive kids really are, and how quickly our words can shape their world</p><p>• The tension between wanting to get things done and wanting to love our kids well</p><p>• Why “showing up” has two sides: physical presence and emotional presence</p><p>• The natural pull toward escape; phones, work, projects, and how it keeps us from being attentive fathers</p><p>• Healthy boundaries, tantrums, and why a child’s pushback doesn’t mean you’re doing it wrong</p><p>• The idea that true independence is built on strong attachment, not early detachment</p><p>• The long-term view of fatherhood: raising kids into adults who choose to return to us because we were there for them</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Being steady, near, reliable, and attentive</p><p>• Learning to join our kids in their emotions rather than fixing them</p><p>• Reframing fatherhood as a long-term investment</p><p>• Why our kids need our genuine presence more than our polished version</p><p>• How focusing on what matters pulls us closer to God’s heart for us as fathers</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Perfection never produced a healthy home, but presence does. The real win isn’t flawless parenting, it’s showing up again and again, even when you’re tired, imperfect, or unsure. That’s where connection is built. That’s where trust grows. And that’s where the heart of fatherhood lives.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Episode 1 of 4: Presence over Perfection: The Myth of the Perfect Dad</strong></p><p>In this episode of Building Up Fathers, we begin a four-week journey exploring how real change as fathers starts with presence, not perfection. We often think improvement begins with fixing ourselves, getting organized, or trying to become the “ideal” parent. But our kids aren’t waiting for a flawless dad. They’re longing for one who simply shows up.</p><p>Drawing from real stories, honest failures, and everyday moments that feel heavier than they should, we talk through the pressures dads experience, especially the lies we believe about needing to be perfect before we can be present.</p><p><strong>In This Episode:</strong></p><p>• The power of simple gratitude and how it reframes a father’s day &nbsp;</p><p>• Parenting fail stories that remind us how perceptive kids really are, and how quickly our words can shape their world</p><p>• The tension between wanting to get things done and wanting to love our kids well</p><p>• Why “showing up” has two sides: physical presence and emotional presence</p><p>• The natural pull toward escape; phones, work, projects, and how it keeps us from being attentive fathers</p><p>• Healthy boundaries, tantrums, and why a child’s pushback doesn’t mean you’re doing it wrong</p><p>• The idea that true independence is built on strong attachment, not early detachment</p><p>• The long-term view of fatherhood: raising kids into adults who choose to return to us because we were there for them</p><p><strong>Key Themes:</strong></p><p>• Being steady, near, reliable, and attentive</p><p>• Learning to join our kids in their emotions rather than fixing them</p><p>• Reframing fatherhood as a long-term investment</p><p>• Why our kids need our genuine presence more than our polished version</p><p>• How focusing on what matters pulls us closer to God’s heart for us as fathers</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Takeaway:</strong></p><p>Perfection never produced a healthy home, but presence does. The real win isn’t flawless parenting, it’s showing up again and again, even when you’re tired, imperfect, or unsure. That’s where connection is built. That’s where trust grows. And that’s where the heart of fatherhood lives.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">eef68897-e882-43e5-8fe1-43edb15247e1</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 25 Nov 2025 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/eef68897-e882-43e5-8fe1-43edb15247e1.mp3" length="179446080" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>01:14:46</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>02. There’s No Accidental Growth</title><itunes:title>There’s No Accidental Growth</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode of&nbsp;<em>Building Up Fathers</em>, we sit down for an honest conversation about the areas every dad needs to work on if we want to grow into the fathers our kids need.</p><p>We with real-life updates and “Parenting Wins,” where we share vulnerable stories about foster parenting, family recovery, and the beautiful chaos of being both dad and mom for a season. From there, the conversation dives deep into the heart of fatherhood, where growth begins with us.</p><p>Together we explore:</p><p><br></p><ul><li>What it means to move from&nbsp;<strong>autopilot to intentional parenting</strong></li><li>Why becoming a better father starts with&nbsp;<strong>healing our own brokenness</strong></li><li>The tension between wanting to lead spiritually and feeling like a&nbsp;<strong>hypocrite</strong></li><li>How kids learn more from what’s&nbsp;<strong>caught than taught</strong></li><li>The slow, steady growth that happens when we keep showing up and doing the work</li></ul><br/><p><br></p><p>This isn’t a “how-to” guide. It’s a real conversation about reflection, humility, and the pursuit of becoming whole men who can lead with love, patience, and purpose.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode of&nbsp;<em>Building Up Fathers</em>, we sit down for an honest conversation about the areas every dad needs to work on if we want to grow into the fathers our kids need.</p><p>We with real-life updates and “Parenting Wins,” where we share vulnerable stories about foster parenting, family recovery, and the beautiful chaos of being both dad and mom for a season. From there, the conversation dives deep into the heart of fatherhood, where growth begins with us.</p><p>Together we explore:</p><p><br></p><ul><li>What it means to move from&nbsp;<strong>autopilot to intentional parenting</strong></li><li>Why becoming a better father starts with&nbsp;<strong>healing our own brokenness</strong></li><li>The tension between wanting to lead spiritually and feeling like a&nbsp;<strong>hypocrite</strong></li><li>How kids learn more from what’s&nbsp;<strong>caught than taught</strong></li><li>The slow, steady growth that happens when we keep showing up and doing the work</li></ul><br/><p><br></p><p>This isn’t a “how-to” guide. It’s a real conversation about reflection, humility, and the pursuit of becoming whole men who can lead with love, patience, and purpose.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">aaa63621-3179-4837-ab32-f6dacd1e5b9d</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Tue, 11 Nov 2025 04:00:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/aaa63621-3179-4837-ab32-f6dacd1e5b9d.mp3" length="83523840" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>34:48</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>01. Welcome To: The Intro</title><itunes:title>Welcome To: The Intro</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>Being a dad today is both an incredible privilege and a weighty responsibility. Our kids don’t just need providers, they need present, intentional fathers who love, guide, protect, and model the kind of character that helps them flourish. The truth is, none of us step into fatherhood with it all figured out. We stumble, we learn, we succeed, and we fail. But every day is another gift to show up.</p><p>At the core of this podcast is the belief that fatherhood is a practice. It’s something we can grow into and strengthen over time. It’s not about perfection, but about progress. And as followers of Jesus, we recognize that we have the ultimate example in God Himself, our perfect Father. He is faithful, patient, and present, and He calls us to reflect His love in how we lead our families.</p><p><br></p><p>This podcast matters because dads matter. When fathers embrace growth, humility, and presence, it changes everything. Our homes, our marriages, our children’s futures, and even generations to come. These conversations, stories, and insights are here to encourage and challenge us to become more like the Father who first loved us. Together, we can learn to live as dads who show up fully, love deeply, and leave a lasting legacy.</p><p>---</p><p>Proverbs 20:7 - "The righteous lead blameless lives; blessed are their children after them."</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Being a dad today is both an incredible privilege and a weighty responsibility. Our kids don’t just need providers, they need present, intentional fathers who love, guide, protect, and model the kind of character that helps them flourish. The truth is, none of us step into fatherhood with it all figured out. We stumble, we learn, we succeed, and we fail. But every day is another gift to show up.</p><p>At the core of this podcast is the belief that fatherhood is a practice. It’s something we can grow into and strengthen over time. It’s not about perfection, but about progress. And as followers of Jesus, we recognize that we have the ultimate example in God Himself, our perfect Father. He is faithful, patient, and present, and He calls us to reflect His love in how we lead our families.</p><p><br></p><p>This podcast matters because dads matter. When fathers embrace growth, humility, and presence, it changes everything. Our homes, our marriages, our children’s futures, and even generations to come. These conversations, stories, and insights are here to encourage and challenge us to become more like the Father who first loved us. Together, we can learn to live as dads who show up fully, love deeply, and leave a lasting legacy.</p><p>---</p><p>Proverbs 20:7 - "The righteous lead blameless lives; blessed are their children after them."</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://building-up-fathers.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">36f0ef71-22d1-4ff5-8c11-b381ae7a3869</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/6c2bf920-5622-4ea3-8449-58fcd2b08955/Building-Up-Fathers-logo.png"/><pubDate>Thu, 09 Oct 2025 16:12:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/36f0ef71-22d1-4ff5-8c11-b381ae7a3869.mp3" length="124975680" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>52:04</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item></channel></rss>