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Confidence and Arrogance - The Fine Line Every Dad Should Know

Confidence and Arrogance - The Fine Line Every Dad Should Know

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Episode 232 - Confidence and Arrogance - The Fine Line Every Dad Should Know

A simple way to put it for dads: confidence is “I’m valuable and capable,” while arrogance is “I’m more valuable and more capable than you.” Kids, partners, and coworkers feel safe around confidence and small around arrogance.​

Clear definitions for dads
  • Confidence: A grounded belief in your abilities, with a realistic sense of strengths and weaknesses, and a willingness to learn and ask for help.​
  • Arrogance: An inflated sense of importance, exaggerating your abilities, needing to be right, and putting others down to feel strong.​

How it feels to your family
  • Confident dad: Listens to his kids and partner, makes decisions, owns mistakes, and still shows respect and warmth, so the home feels safe and collaborative.​
  • Arrogant dad: Dismisses opinions, talks over others, blames, or mocks “weakness,” so the home feels tense and people stop being honest with him.​

Quick self-check questions

Ask before you speak or act:

  • “Am I trying to serve or to prove something?” Confidence serves; arrogance proves.​
  • “Do I still respect this person if they disagree with me or see my flaws?” Confidence can handle disagreement and imperfection; arrogance can’t.​

Everyday dad examples
  • With kids: Confident dad says, “I know how to handle this, but I also want to hear how you see it.” Arrogant dad says or implies, “Because I’m the dad, I’m automatically right, end of story.”​
  • With partner: Confident dad holds a strong opinion and listens, adjusts when shown he’s wrong. Arrogant dad doubles down, keeps score, or refuses to apologize.​
  • At work: Confident dad celebrates the team and takes responsibility when things go wrong. Arrogant dad takes all the credit and shifts blame when things fail.​

How to grow confident, not arrogant
  • Ground your identity: Remind yourself your worth isn’t based on your last win or loss as a dad, husband, or employee; it’s deeper than performance.​
  • Practice humility: Admit “I don’t know” and “I was wrong” regularly; this builds trust and actually strengthens how capable you look to your kids and partner.​
  • Use strength to lift: Any time you feel strong—physically, financially, or intellectually—ask, “How can I use this to support, not to dominate, my family?”​

“Strength with humility is confidence; strength without humility becomes arrogance,” then walk through these family, marriage, and work examples with honest stories and practical self-check questions

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https://dadspace.ca

music provided by Blue Dot Sessions

Song: The Big Ten https://app.sessions.blue/browse/track/258270

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