March DadNess - The Draft – Discovering Your Role as a Dad When You Get Called Up to the Big Leagues
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Episode 249 - March DadNess - The Draft – Discovering Your Role as a Dad When You Get Called Up to the Big Leagues
The Draft – Discovering Your Role as a DadThink back to the most exciting day in sports—the draft. The cameras are rolling, the names are called, and every team looks at their first pick not for what they already are, but for what they could become. That’s fatherhood. When your child enters your life, you’re drafted to the team. You might not feel ready. You might not have a playbook. But you’ve got potential—and that’s where the journey begins.
Letting Go of the Fantasy DadMany of us enter fatherhood carrying an ideal image—the “highlight reel dad” who always knows what to say, never loses his cool, and has it all figured out. But that version of dad often lives in commercials, not real life.
- There is tension between expectation and reality
- The guilt or frustration of not matching your own “dream dad” image
- Accepting that authenticity beats perfection every time
Maybe you pictured being the outdoorsy dad with hiking trips every weekend, but your kid would rather draw or build Lego worlds. Letting go of your fantasy dad opens up room for the dad your child actually needs.
Understanding Your Child’s Unique WiringEvery player brings their own strengths to the team. The same goes for your child—their temperament, communication style, and needs shape how you show up as a dad.
- Learn to read your child the way a good coach learns to read a player
- Adapt your parenting style based on age, personality, and season of life
- Replace “What’s wrong with my kid?” with “What’s unique about my kid?”
Your kids have very different personalities - lean into what makes them unique instead of remaking them into your image
Choosing Your Role Instead of Drifting Into ItOn any team, players who drift through the season without clarity don’t contribute much. As dads, the same applies. We can either choose how we’ll show up, or drift and react.
- How to intentionally define your “dad role” (mentor, encourager, steady anchor, playmaker, listener)
- Why clarity reduces stress and resentment in parenting
- How communication with your partner can help align family “positions”
I would love for you to take 5 minutes after this episode to write down how you wantyour kids to describe you as a Dad in the next 10 years—this helps turn intention into action.
Building Around Strengths, Growing WeaknessesTeams win by playing to strengths but also training for balance. As dads:
- Leverage what you’re naturally good at (maybe you’re patient, or creative, or a great teacher)
- Be humble enough to work on weak spots (maybe listening, consistency, or emotional sharing)
- Model growth—you’re not perfect, and your kids shouldn’t expect you to be
Parenting Parallel: You Are Not Every Position
No dad can be every position on the team. You shouldn’t try to be everything - just the part you’re uniquely wired for. That’s how teams, and families, flourish.
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https://dadspace.ca
music provided by Blue Dot Sessions
Song: The Big Ten https://app.sessions.blue/browse/track/258270