Your Kids Aren’t Your Friends (And Losing My Cat Taught Me Something I Didn’t Expect)
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A proposito di questo titolo
This episode is a little different.
It’s part reintroduction (the real me—high energy, no fluff, no filter), part parenting line-in-the-sand, and part raw grief.
I talk about something I’ve been seeing more and more: parents treating their kids like peers—like friends—pulling them into adult conversations, adult conflict, and adult emotional weight.
And then I share something that hit me hard: when I found out my cat, Onyx, died, it cracked me open in a way I didn’t expect. I used to be the guy who didn’t understand why people grieved pets. I get it now.
In this episode- Why your children are not your friends (and why that boundary protects them)
- The danger of making kids your confidant or “little ally”
- How the way you parent teaches your kids how to relate to authority (bosses, teachers, the real world)
- What losing Onyx taught me about attachment, emotional regulation, and grief
- Why pets can provide a kind of consistent, unconditional connection that many of us don’t experience often
- Parents: keep the boundary. Kids deserve to be kids.
- Grief: it’s not about “rank.” It’s about connection.
- Life: don’t keep re-harming yourself by replaying old pain—learn what you can, then let it go.
More from me: https://bio.site/sayitplain
If this helped you- Like
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- Share it with a parent who needs to hear it (or someone grieving a pet)
And if you’ve ever been through pet loss: I’m genuinely sorry. I didn’t understand before… but I do now.
Hashtags#Parenting #Boundaries #Fatherhood #CoParenting #MensMentalHealth #Grief #PetLoss #ADHD #RealTalk #ChaosToClarity