19/04/2026
You're walking with your kids. They're chatting about something. You nod in the right places. But your head is still at work. Replaying the conversation you should have had differently. Drafting tomorrow's email. Running the list.
Your kids feel it before you do. The slightly-too-quick "mm-hmm." The way they stop trying to pull you into what they're saying after the third attempt.
And later, once the day winds down, you feel it too. That small, guilty ache that says: I wasn't really there.
Here's what I want you to hear, from 12+ years of sitting with men who carry exactly this:
You're not a bad dad. You're an overloaded one.
There's a difference. A bad dad doesn't notice. You do. That quiet pull in your chest right now, that's not failure. That's the part of you that still cares deeply, trying to get your attention.
The men I see in clinic aren't broken. They're running on a nervous system that's been in "get through the day" mode for so long it's forgotten how to come home. Physically, you're on the walk. Emotionally, you're still at the desk.
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A quick ask, dad to dad.
I'm building a programme for men who recognise themselves in this post.
Before I finalise it, I want to hear from you.
Not a sales call. A proper conversation. 30 minutes.
DM me "Dad chat" — I'll take it from there.
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One honest conversation is enough for today.
— Nic
Clinical Psychologist for Men