Host Zach Reeser sits down with his friend Zach McCann — a former pastor turned Nashville production company owner and father of six kids ranging from 12 down to 3. Zach McCann shares how he and his wife married young, started having kids almost immediately, and learned to parent on the fly. The heart of the conversation is a recent real-life story: after a hard workday, Zach McCann and his wife "laid into" their kids over undone chores, watched them shrink in shame, and then circled back to apologize and rebuild trust — without removing the consequences. It's a practical, honest look at tipping points, creating a safe space, holding the line on responsibility, and parenting through distinct developmental phases.
A hard day at work spills into the home. The goal isn't to never lose it; it's to own it when you do.
You can say "I was wrong to talk to you that way" and still hold kids accountable for the responsibility they failed. Separating the two is what keeps it from becoming "everybody's off the hook because we feel bad."
When his daughter asked "Am I a bad kid?", it exposed how easily frustration can make a kid question their worth rather than their behavior.
Six kids, very different temperaments, one thing that works for all of them: validating their feelings and letting them tell you when they're upset, even at you.
Explaining the reasoning builds ownership and critical thinking — at home and on a team.
Phase 1 (0–3): physically exhausting, protect your reset before walking in the door. Phase 2 (~4–10): imagination and connection — soak it up, you're still the hero. Phase 3 (10/11+): emotionally exhausting — ask better questions instead of handing out answers so they learn to think for themselves.
You can do hard.
After a hard day, build in a 15–20 minute reset before engaging the family — sit in the car, take a 10-minute walk, or put on headphones; if you work from home, tell your spouse "I need 15 minutes" so you re-enter in dad mode, not work mode.
The next time you lose your temper, circle back and apologize specifically for the reaction ("I was wrong to talk to you that way") while keeping any earned consequence in place.
When correcting a kid, name the action, not their character — and watch for shame signals (shrinking, going silent, "am I a bad kid?").
Give every child an age-appropriate responsibility/chore so the household functions; separate non-paid responsibilities from paid "extra" tasks.
Set up a kid commission/allowance system tied to a goal they're saving toward (the family uses Greenlight cards; host uses a commission structure with a savings goal).
Practical skills, real stories, and one thing to actually do this week with your family. Written by a dad in the trenches, not a marketing department.
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