Zach sits down with Matt Karam, a lifelong martial arts instructor from Phoenix who, with his wife, has taught thousands of kids and coached their parents. Matt argues that children form their core habits by about age nine, so the real work of fathering is intentional, repeated practice while kids are still under your roof. Through stories — hollering at his five-year-old daughter until he broke the pattern, a dad who "hangs his troubles on a tree" before walking inside, a mom who accidentally left her middle child out of family chores, and a tiny girl who kept failing to break a board — Matt shows that kids mirror their parents, need clear expectations, and build confidence through struggle they're allowed to work through. The throughline is the show's core idea: nobody hands you the manual, so dads have to teach the skills their kids will need when the parents aren't there to rescue them.
Matt cites a Brown University study of 50,000 families finding a child's habits get set by around nine — so the window for intentional habit-building is earlier than most dads assume.
If you want your child to say please and thank you, you have to say it yourself. You can't holler your kids into being calm or command respect you don't model.
"Clean your room" or "make your bed" means nothing until you demonstrate the standard — like a new hire who's never been shown the job then gets chewed out on day one.
Watching once ~20%, watching plus discussion ~50%, doing it with them ~75% — then repeat daily for a week to make it stick.
The moments a kid melts down or resists are the reps that build coping skills for when you're not there. Rescuing them robs them of the lesson.
The girl who finally broke the board (on her third attempt) carried that proof of "I can do hard things" into high school golf and college.
If I want my children to say please or thank you, they're gonna model my behavior. So what do I have to do as dad? Say please and thank you. I have to do it.
Pick one habit you want your kid to have (please/thank you, making the bed) and model it out loud yourself for seven straight days.
The next time you give an instruction like "clean your room," physically show your kid what "done" looks like instead of assuming they know.
Create your own "touch the tree" ritual — one physical cue at the door to drop the day's stress before you walk in to your family.
Give every kid in the house an age-appropriate job (keep it under five minutes) so no one feels left out — inclusion signals they matter.
Next time your kid resists or melts down, treat it as a teaching moment: stay calm, walk them through it, don't do it for them.
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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