Coach Bronson Dant — a dad of four, 17-year military veteran, and author (Ultimate Ketogenic Fitness, and the upcoming Body Confident) — joins Zach to talk about why health is really a fight that starts in your head, not the gym. Bronson shares the beach-chair photo his daughter took in his late thirties that shattered the gap between the identity he still carried (the sub-8% body-fat Army infantryman) and the reality of the man in the chair, and how that embarrassment kicked off a 14-year fitness journey. The conversation goes deep on identity, why "because I said so" fails as leadership, and why avoiding your emotions is the opposite of masculine — Bronson reframes emotions as the entry point to a logic loop you can actually solve. He gives two concrete starting moves: find the emotional conviction (your why or why not) behind the change, then do the one thing you've been avoiding. Zach ties it to the SkilledDad throughline — your kids catch what you model, so if you're not in the fight, you're leaving them on the battlefield alone.
When Bronson saw the beach photo, he faced a choice: accept the out-of-shape reality and lower his self-image, or reclaim the identity he wanted and start doing what that person does. The lifestyle you want has to match the identity you want.
The traits you dislike in your kids often came from you. You can't demand consistency, effort, or follow-through from them if they've watched you quit.
From the military: never ask your team — or your kids — to do something you haven't done or wouldn't do yourself. You may not always need to explain, but you should always be able to.
Emotions are a tool for self-awareness, and they physically change your body via hormones. Emotional intelligence (why am I feeling this?) is different from being overly emotional — men are logical, and emotion is the end result of a logic loop worth solving.
If you can't describe your reason with a real emotion attached (shame, fear, regret, pride), you haven't found it yet. Motivation is just whether you want to do it; conviction is what makes you do it when you don't.
Looking good is pride; confidence comes from repeatedly trusting your body to perform so you can protect and care for your family in any circumstance.
The things that we see our kids doing that we don't like them doing, they're getting from us.
Find your core conviction: write out your "why" (or "why not") for getting healthy, and check that a real emotion (shame, fear, regret, pride) is attached — if not, keep digging.
Do the one thing you've been avoiding: name a single specific habit (stop the gas-station Big Gulp, actually use the gym membership you already pay for) and commit to doing it consistently starting now.
Audit the mirror: pick one behavior your kids are "catching" from you that you'd want them to repeat — and one you want to drop.
Run the emotion-as-logic loop: next time you feel a strong emotion, don't fixate on it — trace it back ("why am I feeling this? what's the trigger, the belief, the perception?") and treat it as a problem to solve.
Apply the leadership test: before telling a kid (or teammate) to do something, confirm you've done it or would do it yourself, and that you can explain why.
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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