Do Something Hard Every Day
Build Your Grit. Then Pass It On.
Softness is easy.
Screens, snacks, shortcuts.
But you weren’t built for easy. You’re a dad. Your job is to lead. And leading means doing what’s hard.
Every. Single. Day.
Not to punish yourself.
Not to posture.
But to keep the blade sharp—for you and for them.
Do something hard every day.
Wake up earlier than you want to.
Work out even when no one’s watching.
Take a cold shower.
Have the hard conversation.
Skip the drink.
Say “no” when it’s easier to cave.
It doesn’t have to be dramatic.
Just deliberate.
Your kid won’t remember how clean the garage was.
They won’t care how many hours you worked.
They’ll remember whether Dad showed up when things got rough.
That’s the legacy. That’s what sticks.
You want to raise tough kids?
They need to see toughness in you.
Not loud. Not angry. Not fake.
Real grit. Quiet strength. Consistency over chaos.
When your kids see you push through something hard—without whining, without bailing—they learn how to push, too.
That becomes their default mode. Not flinching. Not quitting. Just moving forward.
And it’s not about being perfect.
It’s about being in the fight.
Every day.
That’s what they’ll carry.
That’s what they’ll pass on.
So pick one hard thing a day. Stack them up.
Let them shape you. Let them refine you.
Let your kids see what it looks like to struggle with purpose.
Don’t explain it.
Don’t frame it as heroism.
Just live it.
Need ideas? Start with this Dad Bod post. Small actions count.
Or check out James Clear’s habits framework if you want science with your stoicism.
You don’t need a life coach.
You need a push.
Do the hard thing.
Today. Tomorrow. Always.






0 Comments