Dad Space Podcast - for Dads by Dads cover art

Dad Space Podcast - for Dads by Dads

Dad Space Podcast - for Dads by Dads

By: Dave Campbell
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About this listen

DadSpace - A Podcast for Dads by Dads. Dad Space is a safe space to ask questions, learn from other Dads and grow in community! We equip Dads with how to tips, marriage tips, family insights and even the occasional Dad Joke! Great guests will join us to share their Dad journey with you. Whether you are a new Dad, a Step-Dad, an empty nester or Grandparent! Dad Space is a safe space for Dads to connect and do life together! Visit DadSpace.ca for all things Dad!Dave Campbell Parenting & Families Personal Development Personal Success Relationships Social Sciences
Episodes
  • March DadNess - Building A Championship Culture – Playing the Long Game
    Mar 30 2026

    Episode 253 - March DadNess - Building A Championship Culture – Playing the Long Game

    In this March Dadness finale, the conversation closes the five part series with a focus on building a championship culture at home and playing the long game as a dad. Using the language of sports as a frame, the episode argues that the real legacy is not the trophy or the scoreboard, but the character, confidence, and resilience our children carry into adulthood.

    It invites parents to rethink what winning looks like in the family by valuing kindness, effort, integrity, perseverance, teamwork, and emotional honesty over appearances or short term results. The episode also challenges dads to examine their own modeling, since kids learn more from how parents handle disappointment, conflict, stress, gratitude, and faith than from what they are told.

    A championship home, it says, is built on a firm foundation and should prepare children to become secure, grounded adults who can stand tall long after they leave the house. The practical invitation is simple: choose one core family value, talk about it, post it somewhere visible, and reinforce it through words and actions.

    Key takeaway: the best families are remembered not for temporary wins, but for the culture they build and the adults they raise.

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    https://dadspace.ca

    music provided by Blue Dot Sessions

    Song: The Big Ten https://app.sessions.blue/browse/track/258270

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    16 mins
  • March DadNess - Making Halftime Adjustments – Navigating Mistakes and Reset Moments
    Mar 23 2026

    Episode 252 - March DadNess - Making Halftime Adjustments – Navigating Mistakes and Reset Moments

    In this March DadNess episode, Dave invites dads into the locker room of everyday fatherhood to talk about making halftime adjustments when life and parenting don’t go as planned. He opens with a simple but powerful moment: finding his granddaughter’s teddy bear tucked into his bed, a quiet reminder that kids are always watching and quietly reflecting the love, presence, and consistency they experience.

    From there, Dave explores the idea that being a dad is less about playing a perfect game and more about learning to adjust mid‑game. Just like a coach changes strategy based on injuries, weather, or a bad first half, dads need to recognize when something isn’t working and be willing to pivot. Losing your temper, reacting out of exhaustion, or letting stress dictate your tone are all real moments, but they don’t have to be the final score. Instead, Dave encourages dads to build a personal reset routine: step out of the room, call a timeout, own the moment, calm down, then come back with intention rather than regret.

    He also challenges dads to shift from punishment to partnership when kids mess up. Instead of “What were you thinking?” he suggests language that invites learning, problem‑solving, and safety in failure. Kids, he reminds us, are learning how to adult by watching how we apologize, recover, and show humility, not just how we enforce rules or celebrate wins. Reviewing your own “game tape” as a dad means asking how you react under pressure, how you repair after you’ve crossed a line, and how you model resilience and responsibility.

    Throughout the episode, the sports metaphor stays in the background as Dave calls dads to create homes where mistakes aren’t the end of the world but the start of important conversations. Resilient kids are built by parents who keep showing up after tough days, who admit when they made a bad play, and who turn setbacks into shared lessons. The teddy bear on the pillow becomes a symbol of the quiet impact dads have, even on the days they feel worn out and overwhelmed.

    Key takeaway: You don’t need to be a perfect dad in the first half; what matters most is your willingness to pause, reset, and model how to recover, apologize, and adjust so your kids learn resilience and grace by watching you in real time.

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    https://dadspace.ca

    music provided by Blue Dot Sessions

    Song: The Big Ten https://app.sessions.blue/browse/track/258270

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    17 mins
  • March DadNess - The Coach and the Player – Knowing When to Lead and When to Step Back
    Mar 16 2026

    Episode 251 - March DadNess - The Coach and the Player – Knowing When to Lead and When to Step Back

    Host Dave welcomes listeners to the third installment of March DadNess, flipping March Madness into a celebration of fatherhood lessons drawn from the sports playbook. From his home in Canada where snow lingers but spring beckons, he dives into the evolving dance every dad does with his kids: knowing when to lead like a head coach and when to step back like a trusted advisor watching from the sidelines. This solo reflection speaks directly to fathers navigating the shift as their children grow, urging them to grow alongside their players.

    Dave paints fatherhood as a dynamic game where roles change with the seasons. Early on, dads set the tone, call the plays, and build basics through structure and repetition, much like a head coach drilling fundamentals. But as kids age into their teens and twenties, the position evolves, sometimes to assistant coach or bench guide, offering wisdom only when asked rather than imposing it. He shares from his own empty-nester life with kids in their twenties, noting how they now seek support over direction, a change that tests dads accustomed to being constantly needed.

    At the core is distinguishing coaching from controlling. A coaching dad fosters thinking, adaptation, and ownership, allowing kids to claim both wins and losses. Controlling steals those lessons by fixing every fumble. Dave stresses letting children struggle without rushing in, just as no athlete improves if the coach invades the field mid-play. Reps, resistance, and recovery build resilience at home too, with the best response often being calm presence, trusting kids to navigate their moments.

    Feedback seals the deal. Great coaches spot effort, highlight growth, and direct without shaming, saying "you can do better" instead of "you are the problem." Correcting behavior preserves identity and confidence. Dave ties this to timeouts for pausing reactions, game film for reflection on what works, and recognizing each child's unique playbook, since copy-pasting strategies across siblings ignores their differences.

    The episode closes with a rallying call: Dads cannot control the full game, only how they show up with love, support, and adaptability. Like top coaches, lead through servanthood, cheer from the sidelines, and celebrate growth over dominance.

    Key takeaway: The real March DadNess victory is not perfect control but raising players ready for life's next season, thinking, adapting, and leading themselves while you evolve as their lifelong coach.

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    https://dadspace.ca

    music provided by Blue Dot Sessions

    Song: The Big Ten https://app.sessions.blue/browse/track/258270

    Show More Show Less
    17 mins
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