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If you’re a father searching for ways to build a deeper, more meaningful relationship with your daughter, the latest episode of the Dad and Daughter Connection podcast is a must-listen. Host Dr. Christopher Lewis sits down with Rick Walker—business leader, father of three teenage daughters, and author of the upcoming book, Nine Steps to Build a Life of Meaning: How to Unlock Your Mind, Happiness, Power, and Your Enemy's Demise—for a powerful and honest conversation about the realities and rewards of fatherhood.
Throughout the episode, Rick shares invaluable insights not only from his professional life but, more importantly, from his lived experience as a dad. One of the central themes is the importance of truly being present. Rick describes making family dinners a priority, and how even simple rituals—like driving home from summer camp or sharing milkshake runs—can be crucial opportunities to listen and connect. He emphasizes the need to go beyond just showing up: “Attention is the only resource I have to offer,” he says—highlighting that those everyday moments of real engagement are what matter most.
Rick also touches on the challenges of fatherhood: balancing guidance with allowing independence, recognizing each daughter’s individuality, and pushing through discomfort during tough conversations. He admits that sometimes daughters will push their dads away, and it’s up to us not to give up, but to keep returning, reaffirming our love, belief, and pride.
A particularly inspiring message from the episode is the idea that meaning often comes from confronting challenges. Drawing from his book, Rick discusses how fathers—and their children—grow through adversity, and why “avoiding an ounce of pain means drinking a gallon of regret.” For dads feeling stuck, burnt out, or disconnected, he gently suggests that often, the thing you least want to face is where real growth—and renewed connection—can be found.
Practical advice abounds: tell your daughter daily that you’re proud, that you love her, and that you believe in her. And, most importantly, let them see you strive not just in your career, but in being the kind of person you’d want them to choose as a partner one day.
If you’re ready to laugh, reflect, and gather actionable wisdom for your own journey as a dad, be sure to check out this heartfelt episode of the Dad and Daughter Connection. It’s a reminder that you don’t have to walk this path alone—and that every father has the power to be the dad his daughter needs. Listen now and start building that lasting connection today!
If you enjoyed this episode, we ask you to take a moment to take our Dad and Daughter Connection Survey to let us know more about you as a dad. You can also sign up to get our newsletter to stay connected to our community, and we will send items of interest to you to help you to be the dad that you want to be. Feel free to follow me on the following social media platforms: Facebook, Facebook Group, Instagram, LinkedIn, X.
Rick’s Book (9 Steps to Build a Life of Meaning): https://amzn.to/4nGYDFq
Rick’s Newsletter: https://funnel.rickwalker.com/optin?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=hostlastname Rick on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@rickwalkertx Rick on X: https://x.com/RickWalkerTX Rick at Lumicre Private Equity: https://lumicre.com/ Rick’s Website: https://www.rickwalker.com
TRANSCRIPT
Christopher Lewis [00:00:02]: Welcome to the dad and Daughter Connection, the podcast for dads who want to build stronger bonds and raise confident, independent daughters.
Rick Walker [00:00:12]: If you're looking to build a stronger bond with your daughter and help her grow into a confident, independent woman, you're in the right place. I'm Dr. Christopher Lewis, and the dad and Daughter Connection is the podcast where we dive into real stories, expert advice, and practical tips to help you navigate the incredible journey of fatherhood. In every episode, we'll bring you conversations that inspire, challenge, and equip you to show up as the dad your daughter needs. So let's get started, because being a great dad isn't just about being there. It's about truly connecting. Welcome back to the dad and Daughter Connection. I'm so excited that you are back again this week as we walk on this path together on this journey of raising amazing daughters.
Rick Walker [00:01:03]: And, you know, none of us have to walk on this path alone. It's so important that we're willing to put ourselves out there to be willing to learn and to listen and to hear the journeys of other fathers. Because as you and I both know, the journey of fatherhood is not always easy. There are challenges, there are bumps, and sometimes you can get some bruises along the way as well. But you can learn so much from other fathers and see what they're doing, take what they're doing, adapt it, adjust it, make it your own, and identify ways in which you can take that learning and turn it into something amazing that'll help you to be the dad that you want to be. That's why this podcast exists. We want to have amazing connections with our daughters, and that's not always going to be easy. We have to learn and grow along the way.
Rick Walker [00:02:05]: We have to better understand the journey that they're on. And that's why every week, every week, I love being able to have you here to be able to learn from other fathers. And that's why I bring someone new to you every week that allows for you to do just that. This week, we've got another great guest.
Christopher Lewis [00:02:21]: Who?
Rick Walker [00:02:21]: Rick Walker is with us. Rick is the author of a upcoming book called nine steps to build a life of meaning, how to unlock your mind, happiness, power, and your enemy's demise. And he is a renowned leader across multiple domains. He's been a founder CEO of a 400 employee company, and he scaled that up from there. And he also scaled a 2020 team member nonprofit into 53 countries as a chairman. So he's done a lot of stuff. But even beyond that, he is a Father of three daughters, three teenage daughters at that. And I am really excited to be able to not only talk to him about his upcoming book, but also to talk to him about his own journey as a father.
Rick Walker [00:03:08]: Rick, thanks so much for being here today.
Christopher Lewis [00:03:10]: Christopher, it's joy. Looking forward to our time together.
Rick Walker [00:03:12]: Well, I'm really excited that you're here today. And as I, as I said, you are a father of three daughters, and I always start these conversations with an opportunity to get to know you a little bit more as a father yourself, and especially a father of a daughter. As I said, that connection that we want to build is so important. And as you think back to the moments that you've had thus far in your life with your three daughters, what is one of the most meaningful moments that you've been able to share with your daughters thus far and what made it so special?
Christopher Lewis [00:03:41]: One of the more meaningful moments has been with my daughters whenever they would finish up that summer camp. And so we've always tried to make it a point of being there to pick them up from summer camp camp and drive them an hour home just to hear everything. And if you're a dad of a teenage daughter, what you know is you get one of two things. You either get the talkative girl when she's with her friends a lot of times, or you get the quiet one who's too cool to talk to mom and dad. But sometimes if you haven't seen them in a week and they've been through a lot and they're all together, you can get them to talk. And so just being able to listen to them and hear their stories after camp, after not seeing them for a week or so and them also not seeing their sisters for a week, that's always just been a joy. So we do that every year. But yeah, I do find that it's more difficult to get them to open up.
Christopher Lewis [00:04:25]: And those handful of times where we can get them to really open up unguarded, that's always a very meaningful time.
Rick Walker [00:04:31]: I said that you had three daughters, and I know they range in age from 12 to 17. And every father that has kids knows that your kids are not going to be duplicated of one another. They are very unique individuals. They have different personalities, and you have to come to understand who they are as individuals. Talk to me about, I mean, you're a busy guy, so talk to me about how have you been able to. To really identify those unique aspects of your own daughters to. And how have you been able to make those strong connections with each of your daughters individually so that you can have that connection that you want with each one of them.
Christopher Lewis [00:05:10]: Very early on I stumbled across the work of Dr. Meg Meeker, which I imagine you've probably spoken about her a number of times on your podcast and began reading some of her work. And some of the work was life changing. Just the idea that if I could find opportunities to be able to share with my daughter that I, I love them, that I'm proud of them, I believe in them, that that makes all the difference sometimes between a daughter that follows a winning path versus one that doesn't. And so that's always been a joy to be able to do that. And so from the time they were very young, I always encouraged them to try a number of things and we always would have them in one academic activity, one musical activity, and then one sports activity at least. And so having those three things going at the same time kept us very busy. But over the long term they eventually found one thing that they really loved or two things that they really love and it's helped them.
Christopher Lewis [00:05:57]: But the musical capacity we've always found. My wife and I were musicians, we've had musicians on my wife's side of the family. I have a bachelor's degree in music. I believe that music certainly helps children with their mathematical prowess as well as their ability to I guess, consider the imaginative aspects of the intellectual. And so we've made that a very strong priority in our kids upbringing. And we've got at least one of them that's pretty dedicated to her music. But then the sports also, the sports help develop the social and seeing them differentiating in the sports element, my 17 year old, she's a pre professional ballerina, so that is an art and a sport. The these girls, they've got more muscle mass than a lot of these high school football players do, but it's a lot of artistry too.
Christopher Lewis [00:06:37]: And so just trying to figure out where they are has been really impactful. And my wife and I, and then My daughter, my 12 year old, she's the rule follower and she can do anything. She can do academics, she can do sports, she can do music, she can do anything. And so we're excited about her, but she just has a natural gift to be able to get along with people. But trying to expose them to those three different areas from very young has given us a little bit of a glimpse of what they can and they can't do. And they've been able to convince themselves that they can excel in certain areas and they can sell in certain relationships dynamics.
Rick Walker [00:07:05]: As you're raising your daughters, you have to find that balance of being able to guide your daughters while also giving them the independence to become who they're becoming. Talk to me about what you've done to be able to do just that.
Christopher Lewis [00:07:20]: Yeah, so it's a trade off. And every child is different. We have one child who's very, very independent or middle one and she's in middle school. I wouldn't second guess leaving town, leaving her at home for a week by herself. I've never done that. But I wouldn't think twice about it because she's just, she's so independent. She has such high emotional intelligence and she just sort of figures stuff out. She's reliable.
Christopher Lewis [00:07:41]: But then we have other kids that, that they need to be engaged on a regular basis because they're more social creatures and they just don't do where do well in certain social environments with either a large number of people like a public high school or a small number of people. So you have to sort of find that mix there. But it's my objective to obviously get them acclimated to a wide variety of social structures and social environment. But they're not always to do that. Especially during these critical teenage years. You have other things emotionally and socially and even spiritually in play that us as men from what I found anyway, we just can't relate to that. And so my wife, she had to speak a lot of wisdom into those, those interactions over the past number of years.
Rick Walker [00:08:22]: What are some intentional ways that you've worked to strengthen your bond or your connection with your daughters, especially during challenging times.
Christopher Lewis [00:08:29]: So one of the things I read very early on was that what teenage daughters will do is they'll, they'll tend to push the dad away. They'll push them away at some see if he's going to come back for her. And if the dad doesn't come back for her, she begins to self reinforce this idea that I've got to go and find another man that's going to sort of fill that void. Not basically the father void, but just some sort of masculine type of presence in their lives. And so I've always been one that whenever they sort of push me away, I encourage them, but then I'll pursue them. They have to know that there's nothing that they're going to do that will get me to give up on them, to back down from my commitment to have a relationship with them and also to I guess not encourage them to be on a healthy path. Going forward. Obviously, we all make stupid decisions in our lives, with our lives, but there's also some.
Christopher Lewis [00:09:14]: There's also something special about having at least one person in the world that really believes in. In you unconditionally. And that's the role that I want to. I want to play. Not that I approve of every decision or every action, but I approve of the person themselves. And I believe that my daughters can be called higher into a better future than even they can imagine themselves to be in.
Rick Walker [00:09:33]: I know that as a father, I've made my share of mistakes along the way, and I think every father makes some mistakes along the way. What's a mist that you made as a father? And what did you learn about it? Not only about yourself, but about fostering positive connections and communication with your own daughters.
Christopher Lewis [00:09:51]: For me, anyway, I failed to listen to my gut a number of times. And whenever I didn't listen to my gut, and I thought, no, I'm just overthinking this. I'm over worrying what may or may not be happening. I made a grievous error to doing that over the years. And so what I believe is that obviously this child who is a part of me, that there is some sort of resonance there there. That whenever I suspect there's an issue there, I feel something kind of within my bones, that there's something that I need to address that when I don't address it, it's an offense to the gods, if you kind of get what I'm saying there. It's an offense to fathers everywhere that I need. It's my job to be proactive, not be reactive.
Christopher Lewis [00:10:27]: And so I've got to be proactively engaging in these relationships. And when I'm not, that always tends to be a failure in that situation. In the long run, eventually. But love is always a sacrifice. It's always a sacrifice. And you often will put yourself out there. You'll make that comment, you'll make that assertion. You'll call that that child to do something that she doesn't want to do.
Christopher Lewis [00:10:45]: And it's always fun.
Rick Walker [00:10:46]: No, it's not always fun. And I definitely hear you in that. What do you do intentionally to make your daughters feel valued and heard?
Christopher Lewis [00:10:54]: So, first of all, you've got to give them eye contact. The only thing that I have to offer anyone in the world's attention, that's the only thing I have to offer. That's the only resource in the entire world, is attention. And so if I can't give them eye contact and understand, let Them understand that I'm hearing what they're saying, I'm processing it and repeat it back for them, and they can correct me if I misunderstood. That is a great deal of it. The other thing is we try to do family dinners as often as possible. Obviously, we're scattered, doing all sorts of activities, and we can't do that every night because we've got everything going everywhere with sports and music and stuff. But and having a sort of a protected dinner time, protected family time around the table, that is really, really critical.
Christopher Lewis [00:11:32]: I suspect that if a man doesn't get his dinner table right and doesn't get his books right and he doesn't get his quiet time right, he can't get his life right. Like, those are the really only three, three things that matter in your life. And so focusing on the dinner table, focus on that time together is really important. And when you can't do that, hey, you know, I'm the chauffeur. I'm driving kiddos to practices and we're talking. Even though they're exhausted, I'm letting them know, hey, I saw you make this play. What if we did this next time? What is this person saying on the court? How can we encourage our team members? And then we also talk about their future? I've also found, I'm a big believer in Viktor Frankl's work, that if we can get people focused on their future and what their future self would want them to do in the present, well, then that gets to open up an entire world of opportunity for these girls. And it gets them off the idea that my present is the only thing that matters.
Christopher Lewis [00:12:14]: But, no, I've got a future self that has certain expectations of me now, and I have a responsibility to that future self.
Rick Walker [00:12:18]: I mentioned at the beginning that you're the author of an upcoming book, nine steps to build a life of meaning. How to unlock your mind, happiness, power, and your enemy's demise. And, you know, as I was looking and reading through the book, one of the questions that came to my mind is right at the beginning, you dedicate the book to your wife and daughters. How is being a father to three girls shaped your understanding of a life of meaning?
Christopher Lewis [00:12:42]: Pent up in the idea of meaning. And people often confuse purpose and meaning to be the same thing. Purpose is a. As a condition of meaning, oftentimes. But pent up in these ideas, you have this notion of relevance. And relevance has to do with endurance, this enduring presence that I want to leave behind to the world whenever I'm dead and Gone. And I suspect for me, the most important endurance or relevance that I'm going to leave behind to the world are these three daughters and their kids and their grandkids someday. And so if I want to live a life of meaning, I have to figure out how do I get the ideas and the beliefs that I have to endure in the long run, because only by their enduring can I have a chance that they'll be relevant long term.
Christopher Lewis [00:13:26]: Because I think it was Lewis that said this, and this is a common quote, you'll see Mother's Day some years on these cards. He said that it's not what you do, but who you raise that makes your life matter. It's not what you do, but who you raise that makes that makes your life matter. And I suspect most of us, that's the state. So it's not our jobs, it's not these hobbies that we have. It's not these grand podcasts that you and I host. It's not any of this stuff. It's our kids, and they're sitting there.
Christopher Lewis [00:13:51]: That's the irony of life. The most important things are the most obvious things that you most want. And most tend to snub because they're just so commonplace. They're there all the time. They ignore you all the time, but those are the most important things. And our kids, man, the kids. If my kids don't love me and I don't love my kids, none of this other stuff matters.
Rick Walker [00:14:08]: Also in the book, you talk about picking a worthy enemy. How does that principle show up in your parenting, especially when guiding daughters through challenges in today's world?
Christopher Lewis [00:14:19]: So the book is primarily written towards men that are in the midst of this meaning crisis. This is the group of men that are sort of 25 to 45, sometimes up to 50, that don't have a worthy purpose of their lives. They don't know what they want to do. And guys like me, coming out of the business world, we always tell people to pick a goal instead of vision, and let's work the objectives and the tactics to get back to that. Let's accomplish your goals. But men that don't have a vision of what the future could possibly be, they don't have any goals. And it's impossible for us to tell them to go do something, to be something where they can't even envision a world with goals. And so my argument in the book for pick one worthy enemy is that you need something that breaks your heart.
Christopher Lewis [00:14:55]: You need something that's worth giving your life for. Some Evil to overcome in the world. And there's evil manifesting all around us. You look at pornhub, you look at the children that have been just taken completely advantage of on that platform. Well, a man giving up his life to go fight against that manifestation of evil, well, that's a worthy cause because you're protecting people, you're protecting innocents who can't defend themselves. So we look for worthy enemies. And that pursuit against the worthy enemies is what gives us not only the energy that we need to go out and try some stuff, because that's the main issue, is we're not trying. We don't have goals, we don't try.
Christopher Lewis [00:15:26]: But we need the energy. And we find that cause that problem that just shatters our heart that will give us the energy. And somehow, I don't know how it happens, but we get sort of a divine onslaught of resources to help us in that fight. We find friends that want to help us in that fight, and we can begin building coalitions and purposes. And so it starts small with our daughters. It starts on the lacrosse field, on the soccer field, it starts on the basketball court. How are we going to overcome this 10 point deficit? What are you going to call forth out of your teammates? What are you going to do on the defensive end so that you can have an offensive upset? This is the way that I've got to talk to my daughters. Because if I don't give them that level of pursuit, if I don't give that mentality that they can overcome their challenges, what kind of man are they going to marry? Look, the type of man that they're going to be looking for without that sort of mentality is a weak, defeated man who's used to losing.
Christopher Lewis [00:16:11]: No, I want my daughters focused on winning, overcoming challenges, realizing that there's failures, there's very real failures in life, but those are overcomeable as long as you have one breath left.
Rick Walker [00:16:21]: I know you just talked about that target audience for the book, and I'm going to say that a lot of dads, especially in that target audience, some of those dads, feel stuck either in a job that they don't love or routines that feel, I'll say, hollow. Based on the nine steps that you list in the book, what's the first step that a father should take when he realizes he's lost his sense of purpose.
Christopher Lewis [00:16:44]: You need to take a step. You need to make a move. And that move may be trying to discover what really breaks your heart. And I hate to really simplify it like that, but. But what angers you that you see out in the world? It may be something you see in your children's school, maybe something you see in the school district, maybe in a local church, your local synagogue. It may be something that you have around you, but it may be some sort of societal issue or some online issue. Just start working against that. And the more evil that problem is, the more divine the energy you accrue fighting against it.
Christopher Lewis [00:17:14]: I mean, the purpose of the light is invade the darkness. The purpose of the good man is invade the evil. It's. This is the way that the nature of the world works. If you want to be a good man, you want to be a man that has definition, purpose and pursuit and energy, you got to combat that which is not good. I mean, it's that simple. So we're looking around for something, and I would put a cap on it. I would say I'm going to identify something in the next two weeks.
Christopher Lewis [00:17:34]: And Sunday night at this time, this is what I'm going on. And I'm going to give it until this happens. And you've got to leave it out on the field. As they told us when we were growing up, you got to give it your all. And I'm not saying you ignore your family, I'm not saying you ignore your job to do this, but you've got to find something that you can pick up a bit of passion out of. Just a bit of passion, just a bit of energy. And that bit of energy will give you the spark that you need, need help the other steps fall in place. But we've got to pick up an idea about what's possible.
Christopher Lewis [00:18:02]: What difference I can make? Once you have an idea about what difference you can make, you have a potential for relevance.
Rick Walker [00:18:06]: Also in the book, you say that aiming low is the only sin. How can fathers aim higher in their everyday lives? Especially when they're exhausted, they're overwhelmed, or they're just feeling like they're trying to keep their head above water?
Christopher Lewis [00:18:20]: The widest mind looks into the most distant future for the most valued reward that he can purchase with the currency of the present. Let me repeat that. The wisest mind. This is the wisest father. The wisest mind looks into the most distant future for the most valuable reward that he can purchase with the currency of the present. And what you have in the present is your time and your attention. And so you've got to figure out what in the future is worth you giving your only life for. And it's not something that's lower than what you have, you have kids, you've got daughters around you, you've got people that you can call forth more out of.
Christopher Lewis [00:18:51]: You can say these difficult things. If you're not used to talking to your daughters like this, all it takes is or three times, you have to be prepared to be uncomfortable in that, in that conversation and just blurt it out, say, hey, I believe in you, I love you, I trust you, and know that you're going to have a commanding future. Or ask them questions like this, like, what would you do if you knew you couldn't fail? Or think about your most perfect ideal future self? And what would that perfect future self tell you to do? Ask reflective questions about the future to your daughters. And it's going to be uncomfortable the first three, four, five times you do it. But the more you do it, the more easier it gets and the more the relationship grows and it becomes one of trust, not just one of immediacy and putting out fires.
Rick Walker [00:19:29]: You also say in the book, no joy requires pain. For dads who are numb, burnt out, or emotionally disconnected, how can they reconnect with that joy? Even if it hurts first, you have.
Christopher Lewis [00:19:42]: To say the things that you least want to say. It's that passing comment that you thought you should have said five years ago to your wife, I'm sorry for ignoring you, or your wife, I'm sorry for going to golfing with the boys, or I'm sorry for drinking so much. It's those little things, those little steps of humility. Because what you least want to do is the thing you most need to do next. What you least want to do right now is the thing that you most need to do next. And it is that immediate pain of doing the thing that you've been putting off, the thing that your, your mind and your comfort have been enslaving you to preserve. It's that thing that's keeping you from your future. That's what.
Christopher Lewis [00:20:18]: That's what it is. And it's that pain. If you can get rid of that pain and comfort is the number one pain, one or one thing that pain is protecting or that your comfort's protecting, it's protecting you against pain. If you can burst through that, then you've got a little bit of a glimmer of joy. But as long as you don't do the things you know you should be doing, your life is a lie. And so we've got to say the things we know we're expected to say the same things we've been talking about the last few Minutes, the encouragements, the love, the support, the belief in. I'm proud of you. Tell your wife she looks beautiful.
Christopher Lewis [00:20:47]: I mean, I don't care how crappy your marriage is. Tell her she looks lovely. Tell her that she is. Is the most amazing, whether she is or not. And you're proud and you're honored to be in this with her. I mean, say the most difficult thing. The worse your marriage is, the more you need to say it and the more you need to. To live like you mean it.
Christopher Lewis [00:21:04]: Whether you mean it or not is irrelevant at this point. We've got to say those important things that we've been holding back, because that is only the way that we can burst through the pain, burst through the comfort to get to joy on the other side.
Rick Walker [00:21:14]: So really, you know what I'm hearing, and I saw this in the book too, that you're talking about in some aspects that you have to make some sacrifices. And many men afraid in many ways to take that leap, leaping into something new, something that. That makes them sacrifice. The things that they feel are. Are the things that make them who they are, whether it's time or money or ego or whatever it might be. What does your book teach? Or what would you say to that person about embracing sacrifice as a path to meaning?
Christopher Lewis [00:21:46]: No one ever knows that you love them unless you sacrifice something to be with them. If I'm going to give my daughter her attention, that means I'm sacrificing the rest of the world for her. Everything else is a sacrifice to what I'm giving my attention to. And that's why attention connotates meaning. It means meaning. And that's what we've got to do. There's also sacrifices. Of the things that are useless in your life, you're doing a hundred useless things that have no upside whatsoever.
Christopher Lewis [00:22:11]: I can think about the golf with the buddies. I can think, for a lot of men, the drinking. Like, why are you going out and drinking two or three times a week? It has no upside. It only has catastrophic downside. Some of this stuff is just the most foolish thing you can imagine. Look, if you're taking an infinite downside risk for zero upside payout, that's kind of a foolish thing to do. That's a great thing to sacrifice and replace it with the thing you most need to do. And that what that thing you most need to do is give attention to someone who is committed to you and you're committed to and develop that relationship because all you have left after you die is your relationships.
Christopher Lewis [00:22:43]: That's all that you have. And so what we've got to do is try to figure out what are we sacrificing? Because you've already sacrificed your past. All your prior moments have been sacrificed to your present. This is all you've got. And all you're going to do is sacrifice a series of presences to be able to dictate and determine what your future is. And so we've got to realize we're living a life of sacrifice, whether you realize it or not. And what we sacrifice determines what we love, and what we love determines how relevant and how meaningful our lives will be. But everything worth keeping is worth sacrificing.
Christopher Lewis [00:23:13]: Nothing not worth keeping is worthy of offering everything you value is worthy of sacrificing to someone that is higher, to a future that's more distant and a reward that is better. Because anything you have now is always worth sacrificing for those relationships and the future that you want to see happen.
Rick Walker [00:23:33]: So inevitably, there's probably some dads that are listening right now that are feeling like they have failed. They failed in some aspect of their life. And whether it was at home or at work or with themselves. What would you tell him about redemption and legacy and starting again with meaning?
Christopher Lewis [00:23:54]: I failed a lot. In fact, whenever I try something new, I'm assuming I'm going to fail 99 times before it works. Once, I failed a lot. And this book is a story of my failures. Where I've. I've been devastated on national news, where I've had my love with my wife just completely shattered, where I've had all these failures. I had a surgery that went bad and just distorted my mind for many, many years. And I had all these things.
Christopher Lewis [00:24:18]: Things fail and just stupid things that I've done, just failure after failure. But what I've realized is the people that failed, those are the ones whose lives are actually interesting in the end. Those are the lives that have the potential to be redeemed out of this sort of muddy mire that they've been stuck in. And the redeemed man, in a world that's interested in stories, a redeemed man is more perfect than a man who's never needed to be redeemed. Because what we're saying is that a man who's lived a beautiful life and redemption is a beautiful act that if you're focused on telling a beautiful story with your. That redemption is the ultimate type of beauty and the ultimate type of story that you can tell with your life. And so the worse the man the higher the upside. It's not about the man who's always been good.
Christopher Lewis [00:24:59]: He got a little bit better. That's an interesting. That's not a story that anyone wants to hear. What I want to hear is about a man that's been in the depths of hell, that's made all the mistakes you could ever imagine, and he's bounced back from that. It's about the delta between your lowest point, your highest point, and where you in. And that delta is what matter. It's the contrast from where you were to where you're going, not the contrast of how good you are. And that little mediocre change that you made when you.
Christopher Lewis [00:25:25]: When you did this or did that. It's not about that. And so what life is. Life is just a string of failures with the occasional moment of perfection. It's just a string of failures with just an occasional moment of perfection. And however many moments of these of perfection that you can. You can get together in a life, that's what makes a life of relevance and a life of beauty and a story that people want to hear. And so for the men out there that have just been down on themselves, that have just made mistake after mistake, that just don't know how they're to come overcome it, and they just assume everything's lost, I can tell you that I understand where you've been.
Christopher Lewis [00:25:59]: I've made the catastrophic mistakes that many of you have made. And I can tell you there's hope. And let me convince you with this. I'm going to convince you literally that there's hope for you. That if a drop of hope exists, exists anywhere, it threatens all hopelessness everywhere. If a drop of hope exists anywhere in the world, it threatens all hopelessness everywhere. So my drop of hope that I have, I don't have a lot of hope. I've got a little of a drop of hope right now.
Christopher Lewis [00:26:23]: My drop of hope is now threatening your hopelessness right now. And you have a choice whether or not you're going to allow my hope to invade your hopelessness, whether you're going allowed my light to invade your darkness, that thing that you're trying to protect, that comfort that's enslaving your potential, and if you will allow my hope to invade the comfort now enslaving your potential, it'll be ripped away. It'll be ripped away. And you'll be able to see that there's a future and there's a hope, but you could never get there unless you believe hope is possible. You believe a Future is possible unless you believe that there is beauty rising out of the act of redemption. The man that turns himself around is more beautiful than the man that was always headed the right direction. That's not the story I want to hear. I want to hear story about a man that always had it together.
Christopher Lewis [00:27:03]: I want to hear about a man who confronts evil with good. I want to hear about a man who finds meaning out of meaninglessness. I want to figure out a way to hear a story about a man who takes his pain and inverts it to joy. That's what a real story is about. And if you want your kids and your grandkids to talk about you, that's the sort of life that you need to live.
Rick Walker [00:27:21]: So talk to me about how you have taken these nine concepts, these nine pieces from your book and how are you incorporating them into how you're raising your daughters.
Christopher Lewis [00:27:31]: They have to understand, and this is something, this is a job of me as a dad, is that we're going to have pain. We're going to have pain in our lives, we're going to pain in relationships and tragedy, we're going to pain the sicknesses. But a painless world would only birth joyless lives. A painless world would only birth joyless lives. And so if I can encourage them to look at that spread, to look at that spread between pain and joy, that the broader that is, the higher the joy is, then they can see that there's hope for them even in their downfall, even in their tragedy, even in these, these moments that teenage girls just assume, which is the worst thing, and it's unsalvageable. They have to understand that there's a mechanism that, where they can be able to tell more beautiful, more lovely story with their lives. And these are lessons that they're going to teach their own kids, their own grandkids one day. These are all just learning opportunities for them and even for us.
Christopher Lewis [00:28:19]: But I've got to convince my kids, and you've got to convince your kids as well, the listeners do, that there is hope on the other side of pain. And the way that we get, we, we get there is we got to convince ourselves and we got to convince our kids that whenever we see a threat, there's always an opportunity on the other side. In fact, that's what defines a wise person. Not only that they look in the most distant future for the most maximal reward, but that they see threats and they figure out a way to turn them into opportunity. And so if we realize that every threat we see is an opportunity. Every pain is a potential joy. And we're able to ingrain that in our mind. Then we begin to see that there's hope on the other side of the darkness.
Rick Walker [00:28:55]: Now, if your daughters were to describe you using one of the nine steps from your book, which step would they say that you live out the most? And which one would they say you're still working on?
Christopher Lewis [00:29:07]: They know dad can be just absolutely brutal with someone who tries to come after one of my kids or someone that I love. The the first rule, pick one worthy enemy. They know that dad can just be utterly savage if he needs to be. Obviously you never turn that aggression in where that's for protecting your inner circle, those you love from the exterior. But one of the difficulties in that I found is that we have to set forth the difference between an enemy and a counterparty. A counterparty is not an enemy. A counterparty is someone that you're negotiating with. You'll be able to operate in a good faith effort to be able to find a winnable outcome for both parties as much as possible.
Christopher Lewis [00:29:44]: But an enemy, you don't negotiate with enemies, you destroy enemies. And so I think, I think if my kids had to say one thing, they know that dad loves a good fight, but it's got to be worthy enemy. It's not just a counterparty.
Rick Walker [00:29:56]: You've also, you've advised presidents, you've led nonprofits across the 50 states and countries. And yet you also do ballet drop offs and milkshake runs and other things that a dad would do. What's the most unexpected place you found wisdom about being a dad?
Christopher Lewis [00:30:12]: I found this book about daddy daughter dates. I forgot who wrote the book, but it was like 100 daddy daughter date ideas. And I kept this book on one of my tables in my office for years. I would pick it up and thumb through it maybe once a week and try to find an idea. When the kids were young and they had this, this one date idea where you would leave the house and your daughter would have a quarter and she would flip a quarter. If it's heads, you turn right tells you turn left and you'd side in advance how many flips you would do. So you would do eight, nine, ten flips. Well, you can be a long way from your house if you're doing 10 flips.
Christopher Lewis [00:30:40]: But the rule is you have to eat dinner together at the nearest place that serves food. And oftentimes it's a gas station. It's just a gas station. And so this idea that you can have Fun would just complete and utter nonsense sense. That's something that has been useful in the past. It is still useful today that we can just do stuff, just to do stuff, just because we're goofing around together. And that's been something because I'm not naturally a playful person and that's helped me let the guard down, hear from my daughters about what's really going on in their lives, what's what they're saying. And obviously we don't get to do that as much as we used to back in the old days with all the activities and stuff.
Christopher Lewis [00:31:15]: But it takes, it takes different forms. Takes different forms. Listen to silly music, watching silly videos together in these milkshake runs. These milkshake runs are fantastic. If you, if you've never been do a chick fil a after, let's say 7:30 any night of the week. It's an entirely milkshake business. It's milkshake and fries after 7:30. And there will be a run on the milkshake machine.
Christopher Lewis [00:31:33]: You'll find 20 cars lined up and everyone's getting milkshakes. And that's part of the deal. So you got to figure out a way how to have these little routines, these little rituals in with the family, wherever you can fit them. And that's been one of the useful things, these daddy daughter days and sort of these playful times of just complete, utter nonsense.
Rick Walker [00:31:47]: Now we always finish our interviews with what I like to call the dad connection. 66 more questions to delve into you as a dad. Are you ready?
Christopher Lewis [00:31:55]: Yeah.
Rick Walker [00:31:55]: What's one word that describes your relationship with your daughters?
Christopher Lewis [00:32:00]: Productive.
Rick Walker [00:32:01]: What's the best piece of dad advice that you've ever received?
Christopher Lewis [00:32:05]: Tell them you're proud of them every day.
Rick Walker [00:32:07]: What's one activity that you and your daughters love doing together? Going to eat Mexican food and then getting shakes afterwards.
Christopher Lewis [00:32:14]: Oh, absolutely. You got to get a shake afterwards. Yeah.
Rick Walker [00:32:16]: Now, if you could give your daughters one life lesson in a single sentence, what would you leave with them?
Christopher Lewis [00:32:22]: Avoiding an ounce of pain. You will drink a gallon of regret.
Rick Walker [00:32:26]: What's one thing you've learned about yourself since becoming a dad?
Christopher Lewis [00:32:30]: That if I want my daughters to marry someone who I believe is worthy, I've got to be prepared to act like that most worthy example for them. Because they're not going to marry someone that's too far away from how good or how bad a father I want.
Rick Walker [00:32:47]: Now, you've given a lot of pieces of advice today, a lot of ideas for men for fathers to think about and to incorporate into their own lives. As we finish up today, what advice would you give to other dads who want to build a lasting and meaningful relationship with their daughters?
Christopher Lewis [00:33:03]: Tell them the things that they need to hear and make it every day and make it uncomfortable to hear. Sometimes it'll sound like routine. But if you let them know, I'm proud of you, I believe in you. You're awesome. I love you. If you haven't told your daughter I love you, some other man will. But he won't mean it. And he'll tell it for a different reason that you won't like.
Christopher Lewis [00:33:21]: So tell your daughters that you love them. Tell them that you're proud of them. Tell them that you believe in them. They need to hear those three things from you every single day. And if we can give them those ideas that they're loved, they're believed in, and there's someone out there that's proud of them. Oh, and he just happens to be the only man who they were born in the world to be in relationship with for as long as he lives. Well, that's just a side benefit, but we've got to get our daughters used to hearing and believing the things that will uphold them going forward and the things that confirm their identity in such a secularizing culture that we live in now.
Rick Walker [00:33:56]: Well, Rick, I just want to say thank you. Thank you for all that you've been sharing today. If people want to find out more about you about the book, where should they go?
Christopher Lewis [00:34:03]: So my website is rickwalker.com rickwalker.com and I send out a newsletter about every one or two weeks is a three, two one model. So you get three bangers. So these quotes that I've been dropping, you get three of those, I call them bangers. And then I'll give you two videos. So one will be teaching for the most part, another one will be an interview and then the third thing I'll give you is either an essay or some reflective questions to think about. So either a long form essay or reflective question. These are big idea essays or big idea thoughts. Those are the best things.
Christopher Lewis [00:34:31]: The book is available beginning July 5, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Walmart, anywhere you buy your book books and you can actually pre order it right now. So Kindle ebook. I just wrapped up the audiobook yesterday so that'll be available for pre order as well and hardback and paperback.
Rick Walker [00:34:46]: And I will put links in the notes today so you can check out this book for yourself. And Rick, again, thank you, thank you for all that you've shared today for what you're putting out into the world to help other men to be able to live that life of meaning that we've been talking about. And I truly wish you all the best.
Christopher Lewis [00:35:04]: Christopher, thank you so much for having me. I really enjoyed our time together. That's a wrap for this episode of the dad and Daughter Connection. Thanks for joining us on this journey to build stronger bonds and raise confident, independent daughters. Remember, being an engaged dad isn't about being perfect, it's about being present. If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe and share it with a fellow dad. And don't forget, you can find all our episodes@dad dadanddaughterconnection.com until next time, keep showing up, keep connecting, and keep being the dad she needs. We're all in the same boat and it's full of tiny screaming passengers we.
Rick Walker [00:35:49]: Spend the time we give the lessons.
Christopher Lewis [00:35:55]: We made make the meals we buy them presents and bring your A game Cause those kids are growing fast the time goes by just like a dynamite blast Calling astronauts and firemen Carpenters and muscle men get out and be the world to them Be the best dinosaur you can be Be the best dad you can.
If you’re a father searching for ways to build a deeper, more meaningful relationship with your daughter, the latest episode of the Dad and Daughter Connection podcast is a must-listen. Host Dr. Christopher Lewis sits down with Rick Walker—business leader, father of three teenage daughters, and author of the upcoming book, Nine Steps to Build a Life of Meaning: How to Unlock Your Mind, Happiness, Power, and Your Enemy's Demise—for a powerful and honest conversation about the realities and rewards of fatherhood.
Throughout the episode, Rick shares invaluable insights not only from his professional life but, more importantly, from his lived experience as a dad. One of the central themes is the importance of truly being present. Rick describes making family dinners a priority, and how even simple rituals—like driving home from summer camp or sharing milkshake runs—can be crucial opportunities to listen and connect. He emphasizes the need to go beyond just showing up: “Attention is the only resource I have to offer,” he says—highlighting that those everyday moments of real engagement are what matter most.
Rick also touches on the challenges of fatherhood: balancing guidance with allowing independence, recognizing each daughter’s individuality, and pushing through discomfort during tough conversations. He admits that sometimes daughters will push their dads away, and it’s up to us not to give up, but to keep returning, reaffirming our love, belief, and pride.
A particularly inspiring message from the episode is the idea that meaning often comes from confronting challenges. Drawing from his book, Rick discusses how fathers—and their children—grow through adversity, and why “avoiding an ounce of pain means drinking a gallon of regret.” For dads feeling stuck, burnt out, or disconnected, he gently suggests that often, the thing you least want to face is where real growth—and renewed connection—can be found.
Practical advice abounds: tell your daughter daily that you’re proud, that you love her, and that you believe in her. And, most importantly, let them see you strive not just in your career, but in being the kind of person you’d want them to choose as a partner one day.
If you’re ready to laugh, reflect, and gather actionable wisdom for your own journey as a dad, be sure to check out this heartfelt episode of the Dad and Daughter Connection. It’s a reminder that you don’t have to walk this path alone—and that every father has the power to be the dad his daughter needs. Listen now and start building that lasting connection today!
If you enjoyed this episode, we ask you to take a moment to take our Dad and Daughter Connection Survey to let us know more about you as a dad. You can also sign up to get our newsletter to stay connected to our community, and we will send items of interest to you to help you to be the dad that you want to be. Feel free to follow me on the following social media platforms: Facebook, Facebook Group, Instagram, LinkedIn, X.
Rick’s Book (9 Steps to Build a Life of Meaning): https://amzn.to/4nGYDFq
Rick’s Newsletter: https://funnel.rickwalker.com/optin?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=hostlastname Rick on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@rickwalkertx Rick on X: https://x.com/RickWalkerTX Rick at Lumicre Private Equity: https://lumicre.com/ Rick’s Website: https://www.rickwalker.com
TRANSCRIPT
Christopher Lewis [00:00:02]: Welcome to the dad and Daughter Connection, the podcast for dads who want to build stronger bonds and raise confident, independent daughters.
Rick Walker [00:00:12]: If you're looking to build a stronger bond with your daughter and help her grow into a confident, independent woman, you're in the right place. I'm Dr. Christopher Lewis, and the dad and Daughter Connection is the podcast where we dive into real stories, expert advice, and practical tips to help you navigate the incredible journey of fatherhood. In every episode, we'll bring you conversations that inspire, challenge, and equip you to show up as the dad your daughter needs. So let's get started, because being a great dad isn't just about being there. It's about truly connecting. Welcome back to the dad and Daughter Connection. I'm so excited that you are back again this week as we walk on this path together on this journey of raising amazing daughters.
Rick Walker [00:01:03]: And, you know, none of us have to walk on this path alone. It's so important that we're willing to put ourselves out there to be willing to learn and to listen and to hear the journeys of other fathers. Because as you and I both know, the journey of fatherhood is not always easy. There are challenges, there are bumps, and sometimes you can get some bruises along the way as well. But you can learn so much from other fathers and see what they're doing, take what they're doing, adapt it, adjust it, make it your own, and identify ways in which you can take that learning and turn it into something amazing that'll help you to be the dad that you want to be. That's why this podcast exists. We want to have amazing connections with our daughters, and that's not always going to be easy. We have to learn and grow along the way.
Rick Walker [00:02:05]: We have to better understand the journey that they're on. And that's why every week, every week, I love being able to have you here to be able to learn from other fathers. And that's why I bring someone new to you every week that allows for you to do just that. This week, we've got another great guest.
Christopher Lewis [00:02:21]: Who?
Rick Walker [00:02:21]: Rick Walker is with us. Rick is the author of a upcoming book called nine steps to build a life of meaning, how to unlock your mind, happiness, power, and your enemy's demise. And he is a renowned leader across multiple domains. He's been a founder CEO of a 400 employee company, and he scaled that up from there. And he also scaled a 2020 team member nonprofit into 53 countries as a chairman. So he's done a lot of stuff. But even beyond that, he is a Father of three daughters, three teenage daughters at that. And I am really excited to be able to not only talk to him about his upcoming book, but also to talk to him about his own journey as a father.
Rick Walker [00:03:08]: Rick, thanks so much for being here today.
Christopher Lewis [00:03:10]: Christopher, it's joy. Looking forward to our time together.
Rick Walker [00:03:12]: Well, I'm really excited that you're here today. And as I, as I said, you are a father of three daughters, and I always start these conversations with an opportunity to get to know you a little bit more as a father yourself, and especially a father of a daughter. As I said, that connection that we want to build is so important. And as you think back to the moments that you've had thus far in your life with your three daughters, what is one of the most meaningful moments that you've been able to share with your daughters thus far and what made it so special?
Christopher Lewis [00:03:41]: One of the more meaningful moments has been with my daughters whenever they would finish up that summer camp. And so we've always tried to make it a point of being there to pick them up from summer camp camp and drive them an hour home just to hear everything. And if you're a dad of a teenage daughter, what you know is you get one of two things. You either get the talkative girl when she's with her friends a lot of times, or you get the quiet one who's too cool to talk to mom and dad. But sometimes if you haven't seen them in a week and they've been through a lot and they're all together, you can get them to talk. And so just being able to listen to them and hear their stories after camp, after not seeing them for a week or so and them also not seeing their sisters for a week, that's always just been a joy. So we do that every year. But yeah, I do find that it's more difficult to get them to open up.
Christopher Lewis [00:04:25]: And those handful of times where we can get them to really open up unguarded, that's always a very meaningful time.
Rick Walker [00:04:31]: I said that you had three daughters, and I know they range in age from 12 to 17. And every father that has kids knows that your kids are not going to be duplicated of one another. They are very unique individuals. They have different personalities, and you have to come to understand who they are as individuals. Talk to me about, I mean, you're a busy guy, so talk to me about how have you been able to. To really identify those unique aspects of your own daughters to. And how have you been able to make those strong connections with each of your daughters individually so that you can have that connection that you want with each one of them.
Christopher Lewis [00:05:10]: Very early on I stumbled across the work of Dr. Meg Meeker, which I imagine you've probably spoken about her a number of times on your podcast and began reading some of her work. And some of the work was life changing. Just the idea that if I could find opportunities to be able to share with my daughter that I, I love them, that I'm proud of them, I believe in them, that that makes all the difference sometimes between a daughter that follows a winning path versus one that doesn't. And so that's always been a joy to be able to do that. And so from the time they were very young, I always encouraged them to try a number of things and we always would have them in one academic activity, one musical activity, and then one sports activity at least. And so having those three things going at the same time kept us very busy. But over the long term they eventually found one thing that they really loved or two things that they really love and it's helped them.
Christopher Lewis [00:05:57]: But the musical capacity we've always found. My wife and I were musicians, we've had musicians on my wife's side of the family. I have a bachelor's degree in music. I believe that music certainly helps children with their mathematical prowess as well as their ability to I guess, consider the imaginative aspects of the intellectual. And so we've made that a very strong priority in our kids upbringing. And we've got at least one of them that's pretty dedicated to her music. But then the sports also, the sports help develop the social and seeing them differentiating in the sports element, my 17 year old, she's a pre professional ballerina, so that is an art and a sport. The these girls, they've got more muscle mass than a lot of these high school football players do, but it's a lot of artistry too.
Christopher Lewis [00:06:37]: And so just trying to figure out where they are has been really impactful. And my wife and I, and then My daughter, my 12 year old, she's the rule follower and she can do anything. She can do academics, she can do sports, she can do music, she can do anything. And so we're excited about her, but she just has a natural gift to be able to get along with people. But trying to expose them to those three different areas from very young has given us a little bit of a glimpse of what they can and they can't do. And they've been able to convince themselves that they can excel in certain areas and they can sell in certain relationships dynamics.
Rick Walker [00:07:05]: As you're raising your daughters, you have to find that balance of being able to guide your daughters while also giving them the independence to become who they're becoming. Talk to me about what you've done to be able to do just that.
Christopher Lewis [00:07:20]: Yeah, so it's a trade off. And every child is different. We have one child who's very, very independent or middle one and she's in middle school. I wouldn't second guess leaving town, leaving her at home for a week by herself. I've never done that. But I wouldn't think twice about it because she's just, she's so independent. She has such high emotional intelligence and she just sort of figures stuff out. She's reliable.
Christopher Lewis [00:07:41]: But then we have other kids that, that they need to be engaged on a regular basis because they're more social creatures and they just don't do where do well in certain social environments with either a large number of people like a public high school or a small number of people. So you have to sort of find that mix there. But it's my objective to obviously get them acclimated to a wide variety of social structures and social environment. But they're not always to do that. Especially during these critical teenage years. You have other things emotionally and socially and even spiritually in play that us as men from what I found anyway, we just can't relate to that. And so my wife, she had to speak a lot of wisdom into those, those interactions over the past number of years.
Rick Walker [00:08:22]: What are some intentional ways that you've worked to strengthen your bond or your connection with your daughters, especially during challenging times.
Christopher Lewis [00:08:29]: So one of the things I read very early on was that what teenage daughters will do is they'll, they'll tend to push the dad away. They'll push them away at some see if he's going to come back for her. And if the dad doesn't come back for her, she begins to self reinforce this idea that I've got to go and find another man that's going to sort of fill that void. Not basically the father void, but just some sort of masculine type of presence in their lives. And so I've always been one that whenever they sort of push me away, I encourage them, but then I'll pursue them. They have to know that there's nothing that they're going to do that will get me to give up on them, to back down from my commitment to have a relationship with them and also to I guess not encourage them to be on a healthy path. Going forward. Obviously, we all make stupid decisions in our lives, with our lives, but there's also some.
Christopher Lewis [00:09:14]: There's also something special about having at least one person in the world that really believes in. In you unconditionally. And that's the role that I want to. I want to play. Not that I approve of every decision or every action, but I approve of the person themselves. And I believe that my daughters can be called higher into a better future than even they can imagine themselves to be in.
Rick Walker [00:09:33]: I know that as a father, I've made my share of mistakes along the way, and I think every father makes some mistakes along the way. What's a mist that you made as a father? And what did you learn about it? Not only about yourself, but about fostering positive connections and communication with your own daughters.
Christopher Lewis [00:09:51]: For me, anyway, I failed to listen to my gut a number of times. And whenever I didn't listen to my gut, and I thought, no, I'm just overthinking this. I'm over worrying what may or may not be happening. I made a grievous error to doing that over the years. And so what I believe is that obviously this child who is a part of me, that there is some sort of resonance there there. That whenever I suspect there's an issue there, I feel something kind of within my bones, that there's something that I need to address that when I don't address it, it's an offense to the gods, if you kind of get what I'm saying there. It's an offense to fathers everywhere that I need. It's my job to be proactive, not be reactive.
Christopher Lewis [00:10:27]: And so I've got to be proactively engaging in these relationships. And when I'm not, that always tends to be a failure in that situation. In the long run, eventually. But love is always a sacrifice. It's always a sacrifice. And you often will put yourself out there. You'll make that comment, you'll make that assertion. You'll call that that child to do something that she doesn't want to do.
Christopher Lewis [00:10:45]: And it's always fun.
Rick Walker [00:10:46]: No, it's not always fun. And I definitely hear you in that. What do you do intentionally to make your daughters feel valued and heard?
Christopher Lewis [00:10:54]: So, first of all, you've got to give them eye contact. The only thing that I have to offer anyone in the world's attention, that's the only thing I have to offer. That's the only resource in the entire world, is attention. And so if I can't give them eye contact and understand, let Them understand that I'm hearing what they're saying, I'm processing it and repeat it back for them, and they can correct me if I misunderstood. That is a great deal of it. The other thing is we try to do family dinners as often as possible. Obviously, we're scattered, doing all sorts of activities, and we can't do that every night because we've got everything going everywhere with sports and music and stuff. But and having a sort of a protected dinner time, protected family time around the table, that is really, really critical.
Christopher Lewis [00:11:32]: I suspect that if a man doesn't get his dinner table right and doesn't get his books right and he doesn't get his quiet time right, he can't get his life right. Like, those are the really only three, three things that matter in your life. And so focusing on the dinner table, focus on that time together is really important. And when you can't do that, hey, you know, I'm the chauffeur. I'm driving kiddos to practices and we're talking. Even though they're exhausted, I'm letting them know, hey, I saw you make this play. What if we did this next time? What is this person saying on the court? How can we encourage our team members? And then we also talk about their future? I've also found, I'm a big believer in Viktor Frankl's work, that if we can get people focused on their future and what their future self would want them to do in the present, well, then that gets to open up an entire world of opportunity for these girls. And it gets them off the idea that my present is the only thing that matters.
Christopher Lewis [00:12:14]: But, no, I've got a future self that has certain expectations of me now, and I have a responsibility to that future self.
Rick Walker [00:12:18]: I mentioned at the beginning that you're the author of an upcoming book, nine steps to build a life of meaning. How to unlock your mind, happiness, power, and your enemy's demise. And, you know, as I was looking and reading through the book, one of the questions that came to my mind is right at the beginning, you dedicate the book to your wife and daughters. How is being a father to three girls shaped your understanding of a life of meaning?
Christopher Lewis [00:12:42]: Pent up in the idea of meaning. And people often confuse purpose and meaning to be the same thing. Purpose is a. As a condition of meaning, oftentimes. But pent up in these ideas, you have this notion of relevance. And relevance has to do with endurance, this enduring presence that I want to leave behind to the world whenever I'm dead and Gone. And I suspect for me, the most important endurance or relevance that I'm going to leave behind to the world are these three daughters and their kids and their grandkids someday. And so if I want to live a life of meaning, I have to figure out how do I get the ideas and the beliefs that I have to endure in the long run, because only by their enduring can I have a chance that they'll be relevant long term.
Christopher Lewis [00:13:26]: Because I think it was Lewis that said this, and this is a common quote, you'll see Mother's Day some years on these cards. He said that it's not what you do, but who you raise that makes your life matter. It's not what you do, but who you raise that makes that makes your life matter. And I suspect most of us, that's the state. So it's not our jobs, it's not these hobbies that we have. It's not these grand podcasts that you and I host. It's not any of this stuff. It's our kids, and they're sitting there.
Christopher Lewis [00:13:51]: That's the irony of life. The most important things are the most obvious things that you most want. And most tend to snub because they're just so commonplace. They're there all the time. They ignore you all the time, but those are the most important things. And our kids, man, the kids. If my kids don't love me and I don't love my kids, none of this other stuff matters.
Rick Walker [00:14:08]: Also in the book, you talk about picking a worthy enemy. How does that principle show up in your parenting, especially when guiding daughters through challenges in today's world?
Christopher Lewis [00:14:19]: So the book is primarily written towards men that are in the midst of this meaning crisis. This is the group of men that are sort of 25 to 45, sometimes up to 50, that don't have a worthy purpose of their lives. They don't know what they want to do. And guys like me, coming out of the business world, we always tell people to pick a goal instead of vision, and let's work the objectives and the tactics to get back to that. Let's accomplish your goals. But men that don't have a vision of what the future could possibly be, they don't have any goals. And it's impossible for us to tell them to go do something, to be something where they can't even envision a world with goals. And so my argument in the book for pick one worthy enemy is that you need something that breaks your heart.
Christopher Lewis [00:14:55]: You need something that's worth giving your life for. Some Evil to overcome in the world. And there's evil manifesting all around us. You look at pornhub, you look at the children that have been just taken completely advantage of on that platform. Well, a man giving up his life to go fight against that manifestation of evil, well, that's a worthy cause because you're protecting people, you're protecting innocents who can't defend themselves. So we look for worthy enemies. And that pursuit against the worthy enemies is what gives us not only the energy that we need to go out and try some stuff, because that's the main issue, is we're not trying. We don't have goals, we don't try.
Christopher Lewis [00:15:26]: But we need the energy. And we find that cause that problem that just shatters our heart that will give us the energy. And somehow, I don't know how it happens, but we get sort of a divine onslaught of resources to help us in that fight. We find friends that want to help us in that fight, and we can begin building coalitions and purposes. And so it starts small with our daughters. It starts on the lacrosse field, on the soccer field, it starts on the basketball court. How are we going to overcome this 10 point deficit? What are you going to call forth out of your teammates? What are you going to do on the defensive end so that you can have an offensive upset? This is the way that I've got to talk to my daughters. Because if I don't give them that level of pursuit, if I don't give that mentality that they can overcome their challenges, what kind of man are they going to marry? Look, the type of man that they're going to be looking for without that sort of mentality is a weak, defeated man who's used to losing.
Christopher Lewis [00:16:11]: No, I want my daughters focused on winning, overcoming challenges, realizing that there's failures, there's very real failures in life, but those are overcomeable as long as you have one breath left.
Rick Walker [00:16:21]: I know you just talked about that target audience for the book, and I'm going to say that a lot of dads, especially in that target audience, some of those dads, feel stuck either in a job that they don't love or routines that feel, I'll say, hollow. Based on the nine steps that you list in the book, what's the first step that a father should take when he realizes he's lost his sense of purpose.
Christopher Lewis [00:16:44]: You need to take a step. You need to make a move. And that move may be trying to discover what really breaks your heart. And I hate to really simplify it like that, but. But what angers you that you see out in the world? It may be something you see in your children's school, maybe something you see in the school district, maybe in a local church, your local synagogue. It may be something that you have around you, but it may be some sort of societal issue or some online issue. Just start working against that. And the more evil that problem is, the more divine the energy you accrue fighting against it.
Christopher Lewis [00:17:14]: I mean, the purpose of the light is invade the darkness. The purpose of the good man is invade the evil. It's. This is the way that the nature of the world works. If you want to be a good man, you want to be a man that has definition, purpose and pursuit and energy, you got to combat that which is not good. I mean, it's that simple. So we're looking around for something, and I would put a cap on it. I would say I'm going to identify something in the next two weeks.
Christopher Lewis [00:17:34]: And Sunday night at this time, this is what I'm going on. And I'm going to give it until this happens. And you've got to leave it out on the field. As they told us when we were growing up, you got to give it your all. And I'm not saying you ignore your family, I'm not saying you ignore your job to do this, but you've got to find something that you can pick up a bit of passion out of. Just a bit of passion, just a bit of energy. And that bit of energy will give you the spark that you need, need help the other steps fall in place. But we've got to pick up an idea about what's possible.
Christopher Lewis [00:18:02]: What difference I can make? Once you have an idea about what difference you can make, you have a potential for relevance.
Rick Walker [00:18:06]: Also in the book, you say that aiming low is the only sin. How can fathers aim higher in their everyday lives? Especially when they're exhausted, they're overwhelmed, or they're just feeling like they're trying to keep their head above water?
Christopher Lewis [00:18:20]: The widest mind looks into the most distant future for the most valued reward that he can purchase with the currency of the present. Let me repeat that. The wisest mind. This is the wisest father. The wisest mind looks into the most distant future for the most valuable reward that he can purchase with the currency of the present. And what you have in the present is your time and your attention. And so you've got to figure out what in the future is worth you giving your only life for. And it's not something that's lower than what you have, you have kids, you've got daughters around you, you've got people that you can call forth more out of.
Christopher Lewis [00:18:51]: You can say these difficult things. If you're not used to talking to your daughters like this, all it takes is or three times, you have to be prepared to be uncomfortable in that, in that conversation and just blurt it out, say, hey, I believe in you, I love you, I trust you, and know that you're going to have a commanding future. Or ask them questions like this, like, what would you do if you knew you couldn't fail? Or think about your most perfect ideal future self? And what would that perfect future self tell you to do? Ask reflective questions about the future to your daughters. And it's going to be uncomfortable the first three, four, five times you do it. But the more you do it, the more easier it gets and the more the relationship grows and it becomes one of trust, not just one of immediacy and putting out fires.
Rick Walker [00:19:29]: You also say in the book, no joy requires pain. For dads who are numb, burnt out, or emotionally disconnected, how can they reconnect with that joy? Even if it hurts first, you have.
Christopher Lewis [00:19:42]: To say the things that you least want to say. It's that passing comment that you thought you should have said five years ago to your wife, I'm sorry for ignoring you, or your wife, I'm sorry for going to golfing with the boys, or I'm sorry for drinking so much. It's those little things, those little steps of humility. Because what you least want to do is the thing you most need to do next. What you least want to do right now is the thing that you most need to do next. And it is that immediate pain of doing the thing that you've been putting off, the thing that your, your mind and your comfort have been enslaving you to preserve. It's that thing that's keeping you from your future. That's what.
Christopher Lewis [00:20:18]: That's what it is. And it's that pain. If you can get rid of that pain and comfort is the number one pain, one or one thing that pain is protecting or that your comfort's protecting, it's protecting you against pain. If you can burst through that, then you've got a little bit of a glimmer of joy. But as long as you don't do the things you know you should be doing, your life is a lie. And so we've got to say the things we know we're expected to say the same things we've been talking about the last few Minutes, the encouragements, the love, the support, the belief in. I'm proud of you. Tell your wife she looks beautiful.
Christopher Lewis [00:20:47]: I mean, I don't care how crappy your marriage is. Tell her she looks lovely. Tell her that she is. Is the most amazing, whether she is or not. And you're proud and you're honored to be in this with her. I mean, say the most difficult thing. The worse your marriage is, the more you need to say it and the more you need to. To live like you mean it.
Christopher Lewis [00:21:04]: Whether you mean it or not is irrelevant at this point. We've got to say those important things that we've been holding back, because that is only the way that we can burst through the pain, burst through the comfort to get to joy on the other side.
Rick Walker [00:21:14]: So really, you know what I'm hearing, and I saw this in the book too, that you're talking about in some aspects that you have to make some sacrifices. And many men afraid in many ways to take that leap, leaping into something new, something that. That makes them sacrifice. The things that they feel are. Are the things that make them who they are, whether it's time or money or ego or whatever it might be. What does your book teach? Or what would you say to that person about embracing sacrifice as a path to meaning?
Christopher Lewis [00:21:46]: No one ever knows that you love them unless you sacrifice something to be with them. If I'm going to give my daughter her attention, that means I'm sacrificing the rest of the world for her. Everything else is a sacrifice to what I'm giving my attention to. And that's why attention connotates meaning. It means meaning. And that's what we've got to do. There's also sacrifices. Of the things that are useless in your life, you're doing a hundred useless things that have no upside whatsoever.
Christopher Lewis [00:22:11]: I can think about the golf with the buddies. I can think, for a lot of men, the drinking. Like, why are you going out and drinking two or three times a week? It has no upside. It only has catastrophic downside. Some of this stuff is just the most foolish thing you can imagine. Look, if you're taking an infinite downside risk for zero upside payout, that's kind of a foolish thing to do. That's a great thing to sacrifice and replace it with the thing you most need to do. And that what that thing you most need to do is give attention to someone who is committed to you and you're committed to and develop that relationship because all you have left after you die is your relationships.
Christopher Lewis [00:22:43]: That's all that you have. And so what we've got to do is try to figure out what are we sacrificing? Because you've already sacrificed your past. All your prior moments have been sacrificed to your present. This is all you've got. And all you're going to do is sacrifice a series of presences to be able to dictate and determine what your future is. And so we've got to realize we're living a life of sacrifice, whether you realize it or not. And what we sacrifice determines what we love, and what we love determines how relevant and how meaningful our lives will be. But everything worth keeping is worth sacrificing.
Christopher Lewis [00:23:13]: Nothing not worth keeping is worthy of offering everything you value is worthy of sacrificing to someone that is higher, to a future that's more distant and a reward that is better. Because anything you have now is always worth sacrificing for those relationships and the future that you want to see happen.
Rick Walker [00:23:33]: So inevitably, there's probably some dads that are listening right now that are feeling like they have failed. They failed in some aspect of their life. And whether it was at home or at work or with themselves. What would you tell him about redemption and legacy and starting again with meaning?
Christopher Lewis [00:23:54]: I failed a lot. In fact, whenever I try something new, I'm assuming I'm going to fail 99 times before it works. Once, I failed a lot. And this book is a story of my failures. Where I've. I've been devastated on national news, where I've had my love with my wife just completely shattered, where I've had all these failures. I had a surgery that went bad and just distorted my mind for many, many years. And I had all these things.
Christopher Lewis [00:24:18]: Things fail and just stupid things that I've done, just failure after failure. But what I've realized is the people that failed, those are the ones whose lives are actually interesting in the end. Those are the lives that have the potential to be redeemed out of this sort of muddy mire that they've been stuck in. And the redeemed man, in a world that's interested in stories, a redeemed man is more perfect than a man who's never needed to be redeemed. Because what we're saying is that a man who's lived a beautiful life and redemption is a beautiful act that if you're focused on telling a beautiful story with your. That redemption is the ultimate type of beauty and the ultimate type of story that you can tell with your life. And so the worse the man the higher the upside. It's not about the man who's always been good.
Christopher Lewis [00:24:59]: He got a little bit better. That's an interesting. That's not a story that anyone wants to hear. What I want to hear is about a man that's been in the depths of hell, that's made all the mistakes you could ever imagine, and he's bounced back from that. It's about the delta between your lowest point, your highest point, and where you in. And that delta is what matter. It's the contrast from where you were to where you're going, not the contrast of how good you are. And that little mediocre change that you made when you.
Christopher Lewis [00:25:25]: When you did this or did that. It's not about that. And so what life is. Life is just a string of failures with the occasional moment of perfection. It's just a string of failures with just an occasional moment of perfection. And however many moments of these of perfection that you can. You can get together in a life, that's what makes a life of relevance and a life of beauty and a story that people want to hear. And so for the men out there that have just been down on themselves, that have just made mistake after mistake, that just don't know how they're to come overcome it, and they just assume everything's lost, I can tell you that I understand where you've been.
Christopher Lewis [00:25:59]: I've made the catastrophic mistakes that many of you have made. And I can tell you there's hope. And let me convince you with this. I'm going to convince you literally that there's hope for you. That if a drop of hope exists, exists anywhere, it threatens all hopelessness everywhere. If a drop of hope exists anywhere in the world, it threatens all hopelessness everywhere. So my drop of hope that I have, I don't have a lot of hope. I've got a little of a drop of hope right now.
Christopher Lewis [00:26:23]: My drop of hope is now threatening your hopelessness right now. And you have a choice whether or not you're going to allow my hope to invade your hopelessness, whether you're going allowed my light to invade your darkness, that thing that you're trying to protect, that comfort that's enslaving your potential, and if you will allow my hope to invade the comfort now enslaving your potential, it'll be ripped away. It'll be ripped away. And you'll be able to see that there's a future and there's a hope, but you could never get there unless you believe hope is possible. You believe a Future is possible unless you believe that there is beauty rising out of the act of redemption. The man that turns himself around is more beautiful than the man that was always headed the right direction. That's not the story I want to hear. I want to hear story about a man that always had it together.
Christopher Lewis [00:27:03]: I want to hear about a man who confronts evil with good. I want to hear about a man who finds meaning out of meaninglessness. I want to figure out a way to hear a story about a man who takes his pain and inverts it to joy. That's what a real story is about. And if you want your kids and your grandkids to talk about you, that's the sort of life that you need to live.
Rick Walker [00:27:21]: So talk to me about how you have taken these nine concepts, these nine pieces from your book and how are you incorporating them into how you're raising your daughters.
Christopher Lewis [00:27:31]: They have to understand, and this is something, this is a job of me as a dad, is that we're going to have pain. We're going to have pain in our lives, we're going to pain in relationships and tragedy, we're going to pain the sicknesses. But a painless world would only birth joyless lives. A painless world would only birth joyless lives. And so if I can encourage them to look at that spread, to look at that spread between pain and joy, that the broader that is, the higher the joy is, then they can see that there's hope for them even in their downfall, even in their tragedy, even in these, these moments that teenage girls just assume, which is the worst thing, and it's unsalvageable. They have to understand that there's a mechanism that, where they can be able to tell more beautiful, more lovely story with their lives. And these are lessons that they're going to teach their own kids, their own grandkids one day. These are all just learning opportunities for them and even for us.
Christopher Lewis [00:28:19]: But I've got to convince my kids, and you've got to convince your kids as well, the listeners do, that there is hope on the other side of pain. And the way that we get, we, we get there is we got to convince ourselves and we got to convince our kids that whenever we see a threat, there's always an opportunity on the other side. In fact, that's what defines a wise person. Not only that they look in the most distant future for the most maximal reward, but that they see threats and they figure out a way to turn them into opportunity. And so if we realize that every threat we see is an opportunity. Every pain is a potential joy. And we're able to ingrain that in our mind. Then we begin to see that there's hope on the other side of the darkness.
Rick Walker [00:28:55]: Now, if your daughters were to describe you using one of the nine steps from your book, which step would they say that you live out the most? And which one would they say you're still working on?
Christopher Lewis [00:29:07]: They know dad can be just absolutely brutal with someone who tries to come after one of my kids or someone that I love. The the first rule, pick one worthy enemy. They know that dad can just be utterly savage if he needs to be. Obviously you never turn that aggression in where that's for protecting your inner circle, those you love from the exterior. But one of the difficulties in that I found is that we have to set forth the difference between an enemy and a counterparty. A counterparty is not an enemy. A counterparty is someone that you're negotiating with. You'll be able to operate in a good faith effort to be able to find a winnable outcome for both parties as much as possible.
Christopher Lewis [00:29:44]: But an enemy, you don't negotiate with enemies, you destroy enemies. And so I think, I think if my kids had to say one thing, they know that dad loves a good fight, but it's got to be worthy enemy. It's not just a counterparty.
Rick Walker [00:29:56]: You've also, you've advised presidents, you've led nonprofits across the 50 states and countries. And yet you also do ballet drop offs and milkshake runs and other things that a dad would do. What's the most unexpected place you found wisdom about being a dad?
Christopher Lewis [00:30:12]: I found this book about daddy daughter dates. I forgot who wrote the book, but it was like 100 daddy daughter date ideas. And I kept this book on one of my tables in my office for years. I would pick it up and thumb through it maybe once a week and try to find an idea. When the kids were young and they had this, this one date idea where you would leave the house and your daughter would have a quarter and she would flip a quarter. If it's heads, you turn right tells you turn left and you'd side in advance how many flips you would do. So you would do eight, nine, ten flips. Well, you can be a long way from your house if you're doing 10 flips.
Christopher Lewis [00:30:40]: But the rule is you have to eat dinner together at the nearest place that serves food. And oftentimes it's a gas station. It's just a gas station. And so this idea that you can have Fun would just complete and utter nonsense sense. That's something that has been useful in the past. It is still useful today that we can just do stuff, just to do stuff, just because we're goofing around together. And that's been something because I'm not naturally a playful person and that's helped me let the guard down, hear from my daughters about what's really going on in their lives, what's what they're saying. And obviously we don't get to do that as much as we used to back in the old days with all the activities and stuff.
Christopher Lewis [00:31:15]: But it takes, it takes different forms. Takes different forms. Listen to silly music, watching silly videos together in these milkshake runs. These milkshake runs are fantastic. If you, if you've never been do a chick fil a after, let's say 7:30 any night of the week. It's an entirely milkshake business. It's milkshake and fries after 7:30. And there will be a run on the milkshake machine.
Christopher Lewis [00:31:33]: You'll find 20 cars lined up and everyone's getting milkshakes. And that's part of the deal. So you got to figure out a way how to have these little routines, these little rituals in with the family, wherever you can fit them. And that's been one of the useful things, these daddy daughter days and sort of these playful times of just complete, utter nonsense.
Rick Walker [00:31:47]: Now we always finish our interviews with what I like to call the dad connection. 66 more questions to delve into you as a dad. Are you ready?
Christopher Lewis [00:31:55]: Yeah.
Rick Walker [00:31:55]: What's one word that describes your relationship with your daughters?
Christopher Lewis [00:32:00]: Productive.
Rick Walker [00:32:01]: What's the best piece of dad advice that you've ever received?
Christopher Lewis [00:32:05]: Tell them you're proud of them every day.
Rick Walker [00:32:07]: What's one activity that you and your daughters love doing together? Going to eat Mexican food and then getting shakes afterwards.
Christopher Lewis [00:32:14]: Oh, absolutely. You got to get a shake afterwards. Yeah.
Rick Walker [00:32:16]: Now, if you could give your daughters one life lesson in a single sentence, what would you leave with them?
Christopher Lewis [00:32:22]: Avoiding an ounce of pain. You will drink a gallon of regret.
Rick Walker [00:32:26]: What's one thing you've learned about yourself since becoming a dad?
Christopher Lewis [00:32:30]: That if I want my daughters to marry someone who I believe is worthy, I've got to be prepared to act like that most worthy example for them. Because they're not going to marry someone that's too far away from how good or how bad a father I want.
Rick Walker [00:32:47]: Now, you've given a lot of pieces of advice today, a lot of ideas for men for fathers to think about and to incorporate into their own lives. As we finish up today, what advice would you give to other dads who want to build a lasting and meaningful relationship with their daughters?
Christopher Lewis [00:33:03]: Tell them the things that they need to hear and make it every day and make it uncomfortable to hear. Sometimes it'll sound like routine. But if you let them know, I'm proud of you, I believe in you. You're awesome. I love you. If you haven't told your daughter I love you, some other man will. But he won't mean it. And he'll tell it for a different reason that you won't like.
Christopher Lewis [00:33:21]: So tell your daughters that you love them. Tell them that you're proud of them. Tell them that you believe in them. They need to hear those three things from you every single day. And if we can give them those ideas that they're loved, they're believed in, and there's someone out there that's proud of them. Oh, and he just happens to be the only man who they were born in the world to be in relationship with for as long as he lives. Well, that's just a side benefit, but we've got to get our daughters used to hearing and believing the things that will uphold them going forward and the things that confirm their identity in such a secularizing culture that we live in now.
Rick Walker [00:33:56]: Well, Rick, I just want to say thank you. Thank you for all that you've been sharing today. If people want to find out more about you about the book, where should they go?
Christopher Lewis [00:34:03]: So my website is rickwalker.com rickwalker.com and I send out a newsletter about every one or two weeks is a three, two one model. So you get three bangers. So these quotes that I've been dropping, you get three of those, I call them bangers. And then I'll give you two videos. So one will be teaching for the most part, another one will be an interview and then the third thing I'll give you is either an essay or some reflective questions to think about. So either a long form essay or reflective question. These are big idea essays or big idea thoughts. Those are the best things.
Christopher Lewis [00:34:31]: The book is available beginning July 5, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Walmart, anywhere you buy your book books and you can actually pre order it right now. So Kindle ebook. I just wrapped up the audiobook yesterday so that'll be available for pre order as well and hardback and paperback.
Rick Walker [00:34:46]: And I will put links in the notes today so you can check out this book for yourself. And Rick, again, thank you, thank you for all that you've shared today for what you're putting out into the world to help other men to be able to live that life of meaning that we've been talking about. And I truly wish you all the best.
Christopher Lewis [00:35:04]: Christopher, thank you so much for having me. I really enjoyed our time together. That's a wrap for this episode of the dad and Daughter Connection. Thanks for joining us on this journey to build stronger bonds and raise confident, independent daughters. Remember, being an engaged dad isn't about being perfect, it's about being present. If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe and share it with a fellow dad. And don't forget, you can find all our episodes@dad dadanddaughterconnection.com until next time, keep showing up, keep connecting, and keep being the dad she needs. We're all in the same boat and it's full of tiny screaming passengers we.
Rick Walker [00:35:49]: Spend the time we give the lessons.
Christopher Lewis [00:35:55]: We made make the meals we buy them presents and bring your A game Cause those kids are growing fast the time goes by just like a dynamite blast Calling astronauts and firemen Carpenters and muscle men get out and be the world to them Be the best dinosaur you can be Be the best dad you can.