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What do you do?
It’s one of the first questions we ask when we meet someone.
Sometimes it’s harmless.
A simple way to make conversation.
A way to find common ground.
A way to learn a little bit about the person standing in front of us.
But for men, this question can carry more weight than we like to admit.
Because many of us don’t just hear:
What is your job?
We hear:
What is your value?
What have you accomplished?
How much do you provide?
Are you successful?
Are you respectable?
Are you enough?
For generations, many fathers have been measured by what they could bring home.
The paycheck.
The Food on the Table.
Protection.
And to be clear, providing financially for your family is honorable. It is important. It is needed.
But what happens when provision looks different?
What happens when the father is the one packing lunches?
Changing diapers?
Making appointments?
Washing clothes?
Getting the kids ready?
Answering the phone when the school calls?
What happens when the work of fatherhood is no longer measured by a salary, but by just being around?
Maybe providing is never only about money.
Maybe providing is always about showing up, day after day.
Hi, my name is Ryan Guerra, and this is A Father’s Voice.
And today I talk with Kiernan Ocampo.
Kiernan is a friend I’ve had the pleasure of getting to know over the last year and a half. He is a fellow DJ, a father, a husband, and a stay-at-home dad who has learned to own that role with a confidence I deeply admire.
Our conversation today covers a lot.
We talk about life growing up in a Filipino family, We talk about becoming a father later than expected, learning to accept the family given to him, and what it means to fully pour yourself into the child in front to you.
But more than anything, we talk about provision.
Not just financial provision.
But the kind of provision that comes through time, attention, care, humility, and consistency.
Kiernan is part of the National At Home Dad Network, an organization I have been personally blessed by, and through this conversation you’ll hear why spaces like that are important to many fathers.
Because as fathers we need community.
We need encouragement.
We need other men who understand what it means to carry the weight of the home in ways that are not always seen.
I’m thankful for Kiernan’s friendship. I’m thankful for the way he has invited me into his community. And I’m thankful for the way he challenges the old ideas that a man’s value is only found in the money he brings home.
Because maybe money can provide for a house.
But presence provides a home.
And so with that, I am honored to present to you my conversation with Kiernan Ocampo.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Ryan Guerra5
44 ratings
What do you do?
It’s one of the first questions we ask when we meet someone.
Sometimes it’s harmless.
A simple way to make conversation.
A way to find common ground.
A way to learn a little bit about the person standing in front of us.
But for men, this question can carry more weight than we like to admit.
Because many of us don’t just hear:
What is your job?
We hear:
What is your value?
What have you accomplished?
How much do you provide?
Are you successful?
Are you respectable?
Are you enough?
For generations, many fathers have been measured by what they could bring home.
The paycheck.
The Food on the Table.
Protection.
And to be clear, providing financially for your family is honorable. It is important. It is needed.
But what happens when provision looks different?
What happens when the father is the one packing lunches?
Changing diapers?
Making appointments?
Washing clothes?
Getting the kids ready?
Answering the phone when the school calls?
What happens when the work of fatherhood is no longer measured by a salary, but by just being around?
Maybe providing is never only about money.
Maybe providing is always about showing up, day after day.
Hi, my name is Ryan Guerra, and this is A Father’s Voice.
And today I talk with Kiernan Ocampo.
Kiernan is a friend I’ve had the pleasure of getting to know over the last year and a half. He is a fellow DJ, a father, a husband, and a stay-at-home dad who has learned to own that role with a confidence I deeply admire.
Our conversation today covers a lot.
We talk about life growing up in a Filipino family, We talk about becoming a father later than expected, learning to accept the family given to him, and what it means to fully pour yourself into the child in front to you.
But more than anything, we talk about provision.
Not just financial provision.
But the kind of provision that comes through time, attention, care, humility, and consistency.
Kiernan is part of the National At Home Dad Network, an organization I have been personally blessed by, and through this conversation you’ll hear why spaces like that are important to many fathers.
Because as fathers we need community.
We need encouragement.
We need other men who understand what it means to carry the weight of the home in ways that are not always seen.
I’m thankful for Kiernan’s friendship. I’m thankful for the way he has invited me into his community. And I’m thankful for the way he challenges the old ideas that a man’s value is only found in the money he brings home.
Because maybe money can provide for a house.
But presence provides a home.
And so with that, I am honored to present to you my conversation with Kiernan Ocampo.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.