Two for Tuesday - Surrounding Togetherness Pressure Comes in Many Forms


Hi Reader,

Happy Tuesday! Registration for my next online workshop Understanding Family Process is now open. You can find the details below.

This week's post is one I wrote a while ago, but it still resonates with me. I hope you find it helpful. Thanks for reading!

Surrounding Togetherness Pressure Comes in Many Forms

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When one of our sons was about 11, he came to me and asked, “Dad can we go hunting sometime?”

I immediately felt anxiety. I’m not a hunter. I grew up in the suburbs of DC. I’m not against hunting, it’s just not who I am.

But we live in a rural area, and I’m sure that my son had noticed that many of his friends went hunting with their dads. I felt surrounding togetherness pressure. Not because I wanted to be like other dads, but because I didn’t want to disappoint my son.

Surrounding togetherness pressure doesn’t just come from parents, bosses and congregants. And it’s not just external.

Sometimes we put pressure on ourselves to conform to something, even when nobody else is demanding it.

My son wasn’t demanding. He was just asking. The pressure to conform was in me.

Nonetheless, I was having a hard time picturing us hunting. We’d have to buy guns and outdoor gear, do hunter safety training and actually learn to hunt. It’s not that I didn’t want to do it. I was struggling with whether this was something really worth doing.

I also realized that this was not about hunting. It was about bonding. It was the opportunity to have something we could do together, like other dads and sons. It’s process, not content.

But we did do things together. I coached his youth basketball team. We went to NFL games together. We played catch, and I went to all his little league games.

So, after a long pause, I responded, “I don’t think so.”

My wife, being the brilliant person she is, jumped in quickly. She has many cousins from Pennsylvania who are avid hunters. She said, “Maybe we can arrange to have one of my cousins take you hunting.”

That was the last we heard of it.

Before you start thinking about what a bad father I was, let me tell you what a bad son I was.

I didn’t grow up hunting, but I did grow up fishing. My dad LOVED ocean fishing. Whether it was a surf rod, a head boat or a charter, he loved to fish and eat what he caught.

Me? Not so much. I went with him because he was my dad. As I got older my best friend across the street would go with us to Ocean City and that made it better. He liked it much better than I did. In fact, when we were teenagers he started fishing in a local pond. To this day he is an avid fly fisherman.

Ironically, my friend’s dad didn’t fish. He loved baseball. My friend played baseball, but he didn’t love it. But I did.

As things turned out, my friend would end up going fishing with my dad and I would go talk baseball with his.

As I look back, I believe our families taught us that it was OK to be yourself. You didn’t have to be just like your dad or like other dads. I’m grateful for that lesson.

The pressure to conform is everywhere. Most times, the best thing we can do is be ourselves.

I did end up coaching my son’s little league team when he was 13 and 14. I have some great memories from that time. I hope he does, too.

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Recommendations

What Leaders Can Learn From Great Parents - Admired Leadership. Speaking of parenting, this article helps leaders make the link between responsibility and consequences.

This Is The Easiest Way To Make Your Life More Awesome - Eric Barker. This is another example of addition by subtraction. Definitely worth considering.

Upcoming Offerings

Understanding Family Process, September 2, 5-6pm Better understand emotional process so you can distinguish between process and content. The workshop will be recorded if you can't make in real time. Cost: $25 ($20 for VIP Patrons) CLICK HERE to register.

Positive Intelligence October 10-November 25 Gain the skills to help you function as a non-anxious presence in those moments that make you most anxious. This seven-week program normally lists for $995 but will be available for $745 or three payments of $265. Registration opens August 5.

Family Systems for Clergy Oct 21-23, 2025 and Apr 21-23, 2026. This two-part program at Lake Junaluska, NC will challenge clergy to change the way clergy interact with their families and ministries using systems thinking. Participation is required at both retreats to complete the program. Cost: $450 + room and board per retreat. Space is limited to 12 people. CLICK HERE for more information and to register.

Podcast

Episode 341 of The Non-Anxious Leader Podcast, How to Focus on Emotional Process (and Not Content), is now available.

That's it for this week. Thanks for reading.

Peace,

Jack

P.S. If you are new to Two for Tuesday, you can read previous editions HERE.

P.P.S. If this was forwarded to you by a friend, you can subscribe here.

Jack Shitama

I show faith-based leaders how to be a non-anxious presence, personally and professionally.

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