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Life Without Dad's Advice: How to Find Your Footing When He's Gone

The Dead Dads Podcast

The Dead Dads Podcast

·Updated Jun 2, 2026·7 min read
Life Without Dad's Advice: How to Find Your Footing When He's Gone

At some point after your dad dies, you'll hit a moment — a busted water heater, a job offer, a fight with your wife — where your first instinct is to call him. Then you remember. And the second loss hits harder than the first.

That moment is not grief in the way people talk about grief. It doesn't look like crying at a funeral. It looks like standing in the plumbing aisle at a hardware store, holding a part you can't identify, realizing there's no one to call who would actually know.

It's Not Just Sadness — It's a Missing System

Here's what most grief content gets wrong: it treats the loss of a father as purely emotional. But a lot of men describe something more structural than that. Something more like a navigation system going offline.

Your dad was a reference point. Not always a perfect one, not always even a reliable one — but a point. When you didn't know whether to take the job, refinance the mortgage, push back on your boss, or just shut up and wait, there was someone who'd already been through most of it. Someone whose number you had.

That's gone now. And what fills the space isn't just sadness. It's a low-grade confusion that's hard to name because it doesn't feel like grief — it feels like incompetence.

This matters, because men who can't name what they're experiencing tend to assume something is wrong with them specifically. They're not falling apart at the funeral, they're falling apart six months later in the driveway because the car is making a noise and they have no idea who to call. That gap between expected grief and actual grief is where a lot of guys get stuck.

The Categories Where It Actually Lands

This isn't abstract. The absence of a dad's advice shows up in specific places, and it's worth naming them.

Career decisions. You got a competing offer and you need to know whether to use it as leverage or just take it. Your dad had opinions about this. Maybe good ones. Now you're asking Google.

Home repairs. The Dead Dads show description doesn't mention garages full of "useful" junk by accident. Dads collected stuff because they knew how to use it. When they're gone, you inherit both the junk and the ignorance of what it's for. That's a strange, specific kind of helpless.

Parenting questions. If you have kids, this one hits different. You're trying to figure out how to raise a son or daughter and the man who raised you is unavailable for comment. You find yourself wondering what he would say. You find yourself wondering what you actually know about being a father versus what you just absorbed by watching him.

Financial calls. Should you pay off debt or invest? Lock in a rate or wait? Your dad had a philosophy on this — maybe it was terrible, maybe it was solid — but it was something. Now you're either winging it or paying someone to tell you what he would have told you for free.

The small stuff, which turns out to be the big stuff. The password-protected iPad. The insurance paperwork. The pile of documents in a shoebox labeled "important" with no further clarification. None of this comes with instructions. And the person who would have known where to start is the same person who created the mess.

For a deeper look at how early father loss reshapes the whole architecture of how you make decisions, What Losing Your Father Young Actually Does to You is worth your time.

The Hardware Store Moment

The hardware store keeps coming up in conversations about father loss for a reason. It's not a metaphor. It's a real place where dads were at home, competent, and specific in a way that felt effortless to them and mysterious to everyone else.

Grief hits in ordinary places. Not just at the graveside, not just on his birthday. It hits when you're standing in front of a wall of PVC fittings and you genuinely don't know the difference between them, and the person who would have sighed heavily and then explained it without making you feel stupid is gone.

This is grief, but it doesn't feel like grief. It feels like a Tuesday afternoon problem. And because it doesn't look like what grief is supposed to look like, men often dismiss it — push through, figure it out, move on. The feeling stays compressed. And compressed feelings have a way of coming out sideways later.

One listener review on the Dead Dads reviews page described it this way: losing his dad around Christmas, then finding himself unsure how to characterize what he was experiencing. The grief wasn't a wave. It was weather — pervasive, disorienting, present even when nothing dramatic was happening.

That's the thing about losing a dad's ongoing presence and counsel. It doesn't produce a single acute loss. It produces a running series of small ones, spread across years, each attached to a situation your dad would have weighed in on.

What's Actually Happening Beneath the Surface

Part of what makes this period so hard is that losing a father reshapes your relationship to your own identity in ways that don't announce themselves clearly.

Men who lose their fathers describe a shift in how they see their own role — particularly when they have kids of their own. A conversation from the Dead Dads podcast captures it: after a job loss and his dad's death, one guest described a reorientation away from his own ambitions toward watching what the people around him were doing. The preoccupation with himself diminished. What replaced it wasn't emptiness — it was attention to everyone else.

That kind of shift is real, and it doesn't fit neatly into a grief timeline. It's not a stage. It's a slow reorganization of what matters and to whom you think you owe your effort.

The loss of a father also quietly changes your relationship to time. He was the generation ahead of you. His death moves you one row forward in the lineup, whether you asked for it or not. You're now closer to the front. That changes how you think about urgency, legacy, and what you're doing with the years you have. It's not something you decide. It happens.

This identity dimension of father loss — the becoming-the-older-generation part — is something You Are the Old Man Now: The Lessons Nobody Warned You About takes on directly.

Finding Footing: What Actually Helps

There's no replacement for a dad. That's not something to fix — it's something to accept and then work around.

But "working around" is not the same as white-knuckling it alone. The problem isn't that you need advice. It's that you've been conditioned to get advice from exactly one source for most of your life, and that source is gone. The practical task is building a wider base.

Find older men who know things. Not therapy, not a podcast (well, maybe a podcast), but actual people. The friend's dad who fixes everything. The neighbor who worked in finance for thirty years. The mentor at work who's seen every version of a bad quarterly report. These relationships don't replace your father. They don't have to. They just give you someone to call when you're standing in the plumbing aisle.

Write things down. Not as a grief practice — just as information management. Your dad held a lot in his head that is now gone. What you know, write it down. Make sure someone else in your life has access to the important stuff. This is about not recreating the same gap for the next generation.

Let the confusion be information. When you feel that low-grade lost-ness — that "I have no idea what I'm doing" sensation — treat it as a signal that you're in territory your dad usually navigated for you. That feeling is data. It tells you where you need to build capacity, ask for help, or simply accept that there isn't a right answer and make the call anyway.

And talk about it. Not because talking fixes grief, but because the silence is where the isolation lives. The men who listen to Dead Dads describe something consistent: they didn't know other men felt this way. They thought the confusion, the missing dad in the hardware store, the second loss when they reached for the phone — they thought that was theirs alone. It isn't.

One review from a listener who lost his father before Christmas 2025 described it simply: "Touches on things that we as guys either don't discuss or are afraid to discuss." Another listener, Eiman A., wrote that hearing the conversations brought relief from pain he had been bottling up for years after losing his own dad.

The advice gap is real. So is the community that exists on the other side of naming it.

What No One Tells You About Moving Forward

Moving forward doesn't mean the gap closes. It means you get better at operating with it there.

Some of what your dad would have told you, you already know. You absorbed more than you think. Not all of it is good — some of it is exactly what you're trying not to repeat — but it's in you. The task isn't to find a new oracle. It's to start trusting your own judgment while staying humble enough to ask for help.

The men who seem to come out of this steadiest aren't the ones who found a perfect substitute or resolved their grief cleanly. They're the ones who found a conversation — ongoing, honest, sometimes funny — about what it's actually like. And they kept showing up to it.

That's the whole point of a show called Dead Dads. Not closure. Not a journey to wholeness. Just the conversation that most people skip, happening out loud, so the next guy who reaches for his phone in a hardware store knows he's not the only one.

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