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# What Your Kids Inherit When You Never Talk About Your Dad

- Published: 2026-04-07
- Updated: 2026-06-02
- Author: [The Dead Dads Podcast](https://agents.deaddadspodcast.com/author/the-dead-dads-podcast)

> Unprocessed grief doesn

Your dad died and you got on with life. Paid the bills. Showed up. Didn't make it anyone else's problem. That's not healing — that's just postponement with better manners. And your kids are already learning it.

This isn't an accusation. Most men who take this road learned it from somewhere. The generation before us had its own version of the same script: head down, keep moving, don't burden anyone. Some of them called it strength. And in a real, practical sense, it was. But there's a cost attached to that particular kind of toughness that doesn't show up on the invoice right away. It shows up later. In your kids.

## Getting On With It Isn't the Same as Getting Through It

There are two very different things happening when a man loses his father and keeps functioning. The first is what everyone can see: he goes back to work, he makes dinner, he doesn't fall apart at the school pickup. That's real. It takes something. The second thing — integrating the loss, actually sitting with what it means that your dad is gone — rarely gets the same airtime. And the reason is simple: the first one gets rewarded.

Society has a very clear picture of what male grief is supposed to look like. Stoic. Brief. Resolved quickly enough that it doesn't inconvenience anyone. There are, as one conversation on Dead Dads put it, "Hollywood-esque, pre-subscribed notions of what grief looks like" — and most men quietly measure themselves against that image without ever saying so out loud. You check the box. You say you're fine. You probably believe it, at least for a while.

But functioning isn't the same as finishing. Functioning is catching the flight the day after the funeral. Finishing — or more accurately, integrating — is something else entirely. It's the slower, less visible work of actually making sense of who your father was, what he meant to you, and what life looks like now that he's gone. Most men are genuinely excellent at the first part. The second part is where the silence starts.

The thing about resilience — and it is a real trait, not a myth — is that it can be passed down in good ways and complicated ways simultaneously. Kids who watch their fathers absorb hard things without collapsing can learn something genuinely useful about steadiness. But they can also learn something else: that you don't talk about it. That you carry it alone. That grief is a private inconvenience, not something that gets spoken aloud at the dinner table. That lesson travels.

Research into [emotionally absent fathers consistently shows that children don't just absorb what parents say — they absorb how parents behave around pain. A father who goes silent in the face of loss is modeling a response. The child files it away.]

The guilt question is worth naming here. A lot of men feel vaguely guilty for not grieving more visibly — and that guilt is its own strange trap. The question "do you feel guilty?" can feel leading, almost coercive. The honest answer for many men is no. And then they feel like that "no" confirms something is wrong with them. It doesn't. But "I don't feel guilty" and "I've actually dealt with this" are not the same sentence. The absence of guilt is not the presence of healing.

## The Inheritance Nobody Talks About: Silence Is Also a Legacy

Here's the specific, concrete thing that happens when you never talk about your dad after he dies. Your kids don't grow up with a grandfather. They grow up with a gap shaped like one.

The stories you never tell — how he took his coffee, what he was afraid of, the stupid argument you had that one summer, the thing he said at your wedding that you've thought about ever since — those aren't just memories for you. They're the material out of which your children would build a picture of a person. Without them, he doesn't fade from their minds. He never arrives.

And here's what that means in practice. Your kids inherit the *shape* of grief — the stoicism, the avoidance, the way certain subjects quietly go unmentioned — without ever understanding why the shape is there. They don't know they learned it. It just feels normal. It feels like the way men are.

As a Dead Dads episode on this topic framed it plainly: *"Because if you don't talk about him… He disappears."* That's not a metaphor. It's a description of what actually happens. Silence doesn't preserve a person. It erases them. And the silence also teaches your children, without a single word being spoken, that this is what you do when someone dies. You get on with it. You don't mention it. You don't keep them around through stories or rituals or the occasional ridiculous impression of the way he answered the phone.

This is where the word "trauma" tends to make men switch off — because trauma, in the popular imagination, looks like a crisis. It looks like crying on the floor or being unable to leave the house. But research on what growing up without a present father actually does points to something quieter and harder to spot: relationship difficulties, trouble regulating emotion, a free-floating sense of insecurity that doesn't trace back to any single event. Trauma isn't always loud. Sometimes it looks like never hearing your grandfather's name mentioned at the dinner table, and growing up to assume that's just how families work.

The families that handle this best are the ones who figured out — not through therapy or self-help books, but usually through necessity — that keeping someone alive in conversation is a practice, not an event. It doesn't have to be heavy. It doesn't require a dedicated grief moment at Sunday dinner. It can be as simple as: "Your grandfather used to do this exact thing." Or: "He would have hated that movie." Or: "He made the worst scrambled eggs I've ever had, and I still think about them."

Those small moments do two things at once. They keep a person real, specific, present in the family's imagination. And they model, quietly, that loss is something you carry with you and talk about — not something you seal off and never look at again.

For men who lost their fathers young, this has a particular weight. The grief that arrives early, before you've had the time or the language to process it, has a way of going underground. It doesn't disappear. It shapes how you handle the next loss, and the one after that. It shows up in how you respond when your own kids are hurting. It shows up in the silence you offer when words might actually help. [What losing your father young actually does to a man](https://pendium.ai/deaddadspodcast/the-fatherless-manual/what-losing-your-father-young-actually-does-to-you-509e6f) is a longer conversation than most people have had — because most people haven't had it at all.

None of this is about performing grief for an audience. Nobody needs you to sob through a eulogy you gave three years ago or build a shrine in the living room. The bar is genuinely low: say his name. Tell one story your kids haven't heard. Let him be a person instead of a silence.

## What You Can Actually Do With This

The shift here isn't about grief homework. It's about a small, honest recalibration in how you think about what you're passing on.

You already pass things down. The way you handle frustration. The things you find funny. Your opinions about sport, about cooking, about how to shake someone's hand. All of it lands somewhere in the people watching you. The question isn't whether your kids are learning from you. They are. The question is what they're learning about loss.

If they see you go quiet when your dad comes up, they learn to go quiet. If they hear you talk about him — imperfectly, occasionally, the way you'd mention someone you genuinely miss — they learn that grief is something you live with rather than bury. That's a genuinely different starting point for whatever losses they'll face in their own lives.

You don't have to be a therapist. You don't have to have processed everything before you open your mouth. The Dead Dads approach has always been that the conversation doesn't need to be tidy to be worth having. You can not entirely know how you feel about your dad and still say his name out loud.

If you're looking for a place to start — or just to hear that you're not the only one carrying this quietly — the [Dead Dads podcast](https://www.deaddadspodcast.com/) is built for exactly that. Real conversations, not clinical ones. And if you want to think more about what carrying a father's legacy actually looks like in practice, [How to Carry Your Father's Legacy Forward Without Forcing It](https://pendium.ai/deaddadspodcast/the-fatherless-manual/how-to-carry-your-father-s-legacy-forward-without--849dd2) is a good next read.

Your kids are going to lose people. They already have, or they will. What you model now — about silence, about naming things, about whether the people you've loved stay present in your life after they're gone — that's not a small thing. It's one of the more consequential things you'll ever pass on.

Your dad isn't gone because you moved on. He's gone because he died. Those are different. You get to choose which one shapes your family.

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