The Stoic Father: Raising Resilient Kids Without Raising Your Voice
Ancient Wisdom for Modern Dads—How to Lead Calmly, Break Generational Cycles, and Build Kids Who Can Actually Handle Life
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
3 Months Free + £10 Audible voucher
Buy Now for £6.39
-
Narrated by:
-
Zoe ONeill
-
By:
-
Claire Ashworth
A Framework for the Father Who Feels Out of His Depth
You're a capable man. You manage complexity at work. You make difficult decisions under pressure. But somewhere between the office door and your child's face, something shifts. The same nervous system that keeps you functional at work floods the moment your kid pushes back. You feel the rage rising before you can stop it. You raise your voice before you mean to. And then you carry the shame of it—the gap between the father you want to be and the father you're being.
This book is for that man.
Not a book about being a perfect father. Not a book about eliminating all parental frustration. A book about understanding why you lose it, built directly from fifteen years of working with men under pressure and the ancient wisdom of Stoic philosophy—Marcus Aurelius, Epictetus, the texts that were written not about serenity but about how to remain functional and principled when the world demands impossible things.
What You'll Actually Find Inside
The Pause Protocol: The tool Claire developed during her own son's meltdown at Bristol Temple Meads station. Not complicated. Not another breathing exercise. A framework for intervening in your own automatic response before it lands on your child.
The Inherited Patterns: Why you parent the way you do isn't random. Your father shaped your nervous system whether you're aware of it or not. Understanding this won't fix it immediately. But it's the prerequisite for anything else working.
The Systems: Small rituals and structures that prevent the friction that leads to blow-ups. Most parental anger isn't about big things. It's about the accumulated weight of small things. This is about creating an environment where your nervous system isn't constantly flooded.
Not Another Parenting Book
©2026 Claire Ashworth (P)2026 Claire Ashworth