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The Daily Dad

It's All Quality Time

The Daily Dad

Daily Dad

Dads, Society & Culture, Kids & Family, Fatherhood, Education, Wisdom, Relationships, Ryan Holiday, Self-improvement, Parenting

4.6 • 629 Ratings

🗓️ 2 December 2019

⏱️ 3 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

You’ll hear other dads talk about the need for “quality time” with their kids. It’s sort of a strange phrase, if you think about it. Because it implies a kind of hierarchy of time that nobody has ever really bothered to define. There’s a judgement to it too, that maybe the time or experiences you—the busy, ordinary, doing-the-best-you-can dad—give your kids is not enough. 

The comedian Jerry Seinfield, who has three kids—an 18-year-old daughter, a 16-year-old son, and a 13-year-old son—pushes back against that. Special days? Nah. Every day is special. Every minute can be quality time:

I’m a believer in the ordinary and the mundane. These guys that talk about "quality time" – I always find that a little sad when they say, "We have quality time." I don’t want quality time. I want the garbage time. That’s what I like. You just see them in their room reading a comic book and you get to kind of watch that for a minute, or [having] a bowl of Cheerios at 11 o’clock at night when they’re not even supposed to be up. The garbage, that’s what I love.

Your job is not to entertain them. Or to curate every minute of their lives so that everything is meaningful and important and edifying. Your job is to be their dad. You job is to be there. To help them see that quality is what we make it, that it’s always within our reach if we so choose. Eating cereal together can be wonderful. Blowing off school for a fun day together can be wonderful—but so can the twenty minute drive in traffic to school. So can taking out the garbage or watching a garbage truck meander through the neighborhood. 

All time with your kids is created equal. What do you with it is what makes it special.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the Daily Dad podcast.

0:08.0

Every Dad needs a little help, and that's why we made this podcast.

0:12.0

It's one inspiring, philosophically driven, historical-driven, lesson about fatherhood

0:18.0

that you can use to do your most important job a little bit better.

0:30.8

It's all quality time. You'll hear other dads talk about the need for quality time with their kids.

0:37.9

Sort of a strange phrase if you think about it, because it implies a hierarchy of time that

0:43.0

nobody has ever really bothered to define. And there's judgment to that too, that maybe the

0:48.6

time or experiences that you, the busy ordinary dad, give your kids, is not enough.

0:54.1

The comedian Jerry Seinfeld,

0:55.8

who has three kids, an 18-year-old daughter, a 16-year-old son, and a 13-year-old son,

1:01.1

pushes back against that. Special days? No. Every day is special. Every minute can be quality time.

1:08.7

I'm a believer in the ordinary and the mundane, Seinfeld said.

1:12.9

These guys that talk about quality time, I always find that a little sad when they say we have

1:17.8

quality time. I don't want quality time. I want the garbage time. That's what I like. You just see

1:23.8

them in their room reading a comic book and you get to kind of watch that for a minute

1:28.0

or having a bowl of Cheerios at 11 o'clock at night when they're not even supposed to be up.

1:33.1

The garbage. That's what I love.

1:35.6

Your job is not to entertain them or to curate every minute of their lives so that everything is meaningful and important and edifying.

1:43.8

Your job is to be there, dad. Your job is to be

1:47.4

there. To help them see that quality is what we make, that it's always within our reach if we so

1:54.3

choose. Eating cereal together can be wonderful. Blowing off school for a fun day together can be wonderful,

2:00.2

but so can the 20-minute

...

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