The Hard Journey Back from the Edge of Divorce featuring Tara & Tim Katzman
The Dad Edge Podcast
Larry Hagner
4.8 β’ 1.6K Ratings
ποΈ 18 March 2026
β±οΈ 51 minutes
ποΈ Recording | iTunes | RSS
π§ΎοΈ Download transcript
Summary
In this episode, I sit down with Tara and Tim Katzman β a real couple from our own Dad Edge community who were standing at the doorstep of divorce and chose to fight for their marriage instead. This is one of the most downloaded episodes in Dad Edge history, and when you hear their story, you'll understand why.
Tim was a workaholic consumed by his business, available to clients around the clock while his wife and kids got whatever was left β which was almost nothing. Tara reached a breaking point where leaving felt like the only sane option. She was done. She told him daily she wanted a divorce. And yet something shifted.
We dig into what that turning point actually looked like β the flatline-or-mad emotional state Tim was stuck in, the moment Tara came prepared for a fight and got ownership and an apology instead, and how Tim went from never setting a boundary with a client to shutting work off at 4pm and protecting his family time fiercely. Their 18-year-old daughter even noticed β calling out that "dad is out of his people-pleasing era."
We also get into what it means to go from doing the right things to actually being a different man β and why that distinction matters more than any tactic or checklist. Tara describes going from keeping mental receipts and bracing for fallout every time she spoke, to fully melting into her husband. Tim describes going from avoiding his wife to not being able to spend enough time with her.
If your marriage feels like a checklist, if you're disappearing into work, or if you've already heard the words "I'm not in love with you anymore" β this episode is proof that it is possible to turn it all the way around.
Timeline Summary
[0:00] Introduction to the Dad Edge mission and the movement to raise leaders of families and communities
[1:01] Why this episode is one of the most downloaded in Dad Edge history β and what makes it so real
[1:47] Setting the scene: Tim the workaholic, Tara on the verge of walking out, and a marriage running on fumes
[3:24] Switching Wednesday Q&As to real stories of wins from men and couples in the community
[5:42] Tim and Tara introduce themselves β four kids, a pool business, and a 22-year relationship that started at 16
[7:32] Growing up in divorced households with no blueprint for what a healthy marriage looks like
[10:18] The forced house move that made everything worse β and the moment Tara hit her absolute lowest
[12:10] What the disconnection really looked like day to day: ships passing in the night, Tim treating family like a bother
[13:50] When the kids started getting the same treatment β and why that was Tara's breaking point
[17:34] The meditation exercise that shifted Tim's perspective and turned down the volume on work urgency
[18:34] Setting boundaries with clients for the first time β and Tara having to tell him to stop ignoring people
[19:40] Their 18-year-old daughter notices the change: "Dad's out of his people-pleasing era"
[20:52] Tim's side of the story: feeling completely alone while sleeping one foot away from his wife every night
[23:58] Tara's plan to leave β and the screaming match that became the turning point
[27:47] Tara's honest reaction when Tim said a podcast was going to fix things: she laughed
[29:50] The first signs of real change β Tim hearing her, owning his mistakes, and apologizing to the kids
[31:33] The difference between covert contracts and genuine ownership β and which one Tim chose
[35:42] Tara describes what it feels like to finally be safe enough to bring anything to him without bracing for fallout
[37:06] How the relationship has completely transformed β travel, connection, and a bond Tara never believed was possible
[39:26] Tim's perspective now: from avoiding conflict to not being able to get enough time with her
[41:25] The moment Tara started "melting" β and what it means when a woman can finally drop her defenses
[43:17] Masculine and feminine energy β why Tara stepping into her femininity changed the dynamic of everything
[45:00] If you could go back and give yourself advice β what Tim and Tara would tell themselves 2-3 years ago
[47:56] The difference between doing and being β when the work becomes who you are, not just what you do
Five Key Takeaways
- Disconnection rarely looks like dramatic blowups β it looks like two people sharing a house but not a life, talking only about what has to get done.
- A real apology combined with real follow-through is more powerful than years of arguing. Ownership without excuses changes everything.
- When a man becomes the lowest heartbeat in the room β calm, present, and safe β his wife and kids will naturally move toward him.
- The work you do on yourself doesn't stay contained to one area. When Tim changed, it transformed their marriage, their kids, their business, and their friendship.
- There is a difference between doing the right things and being a different man. When it becomes your way of being, you stop having to try β it's just who you are.
Links & Resources
- Roommates to Soulmates Cohort & Preview Call: https://thedadedge.com/soulmates
- The Men's Forge: https://themensforge.com
- Dad Edge Business Boardroom: https://thedadedge.com/mastermind
- Episode Link & Resources (Episode 1453): https://thedadedge.com/1453
Closing
If there's one message from this episode that stands out, it's this: it is never too late to turn your marriage around β but you have to be willing to truly change, not just try harder.
Tara and Tim were 18 years in, kids watching, divorce on the table daily, and they found their way back to something neither of them believed was even possible. Not because life got easier. Because Tim decided to become a different man.
If this episode spoke to something you're carrying right now, don't wait. The longer you wait, the more distance builds. Share this with a man who needs to hear it.
Because when a man leads well at home, everybody wins.
Go out and live legendary.
Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | Welcome to the Dad Edge podcast. The Dad Edge movement creates leaders of men, leaders of families, and leaders of communities. We will not only impact this generation of fathers, but the next generation as well. The kids we are raising will have better chances and odds stacked in their favor because of the amazing example |
| 0:21.2 | that their fathers emulated for them. We are here to change the world. We are here to change |
| 0:27.6 | relationships. We are here to positively disrupt this generation of fathers so no man goes to their |
| 0:33.6 | grave with regret. We disrupt the drift of busyness and replace it with razor-focused intention, |
| 0:40.3 | passion, purpose, and direction. |
| 0:43.7 | We are the Dad Edge, |
| 0:45.7 | and we're here to change the game. |
| 0:47.8 | We're here to change the game. |
| 1:13.3 | I don't know. Gentlemen, welcome to the Dad Edge podcast. I'm Larry Hagner, your host and founder, and today I am bringing you one of the most downloaded episodes that we've ever done in Dad Edge history. |
| 1:16.8 | And it's going to surprise you because it's not a celebrity. |
| 1:18.4 | This is a couple. |
| 1:20.6 | Tara and Tim Katzman. |
| 1:24.7 | And their story, it is absolutely incredible. |
| 1:28.6 | You talk about a couple that has come from the ashes and was knocking on divorces doorstep. This one was it. This interview mattered. And we had so many new dads, |
| 1:36.7 | when we released this a couple years ago, so many new dads came to the Dad Edge Business |
| 1:40.7 | Boardroom because of this and not because it was flashy, but because it was so |
| 1:45.5 | real. They, like I said, they were on the verge of divorce. They had the kind of disconnect where |
| 1:52.1 | they were sharing a house, but they were not sharing a life with each other. Tim, he was obsessed with |
| 1:57.5 | work. He was a workaholic trying to quote unquote provide. And Tara was to the |
| 2:02.5 | point where she felt that leaving was literally the only sane option available to her. And in this |
| 2:08.3 | conversation, you're going to hear what changed. You're also going to hear about what we call |
| 2:12.1 | flatline or mad moments. Kids noticing when the shift of the people pleasing, actually, that era was over. Boundaries |
... |
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