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Dope Black Dads Podcast
How Can I Love You Better?
In this episode, Marvyn Harrison asks a question that shifts the way we show up in our relationships: How can I love you better?
This is a practical, vulnerable reflection on how love evolves over time, and why checking in with our partners, children, and friends matters more than ever.
From the changing landscape of fatherhood to the emotional intelligence needed for deep connection, this is a must-listen for anyone who wants to love with intention and grow while doing it.
đ§ Talking points include:
â Why love must evolve with growth
â How to ask the question without ego
â Common responses and how to receive them
â What to do when the answer challenges you
â Building emotional fluency as Black men and fathers
This episode is your reminder that emotional leadership begins at home.
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Iâm Intervening: The Parenting Line We Canât Cross
32:52|This is a safeguarding episode, not a comfort episode. Children are not collateral damage for adult frustration. They are not background noise. They are not âtiny adultsâ who should just get over it. And they are not content. This episode pulls apart the most dangerous lie we repeat: âKids are resilient.â Thereâs a difference between building strength and forcing a child to survive adult-made chaos, yelling, hitting, humiliation, neglect, manipulation, and constant instability. It also calls out the wider system: under-resourced schools, stripped youth services, safeguarding treated like paperwork, and a culture that frames children as problems to manage instead of humans to protect.If youâre raising kids, employing parents, building communities, or shaping policy, this is the line: protect children in advance, not after damage is done.8 things to consider:Children are not collateral damage for co-parent conflictKids are not background noise to adult livesâResilienceâ vs forced survival: stop confusing the twoDiscipline and consistency matter more than moneyWhy yelling/hitting is adult weakness dressed as parentingSystem failure: safeguarding isnât paperwork, itâs vigilanceChildren as content: the moral line is collapsingThe downstream cost: harmed kids become what other kids must navigate
Why Your New Year Goals Keep Failing
14:37|Most New Year goals fail for the same reason: theyâre fantasies, not systems.In this episode, Marvyn Harrison breaks down why âNew Year, New Meâ thinking collapses every time â and what actually creates change. This is not about motivation, manifestation, or vague intentions. Itâs about identity redesign, constraint awareness, and building daily and weekly systems that survive real life.The conversation covers why outcomes donât stick without identity, why willpower is overrated, how to design progress around limited time, energy, and money, and why evidence beats affirmation every time. Along the way, real life interrupts â parenting, noise, humour â reinforcing the point: growth has to work inside chaos, not in spite of it.This episode is a grounded framework for approaching 2026 without self-deception, self-punishment, or false optimism.
Anthony Joshua Survives Nigeria Car Crash: RIP Sina Ghami and Latif âLatzâ Ayodele
15:01|Anthony Joshua has survived a serious car crash in Nigeria that killed two close friends and long-standing members of his team. Physio Sina Ghami and personal trainer Latif âLatzâ Ayodele were pronounced dead at the scene after a collision on the LagosâIbadan expressway.In this emergency news episode, we break down the confirmed facts, timeline, and reactions from the boxing world, including tributes from Chris Eubank Jr and statements from Matchroom Boxing. We also examine the wider context â Joshuaâs recent fight with Jake Paul, his Nigerian heritage, and the deadly reputation of the expressway where the crash occurred.This episode focuses on clarity, respect, and accountability in reporting, amid widespread misinformation and the circulation of graphic footage online.
Post-Christmas Reflections
28:38|This episode is a quiet audit of Christmas, fatherhood, and attention.After two uninterrupted weeks with his children, Marvyn reflects on what it feels like when family life fully aligns â no school runs, no fragmented schedules, no performance. Just presence. The result wasnât productivity or achievement. It was peace.The episode moves through gift-giving without panic, buying throughout the year, shifting from material presents to experiences, and what it means to fund joy without excess. It explores how children thrive when safety is consistent, how traditions are built deliberately, and why Christmas Eve now belongs to the house â not the shops.There are reflections on idleness, masculinity, hobbies, strength, and the discomfort of having nothing urgent to fix. Golf enters the picture. So does grief, gratitude, and the reality that joy and loss often sit side by side at the end of a year.This is not advice. Itâs a lived reflection on slowing down, protecting what matters, and carrying the right things forward.
Christmas Isnât About Stuff. Itâs About Family
31:56|Weâve been trained to treat Christmas like a performance: spend more, buy more, post more, prove more. But the truth is simplerâand harder to defend: Christmas is about family. In this episode, Iâm pulling the focus back to what lasts. The moments your children remember arenât the receiptsâtheyâre the feeling of the home. The laughter in the kitchen. The safety of being together. The un-rushed hours where nobodyâs âdoingâ anything, but everyoneâs okay. I talk about how easy it is to slip into survival mode at the worst possible time, trying to fund a âperfect Christmas,â carrying the whole season on your back, and turning love into pressure. And I lay out a different standard: protect the atmosphere. Protect the time. Protect the relationships. Thereâs also a personal reflection on childhood Christmas memories and what they teach us: the gift might be exciting, but itâs the people, the warmth, and the stories that become the real inheritance. If youâre a parent feeling the weight of this season, this is your reminder: your kids donât need a perfect Christmas. They need you. They need peace. They need family.Â
5 âPerfectâ Green Flags That Secretly Blow Up Your Relationships
21:13|You were told to chase green flags.You were never taught how some of them hide the biggest red flags of your life.In this episode, Marvyn Harrison pulls five âperfectâ green flags apart and shows the shadow side underneath: limerence, trauma bonds, emotional shutdown, manipulation and cruelty dressed up as âbeing realâ. Across romantic relationships, friendships, family and work, Marvyn unpacks:Intense Chemistry From Day OneThe âwe could marry right nowâ energy that feels like destiny.Why you feel deeply connected on almost no information.Limerence: the repeat pattern of getting obsessed, acting like itâs real and only understanding it years later.How trauma bonds, nervous system chaos and mirroring can feel like soulmate energy while your body is actually in crisis.Why neurodivergent people often feel this intensity and believe itâs âhow love is supposed to feel.â People Who Respectfully Hate Everybody But YouâTheyâre just honest, they see through everyoneâ â the seductive packaging.The contempt, gossip and dehumanising thatâs actually rehearsing how theyâll later talk about you.The difference between feedback, sharing and constant judgement.Why âitâs us against the worldâ often means âyouâre next when the honeymoon ends.âExtreme Independence And Having âNo NeedsââIâm low maintenance, Iâm drama freeâ as a brand.Emotional shutdown disguised as maturity.The triple problem: they canât ask, canât receive and canât repair.How fear of abandonment sits behind âI donât need anything from anyone.âYou end up doing all the emotional labour, while they quietly protect a chaotic inner world they donât want you to see. Total Overlap In Values, Opinions And TastesâWeâre literally the same person, we never argueâ â why that feels like winning.People-pleasing and mirroring as manipulation: pre-written caring responses, no behavioural change.Why genuine adults have differences, and why tolerating disagreement is actually intimacy.The truth about âpeacefulâ relationships that never argue: someone gave up bringing their full self.Brutal Honesty With Zero EmpathyâI just tell it like it is, I keep it 100â as a personality costume.Cruelty cosplaying as truth.Why timing is a core part of empathy: the film-premiere example where âhonestyâ is actually violence. How real friends hold their feedback, let the moment pass, then come back with thought, care and context.Why brutal honesty is often laziness and emotional illiteracy, not integrity.Marvyn closes by turning the lens back on you:Why you keep choosing intense chemistry, âlow maintenanceâ partners or brutally honest friends.Why you might secretly want spontaneity, chaos and âlife of the partyâ energy, then demand they calm down once youâve got them.How to notice the patterns you recreate, instead of taking internet advice âcoldâ and blowing up relationships that could be repaired with awareness and conversation. This is not a call to go home and dump everyone.Itâs a call to see whatâs really happening underneath your favourite âgreen flagsâ and work out whether youâre genuinely safe, genuinely seen â or just addicted to the chaos you were never taught to name.Content WarningsThis episode includes discussion of:Trauma bonds and nervous system dysregulationEmotional shutdown and abandonment fearsManipulation, people-pleasing and cruelty in relationships
Why Iâll Never Want Diddyâs Version Of Success
22:04|Did he do it?In this raw, unplanned monologue, Marvyn Harrison picks up the mic with no notes and processes the new Netflix documentary on Sean âDiddyâ Combs in real time. Across almost four decades of alleged abuse, violence, exploitation and terror, he tracks how one man was turned into the âblueprintâ for Black male success while victims, communities and even whole events were left in pieces. Project 1 (5)Drawing on the documentary executive produced by 50 Cent, Marvyn walks through the timeline of allegations and patterns described on screen:A deadly basketball event allegedly over-promoted and under-protectedEarly accusations of drugging, rape and recording assaultsFinancial games with labels, advances and putting companies in other peopleâs namesViolence and intimidation of business partnersArtists like Craig Mack allegedly left broke while their music topped chartsThe jealous orbit around Biggie and Tupac and claims of set-ups, beef and murder-for-hire energyLong-running allegations of abuse towards women, including Cassie, and a wider pattern of trafficking-style behaviourRobbing artists of publishing and blocking them from their own workBut this episode isnât gossip. Itâs a post-mortem on the culture that let it all slide.Marvyn goes deeper into:How older gatekeepers, executives and media kept co-signing him as a heroHow young Black men were told to worship men who were dead, in jail or alleged abusersHow his own leadership style as a young promoter was briefly shaped by âMaking The Bandâ-style bullying before he rejected itThe cost of building success on coercion, fear and manipulation instead of strategy, wisdom and genuine leadershipWhy he wants no part of a fame, wealth and masculinity model that comes bundled with this level of alleged harmThis is not a polished think piece. Itâs a man in his 40s, a father, broadcaster and community builder, processing the grief of realising the âidolsâ sold to Black boys were either monsters or protected by monsters.If youâve ever looked up to industry titans only to later find out about the allegations around them, this episode will feel uncomfortably familiar â and necessary.
Macmillan Built A House. We Filled It With Grief And Truth
53:53|Black men are dying of cancer in silence. So we took a room full of dads, sons and survivors and built the most honest conversation theyâve ever had.This episode was recorded at Macmillanâs Open House, a home built to feel like the houses that raised us: soft light, old portraits, kettle on the stove, carpet holding the memories of every step. Into that house we brought a live conversation on men, fatherhood and grief.Marvyn Harrison is joined by:â Ibrahim Kamara, whose dad died of cancer on his birthday while he was locked alone in a Covid hotelâ Paul Campbell, who was denied treatment, diagnosed in the same year as his brother and sister, and watched his father die from prostate cancerâ Host and facilitator Ruben Christian, unpacking identity, masculinity and the cost of being âthe strong oneâInside this episode:â The Black dad who had to fight his GP just to get testedâ Why three siblings were all diagnosed with cancer in the same yearâ How a father hid his diagnosis from ten children and made one son carry the secret aloneâ Men explaining what grief actually feels like inside the bodyâ The quiet ways race, culture and masculinity shape how we ignore symptomsâ What good men actually need from their partners, friends and communityâ Why checkups arenât a verdict, theyâre a lifeline and a second chanceThe episode closes with âWhite Smilesâ, an original song written about a dream of a father who finally returns smiling, with new teeth and no pain. Listen grounded, eyes closed if you can.If you love a Black man, live with one, are raising one or are one, this is the episode you send.
Benn vs Eubank: The Fight That Rewrote Fatherhood
12:42|What happens when your fatherâs shadow is your biggest opponent? Marvyn Harrison breaks down Benn vs Eubank II â the fight that wasnât just about punches, but parenting, legacy, and identity. From Nigel Benn and Chris Eubank Sr.âs 90s rivalry to their sonsâ clash under the lights, this is a story about how fathers shape sons â and how sons fight to become men in their own right. Featuring deep analysis, emotional reflection, and a generational lens only Dope Black Dads could deliver.boxing, benn vs eubank, conor benn, chris eubank jr, boxing legacy, fatherhood, generational trauma, dope black dads, masculinity, fight review, redemption, british boxing, family rivalry, legacy, marvyn harrison, eubank trilogy, parenting lessons from boxing#DopeBlackDads #BennVsEubank #BoxingLegacy #Fatherhood #Masculinity #BritishBoxing #MarvynHarrison #EubankJr #ConorBenn #LegacyFight