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Dad Club Japan

Author: Joel

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Real dads discuss real life in surreal Japan.Through anecdotes and stories and from the perspective of dads living in Japan, the aim is to help listeners understand the complexities, curiosities and positive attributes of Japanese culture.
28 Episodes
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Duncan and Joel discuss a Dads get - together (piss up) where they find out they've reached real listeners and have actually helped them!Further promises are made to connect with Dads on Instagram at Dad Club Japan.  We aim to connect with fathers here in Japan and everywhere!  As Dads we all share some similarities and discussing those things which we find challenging can be therapeutic.Let's face it.  We are not the most needy of groups out there in society, but we do experience the ups and downs in life.  Who else, if not other dads, know what we're going through?So have a listen and join the conversation, we would love to hear from you.
Joel poses a question to Duncan in this episode:What are your values?  Joel tries to explain what he defines as 'values', and gives an example of what one of his values is.  He then admits that although his value is defined, he has found recently that he is not living out his value in the way he intended.Duncan admits there is confusion in this current generation about what we should value and who we should be valuing.Food for thought.Do you know your own values?
Duncan discusses his experience back in the UK during the Christmas/New Years holidays. Although a mostly positive experience, aware that he did a brilliant job at keeping everyone happy but he expresses some regret at not being in the moment, and talking more in depth with his family members.Joel raises the issue of discipline, punishment and reward in relation to his sons being addicted to video games.  Facing challenges in having his sons listen to him, he has resorted to taking away their beloved Nintendo Switch.This episode explores discipline for children in Japan.  Both Duncan and Joel recount how they were disciplined during their own childhoods and seek answers for a new way to restrict and reward their own kids.Finally, we discuss how to find and connect with Duncan and Joel: through the Dad Club Japan instagram account, where we will be posting weekly in an effort to reach out to our listeners and to hear their perspectives.Hope to hear from you!
As the end of the calendar year approaches, Duncan and Joel look back at 2023 and assess what they are grateful for.We're grateful to you for listening and we would really appreciate some feedback on this episode or any other episode.Thanks as always, and hope to hear from you!Peace and Love!JoelDuncan
In what will be the final episode recorded in Canada, Duncan questions Joel on his last month in Canada.Discussed are the lessons learned for Joel trying trying to integrate him and his son into Canadian life and how things might have gone differently if there were more time, and the experience for Joel's son as a student in a Canadian school.
Joel joins the conversation from Canada, while Duncan is in Japan posing some great questions about the parenting experience outside Japan.Some action for YOU, the listener to take....>Be sure to subscribe to the podcast!>Leave a review!>Email Joel with any specific requests, ideas, comments or suggestions for the podcast!Get in touch through our FB page, or email Joel at...jvl2177@gmail.comThanks for listening!
Hello to all you amazing Dads (and others)!In this episode...Joel and Duncan discuss Joel's trip home to Canada.Duncan asks about Joel's motives for his 3.5 month visit:>to have his son go to primary school in Canada for 3 months>to celebrate the life of Joel's mother who passed on in March>to level up some new skills with focused work>to have his his son experience living abroadWe hope you enjoy the episode and perhaps even find it helpful.Please rate the episode if you enjoyed listening:It will help us uncover some new topics. Happy Fathering!    
This episode is gold!  Must listen content right here!If you're a father of a mixed/bicultural/half Japanese, half whatever nationality you are, then this episode will resonate deeply with you!Duncan found our latest guest - Jamie - recently at a language school here in Fukuoka.Jamie is mixed heritage: part British, part Japanese.  His father is English, his mother Japanese.As fathers of bicultural children ourselves, Duncan and Joel had a multitude of questions to ask Jamie.Topics like:>how his parents met >where he plans to live in the future>what passport he uses>what were the issues he dealt with growing up>what advice he has for children of mixed race>how he fills out official government forms....And more!Be sure to have a listen.  We're sure you'll find this episode as valuable as we did.And also be sure to rate the Dad Club Japan podcast on any or all of your listening platforms.We would love to have some feedback.Also check us out on Instagram, Facebook or 'X', previously known as Twitter.Just search for Dad Club Japan podcast.Thanks for tuning in.Love!Peace!  
It's the most awesome day of the year for Dads: Fathers Day!!After a an exciting evening of the June edition of the Dads Club Social (held once a month in Fukuoka), Duncan and Joel get together in the Record Room to record a fathers day episode.Be sure to listen carefully as Duncan announces an event he is organizing for the last weekend in July.Hope your Fathers Day 2023 was a great one!
Duncan and Ken continue their conversation in an extended recording session (hence Pt.2) where our guest reveals how he learnt his style of parenting from his own parents. They also discuss how to balance discipline duties with the mothers of their children and the difficult issue of limiting ‘screen time.’ This is Part 2 of the chat with Ken. Be sure to check out Part 1 (Episode 17) where you can hear him and Duncan talk about his recent trip to visit his young daughters  who have been living away in the U.K for 8 months, the changes he noticed in them and how he and his ex-wife came to the decision for their children to move away from Japan. 
Duncan sits down with Ken, a Japanese Dad whose young daughters moved to the U.K 8 months ago. They discuss how his recent trip to visit them went, the changes he noticed in them and how he and his ex-wife came to the decision for their children to move away from Japan. This is Part 1 of the chat with Ken. Be sure to check out Part 2 (Episode 18) where you can hear him and Duncan talk about parenting styles learnt from parents, balancing discipline duties with the mothers of their children and the difficult issue of limiting ‘screen time.’ 
After returning from Canada, Joel talks with Duncan about the death of Joel's mother.We are, after all, the sons of our mothers, and we wouldn't exist as humans, let alone dads, without the gift of life from our mothers (and fathers).Grief, acceptance, connection, love and laughs are wrapped up together in this episode.*This is the first time that an episode of this podcast has not been edited.
Joel sits down with David to discuss what David does well in his role as a father.  We find out about a forgotten piece of audio equipment that has resulted in a hobby that David now shares with his son.  And we share strategies for keeping cool when emotions run high!Please leave us a comment someplace where we can see your feedback: Facebook group, instagram, twitter, or on apple podcasts.Thanks for listening! 
Our first Japanese guest on DCJ!Joel and Duncan welcome their friend Taka to the podcast, discussing all things Dad over beers and scotch.Duncan does his best to interrogate Taka about why he is so different, and where did this difference originate.Taka shares his feelings about Japanese society and the world in general, and shares with us what he wants his daughters to achieve when they grow up.Hope you have a laugh or two and are surprised at one Japanese fathers perspective.Cheers  
A follow up to the previous episode, concentrating on the new year, and what we see ahead for the 'year of the dad'.Listen in for a hint of what's to come for the podcast and for possible events?
Happy New Year! The year of the Rabbit? Yes.  But also Year of the DAD! In the first episode of 2023, Duncan and Joel discuss how they spent their holidays:A little bit blue, but a lot of warmth and love.Building upon the conversations from the previous Christmas, Joel recognized the value in putting forth more effort to make Christmas a special time for his kids.Duncan felt Christmas passed in a blur, and became a little bluesy.Hope you find value in our conversations!Stayed tuned for more content this year.Love you all!
Duncan and Joel discuss differences in lifestyle in the pre-Dad and current Dad years, as well as provide details on their their friendship evolved over time.  Also, the subject of truth and honesty in Dadships (like friendships between Dads) is a theme that gets looked at more closely in this episode.
After a long break, the Dad Club Japan podcast is back.Life has a way of introducing hiccups, and there were a number of big ones between this episode and the last one - which future episodes will undoubtedly dive into.This time around, Duncan discusses his experiences with his two bicultural children while visiting his home country of the UK.
This episode features the ever-entertaining and enlightening Humphrey,  as I ask him how he was able to raise -in Japan - his son who has by most indications matured into a very respectable young man.This was recorded on Feb 1, 2022. 
In this episode, I pay a visit to my friend Stephen at his new school,  Sunshine English, in Nagazumi, Fukuoka.I wanted to find out how Stephen helps nurture another part of his children's identities, the side of them that isn't Japanese.  As it turned out, Stephen is not as concerned as I am about fostering the foreign side of our children's identities.  I was surprised at his answer, but I probably shouldn't have been.  I think my own ego got in the way and assumed that every foreign father has a similar set of expectations from their bicultural children.  That was not the case at all, and I was left to ponder if my own expectations are unrealistic, or even detrimental in some way to their overall development.Nevertheless, I was happy to witness the birth of his school I'm excited for Stephen and his wife. I wish them great success with it.Next time though, I'll do a better job of researching my interviewee beforehand.
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