Daniel Grose is a father and mentor for men who take responsibility seriously—especially in their role as partners and fathers.
He works with men who know that showing up for their family requires more than good intentions. It requires emotional regulation, self-leadership, and the willingness to face one’s own patterns without blame or collapse.
Through Honest Fatherhood, Daniel supports men in developing the inner steadiness needed to be reliable, present, and trustworthy in the home. His work focuses on nervous system regulation, emotional maturity, and relational accountability—so fathers can lead with clarity rather than reactivity.
Daniel does not teach ideology, performance, or surface-level fixes. He works with what is real: stress, anger, withdrawal, fear, and the impact these have on partners and children. From there, he helps men build the capacity to stay present under pressure, repair when they miss the mark, and remain engaged through the long arc of family life.
His work is especially relevant for men navigating pregnancy, birth, and early parenthood; thresholds that demand a higher level of presence and integrity than many men were modeled growing up.
At its core, Daniel’s work is about this: men becoming solid enough inside themselves that their families can relax.