Father’s Day Unfiltered: Successful at Work, Struggling at Home? (Free Online Event) (18th June 2026)
A Father’s Day Conversation on Family, Connection, and the Hidden Cost of Career Success for Men
Many men are succeeding professionally…
But quietly struggling personally.
They are respected at work.
Trusted by clients.
Dependable in business.
Financially responsible.
But at home?
Disconnected.
There’s pressure to provide.
Emotionally unavailable.
Exhausted.
Present physically… but absent mentally.
And because society celebrates men mostly for provision and achievement…
Very few stop to ask:
“What is all this success costing them personally?”
The Family Cost Many Men Realize Too Late
In many homes today:
- Fathers are physically present but emotionally distant
- Conversations between couples have become transactional
- Children are growing up with limited emotional connection to their fathers
- Work stress is silently affecting family dynamics
- Men feel deeply alone… but don’t know how to express it
And the painful part?
Many men genuinely love their families.
But somewhere between responsibility, pressure, and survival…
Connection got lost.
FREE ONLINE EVENT
Father’s Day Unfiltered: Successful at Work, Struggling at Home?
A Father’s Day conversation on family, connection, and the hidden cost of career success for most men
🗓 18th June 2026
⏰ 8:00 PM – 9:00 PM
📍 Online via Zoom
Inside This Conversation, We Will Explore:
- Why many successful men still feel disconnected at home
- The emotional pressure men silently carry
- How work and career demands affect relationships and family connection
- Why many fathers struggle with emotional presence
- The difference between provision and connection
- Rebuilding healthier family relationships while pursuing success
- Rethinking masculinity, vulnerability, and emotional wellbeing
Who Should Attend?
- Fathers
- Husbands
- Professionals balancing career and family pressure
- Men feeling emotionally disconnected or overwhelmed
Because many men are succeeding professionally…
But quietly struggling in the places that matter most.

