Send us Fan MailMost dads today are expected to show up, at every appointment, in the delivery room, and through the hard months after the baby comes home. But no one really tells them how. And the research is now making something clear: what a father does during pregnancy doesn't just matter emotionally. It affects his child's biology. His health, his habits, and his presence are all part of the equation. The system has started to include him. It just hasn't figured out how to support him.In this episode, host Timothy sits down with Dr. Jennifer Lincoln, a board-certified OB-GYN and author of The Birth Book: An OB-GYN's Guide to Demystifying Labor and Delivery. Jennifer has been in the delivery room for thousands of births. She has seen what it looks like when a dad shows up, and what it costs when he doesn't. Together, they talk through what it really means to be present as a father, not just physically, but in a way that actually helps.This conversation covers a lot of ground. It looks at the science behind how fathers shape pregnancy outcomes, what goes on inside the delivery room that no checklist prepares you for, and why the months after birth are often when men are most at risk, while being the least supported. Most men are not underprepared because they don't care. They are underprepared because no one pointed them toward what works.You'll hear us break down:How dads affect pregnancy: A father's health, habits, and emotional presence shape his child's biology in real ways, not as background noise, but as a key part of development.Being there vs. being useful: Showing up and asking questions matters more than knowing every stage of labor. You don't need to pass a test. You need to be engaged.Your role in the delivery room: How to support your partner without taking over, and why learning to advocate for her is more powerful than trying to fix everything yourself.Having people outside your relationship: Men need other dads and close friends to talk to. If your partner is your only outlet, the pregnancy will stretch that thin fast.Postpartum depression in men: Between 10 and 25 percent of new fathers go through postpartum depression or anxiety. It usually peaks at three to six months, right when everyone else has moved on and stopped asking how you're doing.Building a community: Isolation is one of the biggest risks for new parents. A men's group, a fantasy league, a standing hangout, it doesn't need to be formal. It just needs to be real.Parenting your way: There is not one right way to raise a child. Your kid needs your version of parenting, not just a corrected copy of how your partner does it.Here is the first article in a 3-part series with the takeaways from this conversation. If you're on Substack, make sure to let us know you're there.This episode is not about being a perfect dad. It is about knowing that your presence matters, findingThe American Masculinity Podcast™ is hosted by Timothy Wienecke — licensed psychotherapist, Air Force veteran, and men’s advocate. Real conversations about masculinity, mental health, growth, and how men can show up better — as partners, leaders, and friends. We focus on grounded tools, not yelling or clichés. If you have questions or want a tool for something you're wrestling with, leave a comment or send a message — your feedback shapes what we build next. Note: While this doesn’t replace therapy, it might help you notice something worth exploring.