In this episode, Larry opens the doors of a live Dad Edge Alliance Q&A featuring neuroscience expert and brain coach Ashleigh Di Lello. This is a rare look behind the curtain at what actually happens inside the Alliance — real men, real questions, and real breakthroughs in real time.
Ashleigh was told she was going to die at 13. She learned to walk again three times. And when a catastrophic hip surgery in 2017 left her in chronic pain and facing the possibility of never walking again, she decided to stop trying to control her body and start studying her brain instead. What she discovered — and has since spent seven years coaching others through — is a comprehensive, neuroscience-based process for rewiring the patterns, beliefs, and self-critical voices that keep men stuck.
The men in this Q&A ask the questions most of us never say out loud: how do I quiet the inner critic at 61? How do I build resilience when my business is falling apart? How do I help my perfectionist daughter without making it worse? And what does it actually mean to feel your emotions without losing your identity as a man?
Ashleigh answers every one of them — and the conversation goes places you won't expect.
Timeline Summary
[0:00] Introduction to the Dad Edge mission and the movement to raise leaders of families and communities
[1:02] The quiet, sinister nature of negative self-chatter — and why morning affirmations aren't enough
[3:26] Ashleigh's story — told she would die at 13, three hip surgeries, learning to walk again, and turning it all into a neuroscience-based brain rewiring practice
[5:13] Ashleigh opens the Q&A — the brain's mechanisms are the same for all of us and can become our greatest asset
[8:20] Jason's question: 61 years old, raised to suppress feelings, bullied in school — how do I quiet the inner critic now?
[10:35] You are not either strong or weak — you are both. The human experience is contrast.
[12:15] Self-criticism locks up the neural synapses — why the brain cannot change long-term through shame
[13:47] The writing exercise — ten minutes, throw it away, slow the brain down and finally hear yourself
[16:26] Speaking to your brain instead of letting your brain speak to you — and why micro-action is what changes the operating system
[19:40] Larry shares his own moment — sitting down after his interview with Ashleigh in tears, writing down every cruel thing he was telling himself
[21:09] Chris's question: how does your process actually work from start to finish?
[22:15] The 12-week process — identifying, processing out, then rewiring. You can't skip the first half.
[23:43] What isn't expressed is suppressed — and the brain holds on to it
[28:24] Why men are more prone to addiction — shame activates the brain's alarm system and it will always find an outlet
[31:10] Scott's question: how do I build resilience under prolonged stress as an entrepreneur?
[33:29] Resilience is not a character trait — it's a part of your brain you can grow
[34:36] The win book — why you need a physical record of what's working, not just what isn't
[36:07] When your identity gets attached to not pivoting — and how that keeps you stuck
[40:27] Never make a big decision on a bad day — and give your brain real breaks from stimulation
[42:24] Chris's question: I can already see perfectionist tendencies in my nine-year-old daughter — how do I help her?
[43:38] Share your own struggles with your kids — it gives them permission to struggle too
[45:18] Failure is not a noun — it's how we learn. And the brain can't learn through shame.
[46:31] The win book applies to your kids too — build the evidence of progress, not just the list of what went wrong
[49:08] Practice makes progress, not perfect — and what that means for how you raise your kids
[51:38] Henry's question: how do men navigate the space between survival instincts and actually feeling their emotions?
[52:23] It's not either or — it's and. Feeling doesn't eliminate strength. It creates space for more of it.
[54:13] Let it out to bring it in — what isn't expressed will keep battling for space with everything you're trying to build
Five Key Takeaways
Links & Resources
Closing
If there's one message from this episode that stands out, it's this: what you're saying to yourself when no one is listening is either building you up or quietly tearing you apart — and most of us have no idea how cruel we actually are to ourselves.
Ashleigh Di Lello learned to rewire her brain not from a textbook but from necessity. She had no other option. And what she found on the other side was not just recovery — it was a life she built on purpose.
The brain can change. You can change. But it starts with being honest enough to write it all down, compassionate enough to not judge what you find, and brave enough to let it move through you instead of holding it in.
Go out and live legendary.