As a dad and lifelong competitor, I’ve always been wired for progress. I grew up in the pool as a collegiate swimmer, but it was never just about the races. It was the discipline. The structure. The grind. Those habits shaped how I train and how I show up as a father today.

After college, fitness became my anchor. More recently, I leaned into endurance training, the kind that forces you to measure everything. That focus is what pushed me toward WHOOP back in 2021. I wanted data. I wanted clarity. And the biggest variable holding me back was the one I didn’t expect. Alcohol wasn’t wrecking my life, but it was wrecking my recovery.

The tricky part was social life. Saying no when everyone else is saying yes wears you down. It felt like the only way to participate was to drink, even when I didn’t want to sacrifice a morning run or drag through breakfast with my kids.

By 2023, I wanted a reset. So I committed to a dry year. That decision led me to Athletic Brewing, and it immediately became the solution I didn’t know I needed. It let me keep the ritual without the slowdown. A cold beer after work. A beer with friends. A beer on the weekend. Same experience. Better outcomes.

Two years later, there is always a six pack of Run Wild, Free Wave, or Athletic Lite in my fridge. Before, I used to rush through drinks without really tasting them. Now I slow down and actually enjoy them. One or two at dinner is plenty, and the flavor stands on its own.

What surprised me most is how normal everything still feels. I can hang with friends, celebrate wins, and keep the social connection, all while staying aligned with my training. No foggy mornings. No sluggish workouts. No wasted Saturdays. It’s the same ritual, just with a better tradeoff. And the more I bring NA options around, the more people around me try them too.

There’s also the example my kids get to see. They watch their dad unwind with something that never changes who he is. They see consistency. The same person at night and in the morning. They see someone who can relax and celebrate while staying present. That matters to me. It shows them that balance is possible.

On weekends, I still get the urge to reward myself after a long run or a few hours of yard work. Athletic Brewing gives me that satisfying moment without the drag. I get the dopamine hit, the refresh, and I’m still fully engaged with my family afterward.

If you’re curious, just mix in an Athletic on your next night out. Keep your edge. Keep the fun. Keep the next morning. You might find the switch happens faster than you expect.

What Is the Cooper Test?

Forget fancy gym gear and $200 smartwatches. The Cooper Test is as old-school as it gets:

Run for 12 minutes. See how far you get.

Developed in 1968 by Air Force physician Dr. Kenneth H. Cooper, this test measures your aerobic capacity (VO2 max) — basically, how efficiently your body uses oxygen during exercise. It has been used by the military, police academies, and pro athletes for decades because it is brutally simple and brutally honest. No hiding behind “I lift heavy” or “I walk a lot.”

Twelve minutes on the clock tells you everything you need to know about your endurance and your honesty with yourself.


Why Dads Should Care

Because your fitness is your family’s foundation.

The Cooper Test is not about abs or aesthetics. It is about function and longevity — two things every dad should care about.

  • Chasing your kids without gassing out

  • Hiking without huffing

  • Handling stress better because your heart’s stronger

It is a reality check that does not lie, does not care about your excuses, and does not require anything more than a watch and a stretch of road.

In other words, it is dad fitness in its purest form.


How to Do the Cooper Test

1. Find Your Track (or Route)
A standard 400m track is perfect, but any flat surface works. Mark your start and note each lap or distance marker.

2. Warm Up
Spend 5 to 10 minutes jogging lightly and doing mobility drills. Keep it dynamic, not static. Loosen up your joints and wake up your lungs.

3. Run for 12 Minutes
That is it. Push yourself but pace smart. The goal is not to sprint and die, but to sustain effort for all 12 minutes.

4. Record Your Distance
Use a GPS watch, a running app, or count laps. Write it down.

5. Compare Your Score

Age Excellent Good Average Below Avg Poor
30–39 >2700m 2400–2700m 2000–2399m 1600–1999m <1600m
40–49 >2500m 2100–2499m 1700–2099m 1500–1699m <1500m
50+ >2300m 1900–2299m 1600–1899m 1400–1599m <1400m

(Adapted from the original Cooper Institute standards.)


What It Tells You

The Cooper Test estimates your VO2 max, or your body’s oxygen efficiency.

Formula:
VO2 max ≈ (Distance in meters – 504.9) ÷ 44.73

A higher VO2 means a stronger heart, faster recovery, and more energy for life’s chaos.

Think of it as your fitness GPA — a single stat that reflects your engine’s horsepower.


How to Improve Your Score

  • Run More, Smarter
    Do two to three runs a week. Mix long slow runs with interval training like 6x400m at 85% effort.

  • Strength Plus Cardio
    Combine resistance training (deadlifts, squats, pushups) with conditioning (sprints, rowing). Dads need both horsepower and stamina.

  • Sleep and Nutrition
    VO2 does not care about your macros if you are running on 4 hours of sleep. Hydrate, eat clean, and rest hard.

  • Retest Every 8 Weeks
    Improvement is addictive. Seeing measurable progress keeps you honest and motivated.


The Bigger Lesson

Here’s the truth: most dads do not need another 90-day shred challenge. They need a standard. The Cooper Test gives you one. It’s not about being elite, it’s about being honest.

The point is not running 3,000 meters. It is knowing you could if you had to.


Dad Day Takeaway

Take 12 minutes. Find a track. See what you’re made of. Then go home, sweaty and proud because your kids just saw what “showing up” looks like.