Northman Coaching

Northman Coaching

Living life with values means making choices and taking actions that align with your core beliefs and principles. It involves having a clear understanding of what is important to you and using those values as a guide for your thoughts, words, and behavior. 1. Authenticity: Living with values means being true to yourself and staying aligned with your genuine beliefs and principles. It involves being honest with yourself and others, and not compromising your values for the sake of external pressures or expectations. 2. Integrity: Living with values means acting in accordance with your moral and ethical principles. It involves consistently making choices that are honest, fair, and ethical, even when faced with difficult situations or temptations. 3. Purpose: Living with values means having a sense of purpose and direction in life. It involves identifying what is truly important to you and pursuing goals and activities that align with those values. Living with purpose gives your life meaning and fulfillment. 4. Compassion: Living with values means treating others with kindness, empathy, and respect. It involves considering the needs and feelings of others and acting in a way that promotes fairness, equality, and justice. Living with compassion fosters positive relationships and contributes to a harmonious society. 5. Growth and Learning: Living with values means continually striving to grow, learn, and improve. It involves being open-minded, seeking new experiences, and challenging yourself to expand your knowledge and understanding. Living with a growth mindset allows you to adapt and evolve in alignment with your values. Remember, living your life with values is a personal journey, and the specific values you hold may be different from others. It is important to reflect on your own values, define what they mean to you, and actively incorporate them into your daily life choices and actions.

  1. 20h ago

    Northman Coaching Daily Devotional 6/29/26

    Today’s devotional brought together two powerful truths: endurance through trials and renewal through surrender. One devotion reminded us that hardship is not the end of the story—it is often where character is forged. The other emphasized that true peace comes when we stop trying to control everything and begin trusting God with what we cannot carry alone. Together, these messages speak directly to the heart of men’s work: strength is not just muscle or pride, but resilience, humility, and faith under pressure. For many men navigating divorce, heartbreak, or seasons of rebuilding, these truths matter deeply. Divorce can shake identity, confidence, fatherhood roles, finances, and emotional stability. Trials often expose the cracks we ignored for years—anger, avoidance, fear, insecurity, or unhealthy coping patterns. Yet this is also where growth begins. A man who chooses healing over bitterness, accountability over blame, and purpose over pity starts rebuilding brick by brick. God can use broken seasons to create stronger foundations than ever existed before. Mental health is another major part of this journey. Too many men suffer silently with anxiety, depression, loneliness, stress, or emotional exhaustion because they were taught to “just deal with it.” But Christianity teaches that carrying burdens in community and bringing struggles into the light is wisdom, not weakness. Brotherhood, coaching, prayer, journaling, counseling, and honest conversations are tools of healing. A man who asks for help is not failing—he is fighting. Faith and Christianity remind us that our worth is not defined by relationship status, past mistakes, income, or how others see us. Identity is rooted in being a son of God, called to grow in courage, discipline, leadership, and love. Men’s work is the daily process of becoming who God designed you to be: a man of integrity, emotional control, servant leadership, and steady presence for your children, family, and community. When these two devotions are connected, the message becomes clear: pain can refine you, surrender can restore you, and faith can guide you. Whether a man is healing after divorce, battling mental health struggles, rebuilding confidence, or simply seeking a stronger walk with God, the path forward is the same—stay grounded in truth, stay connected in brotherhood, and keep doing the inner work one day at a time.

    4 min
  2. 1d ago

    Northman Coaching Podcast: Bravery: Moving Forward While Fear Rides Along

    What if bravery isn't the absence of fear? What if bravery is simply refusing to let fear make your decisions? In this powerful episode of the Northman Coaching Podcast, Gary Hults explores the value of bravery and challenges the common misconception that courageous people don't experience fear. The truth is that fear is a normal part of life. Every great leader, every person of faith, and every man pursuing growth has faced uncertainty, doubt, and hesitation. The difference is not whether they felt fear—it's what they chose to do next. Drawing from personal experiences, including his mother's battle with cancer, his journey toward baptism, rebuilding after divorce, fatherhood, dating, entrepreneurship, and men's coaching, Gary shares how bravery often shows up in everyday moments rather than dramatic acts of heroism. This episode explores how fear disguises itself as procrastination, perfectionism, overthinking, and waiting for the "right time." You'll learn why courage is built through action, why faith often requires movement before certainty, and why the most important battles are often fought within ourselves. Through biblical examples such as David and Goliath, Joshua leading Israel, Esther approaching the king, Daniel in the lion's den, and Peter stepping out of the boat, this conversation highlights the connection between courage, faith, leadership, and personal transformation. Why bravery is built in ordinary momentsThe difference between fear and courageHow hesitation creates regretWhy faith and bravery often work togetherHow to move forward without perfect certaintyThe role of courage in divorce recovery and personal growthWhy ownership is one of the bravest things a man can embraceHow bravery evolves as men matureWhy consistency is often more courageous than risk-takingThe importance of vulnerability and honesty in relationshipsHow to stop allowing fear to dictate your decisionsWhy small acts of courage compound over time✅ Bravery is not the absence of fear—it is action despite fear. ✅ Fear often disguises itself as procrastination, overthinking, and perfectionism. ✅ Growth requires movement before certainty. ✅ Courage is found in difficult conversations, boundaries, prayers, and daily decisions. ✅ Ownership creates freedom and personal power. ✅ Faith requires trusting God's presence even when outcomes are uncertain. ✅ Consistent acts of bravery create extraordinary lives. Scripture Referenced Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go."Resources Mentioned Northman Brotherhood Men's CommunityThe First 30 Days: How to Regain Clarity After the D-WordFree 60-Minute Discovery CallSessions & Lessons: Life UnscriptedGloing Off ScriptMay December End: The Ballad of Joey FlowersConnect With Northman CoachingNorthman Coaching helps men rebuild confidence, recover from divorce, strengthen their faith, develop emotional resilience, improve relationships, and become the leaders they were created to be. Whether you're navigating heartbreak, personal growth, fatherhood, dating, faith, leadership, or life's next chapter, you don't have to do it alone. Stand Firm. Walk Humbly. Build the Man. Lead the Legacy. #Bravery #Courage #MensCoaching #PersonalDevelopment #SelfImprovement #Leadership #DivorceRecovery #MentalStrength #EmotionalResilience #Fatherhood #PersonalGrowth #SelfMastery #MensWork #Accountability #Brotherhood #NorthmanCoaching

    13 min
  3. 3d ago

    Northman Coaching 6/26/26

    Today’s devotional brought together two powerful truths: endurance through trials and renewal through surrender. One devotion reminded us that hardship is not the end of the story—it is often where character is forged. The other emphasized that true peace comes when we stop trying to control everything and begin trusting God with what we cannot carry alone. Together, these messages speak directly to the heart of men’s work: strength is not just muscle or pride, but resilience, humility, and faith under pressure. For many men navigating divorce, heartbreak, or seasons of rebuilding, these truths matter deeply. Divorce can shake identity, confidence, fatherhood roles, finances, and emotional stability. Trials often expose the cracks we ignored for years—anger, avoidance, fear, insecurity, or unhealthy coping patterns. Yet this is also where growth begins. A man who chooses healing over bitterness, accountability over blame, and purpose over pity starts rebuilding brick by brick. God can use broken seasons to create stronger foundations than ever existed before. Mental health is another major part of this journey. Too many men suffer silently with anxiety, depression, loneliness, stress, or emotional exhaustion because they were taught to “just deal with it.” But Christianity teaches that carrying burdens in community and bringing struggles into the light is wisdom, not weakness. Brotherhood, coaching, prayer, journaling, counseling, and honest conversations are tools of healing. A man who asks for help is not failing—he is fighting. Faith and Christianity remind us that our worth is not defined by relationship status, past mistakes, income, or how others see us. Identity is rooted in being a son of God, called to grow in courage, discipline, leadership, and love. Men’s work is the daily process of becoming who God designed you to be: a man of integrity, emotional control, servant leadership, and steady presence for your children, family, and community. When these two devotions are connected, the message becomes clear: pain can refine you, surrender can restore you, and faith can guide you. Whether a man is healing after divorce, battling mental health struggles, rebuilding confidence, or simply seeking a stronger walk with God, the path forward is the same—stay grounded in truth, stay connected in brotherhood, and keep doing the inner work one day at a time.

    4 min
  4. 4d ago

    Northman Coaching Daily Devotional 6/25/26

    Today’s devotional brought together two powerful truths: endurance through trials and renewal through surrender. One devotion reminded us that hardship is not the end of the story—it is often where character is forged. The other emphasized that true peace comes when we stop trying to control everything and begin trusting God with what we cannot carry alone. Together, these messages speak directly to the heart of men’s work: strength is not just muscle or pride, but resilience, humility, and faith under pressure. For many men navigating divorce, heartbreak, or seasons of rebuilding, these truths matter deeply. Divorce can shake identity, confidence, fatherhood roles, finances, and emotional stability. Trials often expose the cracks we ignored for years—anger, avoidance, fear, insecurity, or unhealthy coping patterns. Yet this is also where growth begins. A man who chooses healing over bitterness, accountability over blame, and purpose over pity starts rebuilding brick by brick. God can use broken seasons to create stronger foundations than ever existed before. Mental health is another major part of this journey. Too many men suffer silently with anxiety, depression, loneliness, stress, or emotional exhaustion because they were taught to “just deal with it.” But Christianity teaches that carrying burdens in community and bringing struggles into the light is wisdom, not weakness. Brotherhood, coaching, prayer, journaling, counseling, and honest conversations are tools of healing. A man who asks for help is not failing—he is fighting. Faith and Christianity remind us that our worth is not defined by relationship status, past mistakes, income, or how others see us. Identity is rooted in being a son of God, called to grow in courage, discipline, leadership, and love. Men’s work is the daily process of becoming who God designed you to be: a man of integrity, emotional control, servant leadership, and steady presence for your children, family, and community. When these two devotions are connected, the message becomes clear: pain can refine you, surrender can restore you, and faith can guide you. Whether a man is healing after divorce, battling mental health struggles, rebuilding confidence, or simply seeking a stronger walk with God, the path forward is the same—stay grounded in truth, stay connected in brotherhood, and keep doing the inner work one day at a time.

    4 min
  5. 5d ago

    Northman Coaching Daily Devotional 6/24/26

    Today’s devotional brought together two powerful truths: endurance through trials and renewal through surrender. One devotion reminded us that hardship is not the end of the story—it is often where character is forged. The other emphasized that true peace comes when we stop trying to control everything and begin trusting God with what we cannot carry alone. Together, these messages speak directly to the heart of men’s work: strength is not just muscle or pride, but resilience, humility, and faith under pressure. For many men navigating divorce, heartbreak, or seasons of rebuilding, these truths matter deeply. Divorce can shake identity, confidence, fatherhood roles, finances, and emotional stability. Trials often expose the cracks we ignored for years—anger, avoidance, fear, insecurity, or unhealthy coping patterns. Yet this is also where growth begins. A man who chooses healing over bitterness, accountability over blame, and purpose over pity starts rebuilding brick by brick. God can use broken seasons to create stronger foundations than ever existed before. Mental health is another major part of this journey. Too many men suffer silently with anxiety, depression, loneliness, stress, or emotional exhaustion because they were taught to “just deal with it.” But Christianity teaches that carrying burdens in community and bringing struggles into the light is wisdom, not weakness. Brotherhood, coaching, prayer, journaling, counseling, and honest conversations are tools of healing. A man who asks for help is not failing—he is fighting. Faith and Christianity remind us that our worth is not defined by relationship status, past mistakes, income, or how others see us. Identity is rooted in being a son of God, called to grow in courage, discipline, leadership, and love. Men’s work is the daily process of becoming who God designed you to be: a man of integrity, emotional control, servant leadership, and steady presence for your children, family, and community. When these two devotions are connected, the message becomes clear: pain can refine you, surrender can restore you, and faith can guide you. Whether a man is healing after divorce, battling mental health struggles, rebuilding confidence, or simply seeking a stronger walk with God, the path forward is the same—stay grounded in truth, stay connected in brotherhood, and keep doing the inner work one day at a time.

    4 min
  6. 6d ago

    Northman Coaching Daily Devotional 6/23/26

    Today’s devotional brought together two powerful truths: endurance through trials and renewal through surrender. One devotion reminded us that hardship is not the end of the story—it is often where character is forged. The other emphasized that true peace comes when we stop trying to control everything and begin trusting God with what we cannot carry alone. Together, these messages speak directly to the heart of men’s work: strength is not just muscle or pride, but resilience, humility, and faith under pressure. For many men navigating divorce, heartbreak, or seasons of rebuilding, these truths matter deeply. Divorce can shake identity, confidence, fatherhood roles, finances, and emotional stability. Trials often expose the cracks we ignored for years—anger, avoidance, fear, insecurity, or unhealthy coping patterns. Yet this is also where growth begins. A man who chooses healing over bitterness, accountability over blame, and purpose over pity starts rebuilding brick by brick. God can use broken seasons to create stronger foundations than ever existed before. Mental health is another major part of this journey. Too many men suffer silently with anxiety, depression, loneliness, stress, or emotional exhaustion because they were taught to “just deal with it.” But Christianity teaches that carrying burdens in community and bringing struggles into the light is wisdom, not weakness. Brotherhood, coaching, prayer, journaling, counseling, and honest conversations are tools of healing. A man who asks for help is not failing—he is fighting. Faith and Christianity remind us that our worth is not defined by relationship status, past mistakes, income, or how others see us. Identity is rooted in being a son of God, called to grow in courage, discipline, leadership, and love. Men’s work is the daily process of becoming who God designed you to be: a man of integrity, emotional control, servant leadership, and steady presence for your children, family, and community. When these two devotions are connected, the message becomes clear: pain can refine you, surrender can restore you, and faith can guide you. Whether a man is healing after divorce, battling mental health struggles, rebuilding confidence, or simply seeking a stronger walk with God, the path forward is the same—stay grounded in truth, stay connected in brotherhood, and keep doing the inner work one day at a time.

    4 min
  7. Jun 22

    Northman Coaching Daily Devotional 6/22/26

    Today’s devotional brought together two powerful truths: endurance through trials and renewal through surrender. One devotion reminded us that hardship is not the end of the story—it is often where character is forged. The other emphasized that true peace comes when we stop trying to control everything and begin trusting God with what we cannot carry alone. Together, these messages speak directly to the heart of men’s work: strength is not just muscle or pride, but resilience, humility, and faith under pressure. For many men navigating divorce, heartbreak, or seasons of rebuilding, these truths matter deeply. Divorce can shake identity, confidence, fatherhood roles, finances, and emotional stability. Trials often expose the cracks we ignored for years—anger, avoidance, fear, insecurity, or unhealthy coping patterns. Yet this is also where growth begins. A man who chooses healing over bitterness, accountability over blame, and purpose over pity starts rebuilding brick by brick. God can use broken seasons to create stronger foundations than ever existed before. Mental health is another major part of this journey. Too many men suffer silently with anxiety, depression, loneliness, stress, or emotional exhaustion because they were taught to “just deal with it.” But Christianity teaches that carrying burdens in community and bringing struggles into the light is wisdom, not weakness. Brotherhood, coaching, prayer, journaling, counseling, and honest conversations are tools of healing. A man who asks for help is not failing—he is fighting. Faith and Christianity remind us that our worth is not defined by relationship status, past mistakes, income, or how others see us. Identity is rooted in being a son of God, called to grow in courage, discipline, leadership, and love. Men’s work is the daily process of becoming who God designed you to be: a man of integrity, emotional control, servant leadership, and steady presence for your children, family, and community. When these two devotions are connected, the message becomes clear: pain can refine you, surrender can restore you, and faith can guide you. Whether a man is healing after divorce, battling mental health struggles, rebuilding confidence, or simply seeking a stronger walk with God, the path forward is the same—stay grounded in truth, stay connected in brotherhood, and keep doing the inner work one day at a time.

    4 min
  8. Jun 21

    Northman Coaching Podcast: Balance: Building a Life That Lasts

    Balance: Building a Life That LastsWhat does it really mean to live a balanced life? In this episode of the Northman Coaching Podcast, Gary Hults explores the value of balance and challenges the common misconception that balance means giving equal time, energy, and attention to everything in your life. True balance isn't about equality—it's about priority. It's understanding what matters most in each season of life and giving those things the attention they deserve without neglecting everything else. Many men find themselves chasing success in one area while unknowingly sacrificing another. They build careers but lose relationships. They become physically strong but emotionally unavailable. They grow spiritually but disconnect from the people they love. They pursue financial freedom while neglecting their health, faith, family, or personal well-being. In this episode, Gary discusses how balance requires awareness, intentionality, and consistent adjustment. Drawing from biblical wisdom, personal coaching experience, and practical examples from everyday life, he explains why sustainable growth always beats extreme behavior and why becoming a whole man matters more than becoming the richest, busiest, or most productive man. You'll learn why: Balance is about priorities, not perfectionObsession often disguises itself as ambitionConsistency beats intensity over the long termRest is preparation, not weaknessAwareness creates adjustment, and adjustment creates balanceThe areas receiving your leftovers are often the areas suffering mostFaith, family, health, purpose, and relationships must work together rather than compete against each otherGary also explores biblical examples of balance, including the rhythms found throughout Ecclesiastes and the example Jesus set by regularly withdrawing to pray, rest, and reconnect despite the demands of His mission. Whether you're navigating divorce recovery, personal growth, leadership challenges, fatherhood, marriage, faith development, career demands, or simply trying to become a more intentional man, this episode will help you evaluate where your life may be out of alignment and what adjustments you can make today. Because balance isn't something you find. Balance is something you build. One choice. One adjustment. One day at a time. Key Takeaways✅ Balance is giving the right things attention at the right time ✅ Success in one area cannot compensate for neglect in another ✅ Sustainable habits create lasting transformation ✅ Rest fuels productivity and purpose ✅ Extreme behavior often creates burnout ✅ Awareness leads to better decisions ✅ Faith, family, health, and purpose require ongoing investment ✅ Small daily actions create a life of fulfillment and peace Ecclesiastes 3:1 — "There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens."Resources MentionedNorthman Brotherhood Men's CommunityThe First 30 Days: How to Regain Clarity After the D-WordFree 60-Minute Discovery CallSessions & Lessons: Life Unscripted with Joel and Glo RosarioNorthman Coaching helps men rebuild confidence, recover from divorce, strengthen their faith, develop emotional resilience, improve relationships, and become the leaders they were created to be. Stand Firm. Walk Humbly. Build the Man. Lead the Legacy. #Balance #MensCoaching #PersonalDevelopment #SelfImprovement #ChristianMen #Leadership #Purpose #MensWork #DivorceRecovery #Fatherhood #Relationships #SelfMastery #MentalHealth #PersonalGrowth #Resilience #Accountability #Discipline #Brotherhood #NorthmanCoaching

    10 min

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About

Living life with values means making choices and taking actions that align with your core beliefs and principles. It involves having a clear understanding of what is important to you and using those values as a guide for your thoughts, words, and behavior. 1. Authenticity: Living with values means being true to yourself and staying aligned with your genuine beliefs and principles. It involves being honest with yourself and others, and not compromising your values for the sake of external pressures or expectations. 2. Integrity: Living with values means acting in accordance with your moral and ethical principles. It involves consistently making choices that are honest, fair, and ethical, even when faced with difficult situations or temptations. 3. Purpose: Living with values means having a sense of purpose and direction in life. It involves identifying what is truly important to you and pursuing goals and activities that align with those values. Living with purpose gives your life meaning and fulfillment. 4. Compassion: Living with values means treating others with kindness, empathy, and respect. It involves considering the needs and feelings of others and acting in a way that promotes fairness, equality, and justice. Living with compassion fosters positive relationships and contributes to a harmonious society. 5. Growth and Learning: Living with values means continually striving to grow, learn, and improve. It involves being open-minded, seeking new experiences, and challenging yourself to expand your knowledge and understanding. Living with a growth mindset allows you to adapt and evolve in alignment with your values. Remember, living your life with values is a personal journey, and the specific values you hold may be different from others. It is important to reflect on your own values, define what they mean to you, and actively incorporate them into your daily life choices and actions.