365 Things I Want You to Know is a father's long conversation with his son-written one lesson at a time, the same way a life is built. This book exists for the moments no one prepares you for. The quiet ones. The hard ones. The days when no one is watching, no one is applauding, and the choices you make quietly shape the man you are becoming. Each page contains a single lesson-short, direct, and grounded in lived experience. These lessons speak to discipline, responsibility, courage, anger, failure, money, restraint, honesty, leadership, self-respect, and purpose. Not as theories. Not as slogans. But as truths learned through time, mistakes, reflection, and growth. This is not a book meant to be rushed. You don't read it once and move on.You live with it. Designed as both a daily companion and a lifelong reference, this book can be read one lesson per day-or opened at random when life presents a situation you don't yet have words for. Facing anger? Turn to anger. Wrestling with discipline? Look it up. Standing at a crossroads? There's a lesson waiting. The structure is intentional.The tone is steady.The voice is honest. This is not about perfection. It's about alignment-between who you are, who you want to become, and how you act when no one is guiding you. It acknowledges failure without excusing it. It speaks of strength without glorifying hardness. It emphasizes responsibility without shame. At its core, this book is about becoming a man who can stand on his own feet-one who knows how to think clearly, act deliberately, manage himself, respect others, and carry responsibility with quiet confidence. While written from a father to a son, these lessons reach further. Fathers will recognize their hopes on the page. Sons will recognize truths they feel but haven't yet named. And those rebuilding later in life will find something rare: guidance that doesn't talk down, sell shortcuts, or pretend life is simple. This is a book meant to last.A book to be marked, returned to, and passed on. Because wisdom doesn't arrive all at once.It arrives one lesson at a time.