We open the show on a wiffle ball game in the backyard. Adam's pitching. Jude's at the plate — right-handed, like always. Adam throws a sinker. Jude cranks it. Home run. On dad. In front of the whole family. Adam shakes it off, gets ready to deliver some justice on the next at-bat… and Jude steps over to the left side of the plate. "Jude, what are you doing?" "Dad. Just pitch the ball." Brushback pitch. Second swing — gone. Out of the park. Left-handed. Turns out Jude found out earlier that day he can bat from either side and forgot to mention it. Adam took it like a man — somewhere between humiliated and proud. Dave's response: this is why he still brushes his teeth left-handed. To stay coordinated. (Adam also has four cavities. Unrelated.)
This week we're sipping Laphroaig Càirdeas 2024 — Triple Wood & PX Casks. Aged ten years in ex-bourbon and quarter casks, finished in Pedro Ximénez sherry casks. 52.4% ABV. Dark cherry-amber in the glass — uncharacteristic for an Islay. The classic peat smoke is there, then it opens into ginger, fruit, sherry sweetness. Càirdeas means friendship in Gaelic, which is exactly where the episode is headed. About $130-$140. Limited release, every year a little different.
Mary update: she's off the paralysis medicine. Still heavily sedated, but her eyes are open. She's looking around. Oxygen, blood pressure, heart rate — all trending in the right direction. More good days than bad right now. Adam and Lady Haylee are grateful. Keep them in your prayers.
Then we get into it: spiritual friendship, through St. Aelred of Rievaulx — the 12th-century Cistercian abbot whose book Spiritual Friendship is basically the Catholic doctrine on what a real friend is. He opens it with this line: "Here we are, you and I, and I hope that Christ makes a third with us." That's the whole thing.
Adam walks through the bell curve of zeal every man hits when he starts taking his faith seriously. Phase one: you read everything, you want to tell everybody, you should start a podcast. Phase two: you realize you know almost nothing and you go quiet. Phase three is where Aelred meets you — somewhere between "let me lecture you" and "I'm not qualified to say anything." The answer isn't to forfeit the zeal. It's to ground it in humility. You don't have the answers because you are not the answer. Christ is. But you do have your own experience, and what He's done in your life is yours to share.
Aelred's rules for friendship cut right through the noise. Spiritual friendship is not a teacher-student relationship — both men give, both men receive. Don't sacrifice your own vocation to be a "spiritual father" to someone else. When you meet, it's not the depth of the conversation that matters most, it's the consistency. And the cheat-code question for getting under the surface: how's your prayer life? Try that on a buddy this week and see what happens.
We close on Aristotle and the Eucharist. Nicomachean Ethics lays out hierarchies of friendship — friendship of utility, of pleasure, of virtue — but you can't be an authentic friend if you don't first know the good. And the good, ultimately, is Christ in the Eucharist. If the man you call your friend doesn't live a Eucharistic life, you may have a buddy. You don't yet have a spiritual friend. Make one. Be one. Bring him to Christ.
Raise your glass.
TOPICS COVERED
- Jude's ambidextrous wiffle ball ambush and the inevitable day every dad gets cranked on
- Adam's left-handed toothbrushing regimen and his four cavities (related, probably)
- Why the Càirdeas release is one of the most interesting Islay bottlings out there
- An update on baby Mary — off the paralytic, eyes open, more wins than losses
- The bell curve of zeal — and why most men quit halfway up the back side
- St. Aelred of Rievaulx, the 12th-century Cistercian abbot the Church basically credits as the doctor of friendship
- "Here we are, you and I, and I hope that Christ makes a third with us" — the opening line of Spiritual Friendship
- Why spiritual friendship is not a teacher-student relationship and why treating it like one ruins it
- The danger of becoming the guy who turns every conversation into a lecture
- Don't sacrifice your own vocation to play spiritual father to someone else's
- Consistency beats intensity — and why a Pelagian attitude toward your men's group will wear you out
- "How's your prayer life?" — the question that breaks past small talk in under thirty seconds
- Vulnerability as a man's strength, not his concession to a cultural buzzword
- Why one man's honest confession in a group does more for the listeners than the speaker
- Lady Haylee and Lady Pamela both telling their husbands, in different houses, the same thing: you're a better man when you come back from those groups
- Subsidiarity in friendship — the smallest circle is always the most important circle
- Aristotle's hierarchy of friendship and why you can't be an authentic friend without knowing the good
- The Eucharist as the prerequisite for real spiritual friendship between men
- Make a friend. Be a friend. Bring a friend to Christ.
- Bourbon of the week: Laphroaig Càirdeas 2024, Triple Wood & PX Casks
REFERENCED IN THIS EPISODE
Books:
- Spiritual Friendship by St. Aelred of Rievaulx — be careful of older translations from the 60s and 70s that read sexualization into the text that isn't there
- Nicomachean Ethics by Aristotle
- Purgatorio by Dante (Adam's office reading group, currently working through it)
Saints:
- St. Aelred of Rievaulx
- St. Benedict (and the Cistercian reform out of the Benedictine order)
- St. Peter (the lawn chair analogy)
People & references:
- Lady Haylee Minihan
- Lady Pamela Niles
- Adam's Substack (where he wrote about the Dante reading group)
- The friend in Adam's office who told him, "I didn't even realize that friendship like that existed"
Concepts & passages:
- John 15: "I no longer call you slaves, but friends"
- The three Aristotelian friendships: utility, pleasure, virtue
- The four ends of friendship in St. Aelred
- The "Friends of Laphroaig" plot program
- The three TCMS pillars: Protect, Provide, Establish
SPONSOR BLOCK
Sponsor: Select International Tours — selectinternationaltours.com
When Adam and Dave decided to lead their first pilgrimage, the same name kept coming up: Select International Tours. Having now used them, we can tell you they're the real deal. Whether you want to lead a pilgrimage or join one, Select has a tour ready for wherever the Lord is calling you. Head to selectinternationaltours.com and take a look.