Month: May 2026

LPH56: Mark and John Cronin Turned Socks Into Purpose and Possibility

LPH56: Mark and John Cronin Turned Socks Into Purpose and Possibility

What happens when a father and son build their own path when the system has few options?

In this episode, Mark Cronin and his son, John, share their journey of Down syndrome, disability, entrepreneurship, and employment. Together, they started John’s Crazy Socks, a business that employs people with different abilities and has shipped over 500,000 packages to 94 countries. John’s Crazy Socks has also donated more than $800,000 to charity, including the Special Olympics. Their story shows what families can do when they believe in their child and refuse to accept limits placed on them by others.

Now that is growing into a movement. Through their nonprofit, Abilities Rising, Mark and John are helping other families start businesses, build job skills, and create real employment pathways for adults with different abilities. Their journey reminds us that when support does not exist, families build it, and when families share their stories, more people begin to understand what true support really means.

 

More about the show…

Learn more about Mark and John Cronin’s business, John’s Crazy Socks https://johnscrazysocks.com/
Find more information about LPH host, Wendy Ernzen https://www.linkedin.com/in/wendyernzen.
Real stories. Real insights. Real life. Join the LPH newsletter: https://www.letsplanthouses.com/newsletter/
Feel free to contact Wendy Ernzen via email: letsplanthouses.com.
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LPH55: Founder Kirby Rabalais Built Got4titude Through Fatherhood

LPH55: Founder Kirby Rabalais Built Got4titude Through Fatherhood

What happens when fatherhood asks you to put your career on hold and trust that your family will find a way forward?

In this episode about caregiving, disability, and fatherhood, Kirby Rabalais shares how raising a child with a rare genetic condition reshaped his priorities and his purpose. Families living with neurodivergence often carry invisible work every single day. Kirby reminds us that real life is more complex than most systems recognize, and that support must be practical, flexible, and human.

Kirby opens up about stepping back from his career to become his son’s primary caregiver, and how that season changed his life in the best way. From that experience, he founded Got4titude, a support community for fathers raising children with disabilities. His story shows that when families share what they are living, new ideas grow, new support takes shape, and meaningful change becomes possible.