It didn’t come out of nowhere. My son is in his thirties now, with kids of his own, and we were having one of those rare honest conversations — the kind I used to avoid because I wasn’t sure I’d like where they ended up. He wasn’t angry. He wasn’t trying to hurt me. He was just telling me the truth, quietly, the way adults do when they’ve made their peace with something.
He said that when he was growing up, I was always there — but not really there. That I’d come home from work, sit at the dinner table, and be so hollowed out from the day that my eyes were open but nobody was home. And that I’d told him, more times than he could count, that I was doing it all for him. The long hours. The stress I carried home like luggage. All of it — for him.
He said he would have traded every dollar for one conversation where I wasn’t half-asleep.
I didn’t argue. I couldn’t. Because the worst part wasn’t that he said it. The worst part was that I knew, the second the words landed, that he was right.
I built my whole identity on being the provider
Thirty-plus years in human resources. I spent my career sitting with people during the hardest moments of their working lives — terminations, grievances, personal crises bleeding into the workplace. I was good at it. I knew how to listen, how to read a room, how to make someone feel heard.
And somehow, I couldn’t bring that same quality of attention home.
Looking back, I think I told myself that providing financially was the most important thing I could do as a father. It was the version of love I understood. It felt concrete. Measurable. A man who kept the bills paid and the fridge full — that was a good father, wasn’t it?
What I didn’t see, for far too long, was that presence is not the same thing as showing up. You can be in the room every evening and still be completely absent. I was a master at that particular trick.
What I got wrong about how kids experience love
Children don’t experience your salary. They don’t feel your long commute. They don’t understand the politics at work that made you tense and distracted by six o’clock. What they experience is whether you look at them when they’re talking. Whether you ask about the thing that mattered to them yesterday and remembered to follow up. Whether they feel like they exist to you in a real way, not just as a responsibility on your list.
I learned this properly — too late, and from my own sons — that a child will always choose connection over provision. Not because they don’t need security. They do. But security without warmth just produces a different kind of hunger.
My younger son once told me that my habit of offering advice felt like constant criticism. I thought I was helping. He experienced it as judgment. Same action, completely different reception. I was communicating in a language that made sense to me, without ever stopping to ask if it was landing the way I intended.
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That’s a communication failure. And I spent thirty years helping other people recognize exactly that kind of failure at work, while repeating it at home.
The cost of wrapping your identity in being useful
When the company offered me a redundancy package and I retired at sixty-three, the first few months felt like falling off a cliff. My whole sense of self had been built around being needed, being productive, being the person who solved problems. Suddenly, nobody needed me for anything — or so it felt.
It took therapy, which I started in my sixties at my wife Linda’s suggestion and which I wish I’d done thirty years earlier, to really understand what had happened. I had confused being busy with being valuable. I had confused provision with love. And when the busyness stopped, I had to face the fact that I’d been using work to avoid sitting with myself.
The identity crisis I went through after retiring wasn’t really about retirement. It was about having built my entire self-image on the wrong foundation. When the job went, there was less underneath it than I’d assumed.
That’s a hard thing to sit with. But it was also the beginning of something better.
What I’ve learned about being actually present
I have four grandchildren now. The two who live close by, I take to the park most weekends. I treat it as non-negotiable — the highlight of my week, honestly. And what I’ve noticed is that the best afternoons are the completely unstructured ones. No plan. No agenda. Just following their lead and being genuinely interested in whatever catches their attention.
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That’s the thing I got backwards for most of my sons’ childhoods. I thought being a good father meant directing things. Planning things. Providing experiences. What the grandchildren are teaching me — and what my sons tried to tell me in their own ways — is that what people actually want from you is your full attention. Not your money. Not your plan. Just you, actually there, actually listening.
I make a point of one-on-one time with each grandchild because I’ve noticed they’re completely different people when they’re not competing for attention. That’s something I learned too late with my own boys. I’m trying to get it right this time — not to compensate, but because I finally understand why it matters.
Apologizing to your adult children is harder than it sounds — and more important
A few years ago, I started apologizing to my sons. Not in a general, vague way — not “sorry if I wasn’t perfect.” Specifically. For real things I got wrong. For pushing my older son toward a career path that looked good on paper but wasn’t right for him. For not being present in the way they needed when they were teenagers and I was too exhausted from work to be much use to anyone at home.
I’d expected it to feel humiliating. Instead, it opened doors that staying defensive had been keeping shut. My sons talk to me more now than they ever did when they were young. One calls every week. And while the conversations we have now can’t replace the ones we didn’t have when they were kids, they matter. They’re real.
Getting feedback from your adult children about what you got wrong is painful. I won’t pretend otherwise. But it’s also one of the most valuable things that has happened to me. It made me a better father to them now, and a better grandfather to their children.
It’s not too late to understand what they actually needed
I spent decades believing that working hard and providing well was the same thing as being present. It isn’t. They’re related, but they’re not the same, and a child knows the difference even when they don’t have the words for it yet.
If you’re still in the thick of it — raising kids, working long hours, telling yourself it’s all for them — I’m not here to make you feel guilty. I know how that season feels. But I’d ask you to consider this: what would it look like to be genuinely there, not just physically in the room? What would it cost you to put the tiredness down, just for twenty minutes, and actually pay attention?
Because they will remember. Not the holidays you saved for or the school you worked to afford. They’ll remember whether you looked at them. Whether they felt like they mattered to you in the moment, not just in the abstract.
My son wasn’t angry when he told me what he told me. He’d made his peace with it.
But I’m still sitting with the truth of it — and I think that’s exactly where I should be.
