Wednesday, 01 July 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

Your father’s chair at the table has a particular creak when he shifts his weight. You have known that sound your entire life — first as a child sitting across from him, then as a young man coming home between jobs, and now as the man who lives downstairs while he lives upstairs. The creak is the same. The chair is the same. What has changed is the sound of his breathing between bites, slightly heavier now, and the way his hand sometimes hesitates before reaching for the salt.

You do not remember when you started noticing his hands. They were always just there — holding tools, signing papers, resting on the armrest of his chair while he watched the evening news. But lately you see them differently. The skin is looser. The veins are more prominent. When he holds his cup of tea in the morning, you can see the small tremor that was not there five years ago. Not Parkinson’s. Just age. Just the body being honest about how long it has been working.

He built the roof over your head. Not metaphorically. Actually. You remember being young and watching him up there with the contractor, pointing at measurements, checking angles, making sure the water would run off properly during monsoon. He was younger then than you are now. He was building the house that would hold his children, his grandchildren, the meals that would stretch across thirty years. He did not know that then. He just knew the roof needed to be solid. And it is. You are sitting under it right now.

The meals upstairs happen every day. Sometimes twice a day. You climb the stairs and he is already there, or he climbs down and you are waiting. There is no ceremony to it. No announcement. Just the sound of his footsteps and the understanding that food will be shared and the twenty minutes will pass the way they always pass — mostly quiet, occasionally a question about your work or his appointment, sometimes nothing but the sound of eating.

You have stopped counting these meals. Not because there are too many to count. Because counting them makes you aware of the number in a way that tightens your chest. But you know without counting that the number is not infinite. You know that your children will remember their grandfather, but they will not remember as many meals as you have had. And that knowledge sits with you while you eat. Not ruining the meal. Just making it more vivid. The rice tastes like rice. His presence across the table is just presence. But you are awake to it now in a way you were not when you were twenty-five.

He is teaching you how to be an older man simply by being one. Not with advice. Not with lectures about life or how you should run your business or what you should do with your children. Just by showing up every day in the body he has, moving at the pace he moves, accepting what he can no longer do without complaint. He does not fight his age. He just inhabits it. You watch him take the stairs more slowly than he used to. You watch him ask you to reach something on the high shelf that he used to reach himself. You watch him nod off in his chair after lunch and wake twenty minutes later without apology or embarrassment. This is what it looks like. This is what you will look like if you are lucky enough to get there.

He does not know he is teaching you. He is just living. But you are learning anyway. You are learning that strength is not only the body lifting heavy things. It is also the body admitting what it can no longer lift. You are learning that dignity does not require pretending. It just requires showing up as you are and trusting that the people around you will adjust. You are learning that being an older man does not mean being less. It just means being different. And he is showing you the shape of that difference every single morning.

Yesterday he asked you about the business. Not in the way he used to ask when you were starting out, when the questions had a weight to them, when you could feel him worrying about whether you would be okay. Now he just asks because he is interested. Because you are his son and he wants to know what you are doing with your days. The worry has softened into curiosity. The pressure has become presence. And you realize, sitting there answering him, that this shift did not happen because you finally proved something to him. It happened because he got older and the older version of him has less need to protect you from your own choices.

You are becoming the man who will sit in his chair someday. Not the exact chair — he will probably outlive the furniture. But the position. The father upstairs. The steady presence your children will climb toward when they need the meal or the conversation or just the fact of you still being there. You do not know how to do that yet. But he is showing you. Not by telling you how. By doing it. By being the man who shows up every day, who eats his meals, who asks his small questions, who lets his body age without theatrics.

The roof he built is holding. The walls are standing. The house has not leaked. The foundation has not cracked. He did his job and it lasted. You are doing your job now — the business, the systems, the routines that keep your own household running. But you are doing it inside the house he built. Literally and otherwise. The stability you are trying to create for your children is resting on the stability he already created for you. He does not need you to thank him for that. He is not waiting for acknowledgment. He just built it and moved on. But you know. And the knowing sits with you at the table.

His breath across from you is steady. His hands hold the fork without shaking too much. His eyes still see you clearly. He is here. Right now. In this moment. Still alive. Still your father. Still the man whose chair creaks in that particular way. And you are here across from him. Still his son. Still eating the meal. Still learning how to be the man you are becoming by watching the man he has become.

The meal will end soon. You will go back downstairs. He will go back to his room or his chair or whatever the afternoon holds for him. Tomorrow you will do it again. And the day after that. And the gratitude is not for some imagined future where you have figured out how to hold this more lightly or appreciate it more fully. The gratitude is for the fact that it is happening right now. That he is still here. That the stairs still connect you. That the roof is still solid. That the man who built all this is still sitting across from you, breathing, eating, being your father in the way only he knows how to be.